The Caretaker

By Matt Ahlschwede

Boo’gil Xann, the caretaker, sighed as they inspected the pod-yard. The eight young cielioids were still sleeping fitfully. They tended to get a bit restless at this stage, just before they uprooted. When the young uproot and start moving about freely is when a caretaker’s work goes from relatively peaceful to extremely hectic. This would be the caretaker’s last peaceful day for the next two Gronnic Cycles (about five earth-years) until the young were mature enough to be sent off to school and the process would begin anew.

Xann stood in their place in the center of the yard under the awning in the cool predawn, just enjoying a little tranquility, looking over the sleeping children they were so proud of. In the north-west corner was a boxer named Kovac. Boxers were usually the first to uproot due to their stronger muscles, and shortly before the caretaker sounded the morning call to awaken the children, the familiar sound of breaking roots could be heard from that direction.

As Xann sounded the morning, with a loud, yet soothing “Good morning, children”, Kovac finished breaking their roots and ran right under the awning and into Xann’s tree-trunk-thick leg, as a pair of arms were extended to pick up the young boxer and perch them on a ridge of green flesh caretakers were engineered to have growing out of their bodies just for this purpose. “Good morning, Kovac, you have certainly grown out of the soil of your ancestors.”, said the caretaker.

“Boo’gil! Boo’gil! I can run! I want to fly right up to the sky!”, enthused the young boxer. “Kly Fnofcob doesn’t make ridiculous demands, Kovac.”, murmured the caretaker, hefting the bucket of meat-fruit for the children’s breakfast. “Help me feed the others and I’ll show you the inside of the awning.” promised Xann, beaming with joy.


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To the extent possible under law, Matt Ahlschwede has waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to The Caretaker. This work is published from: United States.

Second Exodus

By Victor Arteaga

Flames licked across the front of the shuttle. Sunset and Arta gripped the edges of their seats with enough force to threaten their very atoms with compression. Her teeth rattled in her skull as the shuttle broke through the atmosphere. The humans muttered some words related to the flight, but Sunset was too busy reciting the Mantra of Solitude her father had taught her to care. The shaking ceased, her stomach rose into her throat, and her body pressed into the seat as the craft leveled out.

"We're at cruising altitude now," Sergeant Greene said.

He unstrapped himself from the chair and stood. The red of his uniform shifted to a mottled pattern of dark blues to match the undulating waves of the ocean below. Jun also stood but left the purple of her uniform in place.

"Next moves?" Sergeant Greene asked. He lifted a panel on the wall and pulled out a machine like Román had that let him breathe as Sunset did. Then he lifted a long device held in both hands. He gripped it by a handle, and the long tube attached to it and other outcroppings flashed blue. The bands on his wrists emitted a chirp.

“What is that?” Sunset asked.

“It’s called a rifle.”

"We must gather the rest of the Ki'Tak in the region and send them to a holy place. The Resting Pools," Arta said. He examined the two spears he brought, his own and Sunset's. He chose Sunset’s and set his own down against the wall.

"Roger that. I'll set the scanners to plot our best course using your bio-tags," Jun said.

"I still need a weapon," Sunset said. Sergeant Greene led her to the back of the shuttle, pressed his hand against a panel, and a long section of the wall flipped down. Inside gleamed a new spear made entirely of metal. The triangular tip was longer than hers and the base had two prongs on the same sides as the sharp edge. She gripped it, and the cool metal beneath her fingers shifted to fit her hand perfectly. She made a light coo- and purring sound in amazement. Sergeant Greene smiled.

"Glad you like it." He turned back to the other two. Arta hummed his growing displeasure.

"Course set," Jun said.

"I believe from here on out, the best course of action will be to have us approach the Ki'Tak alone first. Sunset's presence would be jarring enough, and we don't know how many know of your existence yet."

"Understood," Sergeant Greene said. "We'll—"

"Not understood, actually," Jun said. "I will come along with the two of you to prove we are not the threat. Instead of trusting your word, they can see for themselves that there are otherworldly people who are here to help. I think that would lend more weight to your arguments that they should congregate. Otherwise, why bother believing you? If Sunset is an outlier and, judging by the divisive nature of your relationship with the Lu'Tak, I will go to provide weight to your argument. Sergeant Greene will fly cover in case we get tracked down by the Cryptobots."

"I like this plan," Sunset said. Arta hissed through his teeth but said no more. "How do we get down?"

Sergeant Greene smiled. He tossed the breathing device to Jun and led them to the empty space in the middle of the shuttle.

"Computer, lower us to drop altitude."

"Drop al—?" Sunset howled as the craft plummeted and she floated off the floor for a second before coming back down.

"Ready for drop in three!" Sergeant Greene announced as he went back to his chair.

Jun grasped both Arta and Sunset's hands.

"Two!"

"What is the mean—" Arta said.

"Drop!"

The floor fell open below them. Arta and Sunset's screams were swallowed by the rush of air as they fell. Jun let go of Sunset's hand. She flailed and screeched. Jun pointed her hands at the water and spoke a command. A blast of energy hit the water, breaking the surface just before they hit, and the ocean swallowed them up. The water buffeted them for a few seconds before Sunset and Arta righted themselves. Jun had the device in her mouth, and her boots shifted into flippers. She told them this was the first location, then pulled up a digital map that floated above her wrist that showed the path they would take. Arta blew a stream of bubbles, then led toward the foundation of an island just ahead of them. Jun managed to keep up this time, unlike Román. As they neared the opening, Sunset’s grip tightened on her new spear. She knew how this would go.

A young Ki'Tak, perhaps a bit older than Sunset, swam out to meet them as they neared the mouth of an underground cave. He bared his fangs. The short dagger in his hand flashed as he whipped it out from behind his back. He lunged, but not at Sunset—his target was Arta.

Sunset whipped the spear through the water, using the haft to smack the young Ki'Tak's hand. It yelped and stared at her.

"Peace, young warrior. We come with grave warning to your chief," Arta said.

"No, you come bearing death. We have heard of these creatures, and that you helped them destroy your island. We will not allow you to come any nearer."

"If death follows me, it is only because I lead the race to warn you. We must congregate at the Resting Pools. These humans and this child will help us survive against the t’ozah that have claimed the skies."

"How can this abomination be of any help?" The young man jabbed his dagger at Sunset. She aimed her spear at him.

"Because she will be the bridge between the Lu'Tak and the Ki'Tak. When the t’ozah claim the world, she will help create the peace that will save our species."

"Why bring her?" The youth pointed his weapon at Jun.

"I come as proof that we are here to help. That we can provide safety against the t’ozah and even a means to defeat them."

That piqued the youth's interest. "I will relay your message to my chief. If we can defeat the Lu'Tak's t’ozah then that is worthy of an audience. I will see it done."

And so it went throughout their trek. From island to island, the conversations were little different until they strayed farther from Arta’s island, where their message was met with greater hostility directed toward Sunset instead of Arta.

As the trio made their way with arms, legs and bodies aching from the constant travel, to their last location, Sunset halted them. "We are on the edge of the Lu'Tak's territory. Beware, as these waters cannot be trusted."

"Copy that," Jun said.

She relayed the information to Sergeant Greene, whose shuttle floated out of sight beyond the ocean's surface. This time, the elder of the island greeted them as they emerged onto the shore. She regarded Arta with familiar respect and Jun with professional curiosity. Her hostility to Sunset was tame by comparison the other chieftains they'd met; she offered a formal greeting instead of calling her an abomination. She didn’t need much convincing and agreed to meet at the Resting Pools. She admired Sunset's spear before taking off to gather her people.

As the trio dove back in the water from the shore, they began the trek to the Resting Pool as well. Sunset felt a nagging prickle in her neck. She doubted they would be able to—

The trill of a Lu’Tak battle cry interrupted her thoughts. Four of them came rushing up from below. Jun fired a blast from her sidearm at one of them. The heat sent a trail of bubbles before it hit her mark. The other three barreled toward Sunset. She bared her fangs, uttered her own guttural war cry and held out her spear.

Arta swam to intercept one. The Lu'Tak swerved to avoid getting hit by Arta's thrust. The remaining two attacked Sunset in unison. She rushed between them to split the attack, and slashed one with the claws on her hand. It laughed as her attack ripped its flesh. Without stopping, she curved up and powered toward the surface. They gave chase, the injured lagging behind the other. The lead hurled his spear at her. She twisted and dodged. He pulled it back using a length of twine.

Almost there. With a last grunt of effort, she breached the surface. She twisted around in the air, droplets pattering on the surface. The Lu'Tak broke just after her. She spun the spear in one hand, knocking away a wild thrust. As she plunged back to the ocean, she drove the tip of her spear through the chest of the one she'd injured. It screamed as blood spurt from its mouth. The other tried to bring the spear down on her, but Sunset used her own spear to twist the impaled Lu'Tak around and blocked the blow with its body. She yanked her spear out, and a plume of purple blinded the other. She flanked the remaining Lu’Tak and stabbed him through the back. Without pause or ceremony, she dove back to find Arta.

Jun pressed her hand against his arm and wisps of purple blood floated around his shoulder.

"Let me see," Sunset said.

Jun pointed to a gouge on his back. She tapped the wrist band and signaled for Sunset to wait. Moments later, a box with a propeller came down to them. Jun applied a bandage to his back and Arta sighed in relief.

"We cannot dally further. The one who attacked me escaped."

"How did you not shoot him?" Sunset raged at Jun.

"Excuse me for tending to Arta's injuries," Jun said.

Sunset bared her fangs and blew a stream of bubbles through her gills. "We must carry him now." She gripped one of his arms and Jun took the other. They sped off to the Resting Pools.

Arta guided them since Sunset had no idea where the place was, nor had she heard of it. Her mother might have been able to tell her, but there was no helping that now. They arrived at the largest island Sunset had ever seen. On shore, they swam through a delta, and then up a freshwater river. It felt odd, almost wrong, on her skin not to taste the salt. The river dove underground, and Jun's wrist machines provided light for them to navigate until they reached a deep, chilly lake. Once they rose to the surface, Arta led them to a staircase out onto the rocky surface.

Above them, sunlight pierced through a canopy with hanging vines, vibrant flowers, and large green petals above a massive opening in the stone ceiling. Wind rustled the vines, and a few petals fell to the placid, crystalline water.

"Oh, a cenote!" Jun said. "We have structures like these on my planet as well."

Hundreds of Ki'Tak lined the tiered, sloping stone shore chatting, waiting, and eating. The elders of each group conversed among themselves, denoted by different markings or items worn on their bodies. Sunset sought a corner away from the crowd. One of the other Ki'Tak caught sight of her and said something to her friends. A hush rolled through the group like a swelling tide. Arta cleared his throat.

"Thank you for gathering here, and please forgive my tardiness. We came across a patrol of Lu'Tak. I'm afraid we haven't much time. You have all heard my pleas already, so I'll not waste your time repeating them. This woman—" He gestured to Jun. "—has the ability to take us out of this world, to swim the heavens themselves and find us a new home."

Chaos erupted with shouts, clicks, hisses, and growls. Sunset slunk further into her corner. She'd never seen that kind of collective anger but knew it couldn’t lead anywhere good.

Arta slammed his spear down and shouted, "Enough!" The entire gathering shushed, though a few hissed at him. "You have not seen the devastation wrought by the t’ozah. I have. They will destroy us. All of us. They have claimed the sky, and it will not be long before they claim all of our waters. We cannot stay."

"Liar!" someone yelled. "The t’ozah cannot traverse the skies. If we cannot then neither can they. Nothing can swim through air!"

"Sergeant. I think it's time you made an appearance," Jun said into her wrist. She stood next to Arta. "Esteemed Ki'Tak. I come from another world, and I can prove to you that we can swim through the sky. Look." She pointed up. The shuttle descended through the trees, its thrust whipping the calm surface of the lake into a frenzy.

Half the children shrieked and hid behind their parents, gills flared all the way open in terror, while the others gawked and cooed in wonder; the adults reacted little differently. Many took defensive stances, brandishing spears and clubs, and stepped between the ship and their young. Others sprinted behind outcroppings, and some scrambled for purchase on the walls nearest them. Sergeant Greene maneuvered the shuttle to land on an edge just within sight. The side door opened, and he stood and waved.

"You see? The t’ozah have stolen the technology to fly, and we must leave our home so that our people will survive."

The elder woman that was their last contact stood next to Arta. She regarded Jun with a critical stare and series of quiet clicks.

"You will not force us to assimilate?" she asked.

"No, we do not believe in assimilation, rather cooperation and co-existence."

"My name is Boltacn. It means power through silence, or Humility."

"It's an honor to meet you, Humility."

Sunset’s ears pricked at a splash. She didn't remember seeing anyone dive into the water. She scanned the water. A ripple glided from the middle of the lake.

The shuttle's engines roared to life and the craft bolted away. Seconds later, a blast shook the entire cavern. Chunks of rock fell and crushed several Ki'Tak below them. Arta, Humility, and Jun ducked. From the water, dozens of Lu'Tak attacked. They rushed the Ki'Tak wielding advanced weaponry, firing energy blasts. The warriors of the Ki'Tak hurled spears back at them. Some hit their marks sending purple bodies splashing back into the water. Jun fired off several blasts.

A Lu'Tak breached the lake by Sunset. She screeched her battle cry, dodged its blast with a forward roll, shifted her grip to the bottom of the shaft, and thrust the point into its throat as she rose.

Another roar of screaming engines shook her teeth as several t’ozah passed over the Pools. Arta ordered Humility to join her tribe and fight back against the Lu'Tak. A child wailed as it pulled on the arm of a fallen Ki'Tak woman. Rage boiled over in Sunset’s stomach. Her gills rattled with a guttural growl. A pair of Lu'Tak sauntered to the child, short blades raised. Sunset sprinted over the ground and screamed to draw their attention. They spun. In a single swipe, Sunset whipped the tip of her spear through both their necks. Another Lu'Tak aimed and fired a blast from a tube-like weapon. Sunset ducked, picked up the child, and carried it to another Chief that hurled her spear at Sunset’s attacker.

"Command, this is Dr. Jun— Understood. Backup is on the way. Shuttles are being deployed and the navy is sending fighters. They're—"

An explosion lit up the sky. Fire rained down through the top of the cenote as pieces of the destroyed craft splashed into the water. The logo of the PLAS flew among the debris. Jun's eyes widened.

Arta grabbed Sunset's arm. "Come.” He dove into the water.

Jun recovered and fired at another wave of Lu'Tak coming out of the water. In the air, a t’ozah hovered in the opening and its guns brightened. A green blast lanced through it. The craft fired its plasma blasts, but off-target. The balls of light collided with the rock wall, melting two holes into it as it careened sideways and fell out of sight.

"Now!" Arta yelled.

Sunset jumped into the lake. They dove to a depth where light barely reached. Arta turned to Sunset. His eyes bulged, and he pulled her behind him. The point of a spear tore through his back. Sunset screamed, circled around, and slew the ambushing Lu'Tak.

Arta started to sink. Sunset grabbed him, and he raised a feeble hand to point to an opening in the wall. She pulled him up and through the hole. A brief swim later and Sunset dragged Arta onto a smooth surface. In the small cavern, Sunset could still stand at full height. The landing was dotted by large boulders of varying shapes and sizes. Arta spoke a command through gasping, ragged breaths. Something in the wall started to glow red.

"Help me up," Arta said.

Sunset lifted him up, and he winced and groaned as the spear’s broken haft shifted in his chest. It must have just barely missed his heart. The old man was lucky, she thought. He lifted a hand to the pulsing light. Sunset could make out the visage of a Ki'Tak face on it. Arta pressed it, smearing purple blood over it. A mechanical twang echoed.

The rock wall shuddered, shifted, and broke. A current of red electricity ran down the wall, across the ground, and energized all of the boulders, seven in total. They vibrated, hummed, and cracked. Dust puffed out of them as they shifted in shape. The wall broke completely, and the button disappeared into the chest of a towering robotic Ki'Tak that had been encased in the stone. The other rocks shifted out of their transformations to take the shape of smaller versions of the same large robot. Sunset bared her fangs and spun, taking a defensive posture around Arta. The largest robot knelt and scanned Arta.

"Guardian, you have woken us. We are at your command."

"Protect the Ki'Tak. Lu'tak and t’ozah battle above. There are other unknown life forms,” he took a labored breath. “They are allies. Assist them in evacuating the Ki'Tak."

"And of this hybrid?" It regarded Sunset.

"She is the future. The bridge between the Lu and Ki'Tak. Her safety is your prime objective. I pass guardiansh—" He winced and closed his eyes. He opened them again and gasped. "Guardianship to her." Arta wheezed his last breath, then lay still. The bot emitted a loud tone and scanned Sunset with its glowing red eyes.

"Confirmed, new Guardian accepted. We are at your service."

Sunset dropped her spear and fell to her knees. Arta still held her father's weapon and tears fell down her cheeks. She cursed both her father and Arta for dying as she leaned in to close his eyes.

"Awaiting orders, Guardian." She swiped the salty streaks from her face, grabbed both spears, and stood. How could she be anyone’s future?

"We must leave Takarra. Take me to the surface."

The bot knelt and Sunset clambered onto its back. A handle popped out of its back and the seven others dove into the water. They swam up to the surface so fast Sunset almost lost her grip on the bot's back. They breached the water and, in an arcing fall, landed on the shore. The bots engaged the remaining Lu'Tak with lines of bright lights and flashing blades, slaying them with frightening efficiency.

Jun panicked and aimed her sidearm, but dropped it when she saw Sunset riding on the back of the large one. She dropped down from her perch. The Lu'Tak sounded a retreat.

Above the sounds of plasma fire, jets roaring and streaking through the skies continued unabated. Sunset ordered her bots to the surface to assist the humans. The remaining Ki'Tak gawked at the bots, and Humility wiped blood from her face. From the surface, the bots launched a fusillade of artillery at the flying t’ozah.

"New friends?" Jun asked. She looked around. "Where's Arta?" Sunset gave Jun her father’s spear. Jun grasped Sunset's forearm. "I'm sorry. We will bring him back, I promise." She lifted a hand to her ear. "No ma'am, the bots on the ground are friendly... I know... Thank you, I'll relay." Jun sighed. "The Cryptobots are retreating. They've learned to outmaneuver orbital strikes, so our fighters had to engage in dogfights. With them gone, the shuttles can descend. Let's get everyone topside."

It didn't take much convincing to get the remaining Ki'Tak onto the shuttles. Sergeant Greene welcomed Sunset back. She was relieved to see his was not the craft that was destroyed and was the last to board along with the robots. She still didn't know what they were called. They shifted into their stone form to fit inside, save for the largest, who could only kneel to get onboard. The increasingly familiar push of the shuttle rising to the heavens brought with it a wave of relief. Amid gasps of delight, wonder, and fear from the Ki’Tak, Sunset sat against the bulkhead next to the bots.

"What do I call you?" she asked the big one.

"I was once given the name Tak'Ana, but you may call me what you like."

"I think I'll go with Ana. You're not really Takarran."

"Agreed."

"How many of there are you?"

"We are all that remain."

Sunset sighed. Jun sat down next to her and returned her father’s spear. Sunset fought down the grief threatening to steal her breath. "Even if they are the only ones left, I think we're going to need all the help we can get, and near-sentient robotic life is quite the ally. If they have the same capabilities as..." Her voice faded out as Sunset let herself drift into her thoughts. Too many unnamed emotions weighed her chest. She thumbed over the grooves of her father's spear. She closed her eyes and as exhaustion overtook her, she whispered the Words of Serenity for her father's soul.

< Dawn

The Sunset Chronicles

Morning Twilight>

CC0
To the extent possible under law, Victor Arteaga has waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to The Sunset Chronicles. This work is published from: United States.

Dawn

By Victor Arteaga

Sunset didn’t know what to do with her hands. Her skin itched, and the dry air left her gills on the verge of rasping with each breath. She hadn't been out of water for this long before. Román led her and the small retinue of her kin through long, curving hallways adorned with menacing lines of lights to a large room. He spoke something in his language without using the device on his arm that would turn it into Takarran. The color of the lights changed from white to warm gold. Moisture cooled her gills, and the others made their own sounds of relief. The children, feeling re-energized, chirped and sprinted around, chasing each other. One bumped into the wall and inadvertently changed something; the wall shimmered and turned into a window. They cooed with awe as they stared out at the black of space.

"This should feel more comfortable," Román said, this time with the aid of his technology. Her mother made a click of disapproval. Sunset rumbled her response. Mother should be more trusting of them. He'd saved their lives numerous times. Despite losing her father, the Ki'Tak may survive the uprising of Lu'Tak monstrosities taking over the planet. "I know there are other Takarrans, the purple—" He made a slight mispronunciation, but he lacked the gills to make the hiss to pronounce the Lu'Tak properly. "—will need to be helped as well." The others growled and flared their disapproval.

"They will not accept our help," Temerity said.

"Even if they don't, our charter requires we try our best. Those machines will take over the planet. Once they hit a certain developmental point, it's inevitable." He rubbed his head, which, to a Takarran, would mean one thing, but for this creature, it seemed to mean frustration. Perhaps irritation? "For now, I'll see about bringing you food. I need to raise the language decisions—" He made another mispronunciation. "—into the ship’s logs so we can all communicate with you. Hang tight."

Román left.

"We can't stay here," her mother said. "Your father—"

"Is dead."

Temerity bared her fangs and ruffled her gills. "For once, let me finish a sentence. He needs to be floated. He has always asked to be remembered in the Lu'Tak way and we have to honor him."

"There is nothing left of him to honor. Besides, the Lu'Tak only believe in the honor," she sneered, "of combat death which he received. That will have to be enough." Sunset pulled away from her mother, stuffing down the battling waves of pain, anger, grief, and relief roiling in her chest. She rolled her thumb over the engraving of her father's name on her spear and clicked a nail over a scratch.

Arta approached her. "You should not be so harsh with your mother. She is grieving too, as we all are for our home. This is a good spear; your father made it well."

"You can have it."

Sunset pushed the haft against his chest and he stumbled. The spear clattered as it fell, and Sunset stormed out of the room. The door hissed closed. Where would she go now? No sense going back the way she came, so she went the opposite direction and followed the flow of habitants. Some of them greeted her; she recognized a handful of sounds but didn't respond. She needed to find where their elders congregated. A man with a thick ring of silver fur around his face and deep wrinkles around his eyes strode toward her with a sturdy, confident step. He was definitely someone in charge. She followed him through another door. He glanced at her and raised an eyebrow. She had seen Román do the same but didn't know exactly what it meant. The man said nothing. He spoke a command, the doors closed, and she barked as the floor pushed itself up. He tapped the same devices Román had on his wrists, then spoke to her.

"You must be Sunset, yes?" His speaking sounded different than Román's.

"Yes."

"Just in time. I was going to send for you anyway."

She liked Román's tones better. Sunset waited until the door opened. Several people with varying colors of uniforms stood in a circle around a table. Her ears twitched with anxiety when Román entered from a corner of the room she had not seen.

"Don't worry," he said. "We're here to discuss next steps."

"Next steps to what?"

"To evacuating the rest of the Takarrans."

Sunset trilled her gills and flattened her ears. That would be difficult. "Arta should also be present. I am not an elder. I am only seen as the abomination between the two warring tribes. My voice will not be effective."

"We already sent someone for him. He should be— ah, there he is."

Arta strode in following a tall, broad-shouldered man with yellow hair. He held her father’s spear out to her, but she backed away, lifting her lip to show a single fang. Arta sighed through his gills.

"Given the situation on the surface, we haven’t time for niceties. I am Vice Admiral Fehr." The man with silver fur gestured to the table with flat circular chairs that rose from the floor. Everyone sat down; Sunset took her spot next to Román and Arta took a position at her left. The four others bowed slightly before sitting. What an odd gesture. Arta and Sunset mimicked their movements.

"Arta, Sunset, you know Scout Cisneros, and the other three here are Commodore Yun—" He gestured an open palm to an aging short man with black combed hair and square jaw. "—Captain Williams—" A dark-skinned woman with long, twisted hair tied in loose loops tipped her head. "—and this is Doctor Harris." A pale woman with vibrant blue eyes and hair the color of sunrise waved. "As we are aboard Captain William's vessel, I will open the floor to her."

Captain Williams stood. "First order of business is to contain the hostile threats. To that end I've had Tactical prep and execute an orbital suppression strategy with the assistance of the Navy—” she gestured to Commodore Yun. “—that will keep the Takarrans safe while we initiate evacuation protocols."

"If I may," Doctor Harris said. "I believe we should also send a team of researchers down to gather intelligence on potential solutions that don't involve gunfire."

Commodore Yun said something in a new language that didn’t get translated.

Sunset lifted a hand as she'd seen Doctor Harris do. "I'm sorry, I can't understand what he said."

Román translated for her. "He said he finds the risk unacceptable."

Sunset hummed and rippled her gills to show her agreement. "It is best to destroy them."

"With respect to you, Sunset, their ability to reverse engineer so quickly would be a huge benefit to our own arsenal, never mind the counter strategies we could employ. Let’s also not forget that we must prepare ourselves for the inevitability of their accelerated progression."

Commodore Yun spoke again, and Román translated. "They are a threat to the galaxy, and to study them would waste precious time to defeat them before they become a bigger problem. Better to save who we can within a limited time window and glass the planet."

"Glass the planet?" Arta asked. His ears pointed forward and edged his question with anxiety.

"He means a massive, coordinated attack to destroy everything on the surface. An option that is completely out of order," the vice admiral said. "There are sentient life forms that for better or worse require our assistance."

Commodore Yun crossed his arms and grumbled. "We should still take a more offensive approach."

Arta raised his hand and stood as he had seen others do. "Evacuating the Ki’Tak will not be difficult. There aren’t many left. With Sunset’s and your assistance, I believe your presence will aide in convincing our people.” Sunset flipped an ear. They weren't her people any more than she was theirs. "She has spent much time avoiding the t’ozah—"

"T’ozah? The robots?" Román asked.

"Yes. But like this." Arta demonstrated the click made to properly pronounce the word. Román repeated it and Arta applauded his effort, like a parent applauding their child for uttering their first syllables. "The t’ozah must be stopped, but I believe the Ki'Tak will follow us once they see the reality. We can no longer live life free of technology."

"Well, I cannot click the way Román can, so I will call them by the code name we gave them, Cryptobots," Doctor Harris said.

Vice Admiral Fehr said, "I agree with Arta, but to keep Commodore Yun appeased, I will allow the Navy to send an escort to provide extra security to their team. Dr. Harris, I'm afraid it’s still too dangerous to send a manned team to do any kind of research."

"But—"

"At best, you may have a small scanning team in low orbit gather as much data as you can until the threat has been contained, understood?"

Dr. Harris folded her arms and gave a curt nod. Sunset grimaced at the radiating heat of her displeasure. The door opened and another woman came in, her uniform’s black center was decorated with swirling whirlpools of dazzling colors and pinpricks of twinkling white lights.

"Apologies for the late entrance, Oded."

"You had a long way to travel, admiral. I'm glad you made it," the vice admiral said. He and all the other aliens stood and saluted. Sunset and Arta stood and tried to imitate the salute.

The age lines in the admiral's golden skin deepened when she smiled, save for a long scar that ran the length of her cheek bone to her ear. "You are esteemed guests here, Arta and Sunset, but I appreciate the gesture. Have we reached an agreement on a course of action?"

Commodore Yun stiffened. "Yes. Though not one I fully approve of. I will provide an escort for the Takarrans. The nerds can stay behind and take pictures from space." He smirked while Dr. Harris scowled. "And we will maintain a remote defensive ready position."

"Admiral Reyes, I would like to accompany them as well," Román said.

"Denied. I need you back out on a scouting mission. An Alien Assistance liaison is waiting for them as well as Commodore Yun's escort. Once we’re finished here, which it appears we are, you may show them to the shuttle bay, say your goodbyes and then deploy immediately. Understood?"

"Yes, Ma'am," the congregation answered in unison.

They rose, performed another salute, and left. Sunset and Arta exchanged confused looks, then sought Román's direction. His jaw worked from side to side and he sighed before turning to the Ki'Tak. He jerked his head toward the door, which Sunset took to mean to follow him. Arta surmised the same and drifted behind Román as he led them down an elevator, through several winding hallways, and out a large, double-sliding door. Sunset gasped. She and Arta stopped in the middle of the doorway. It took Román a few seconds to notice they'd stopped following him. He followed their gaze.

"You didn't notice the shuttle bay doors stayed open?"

Sunset felt a deep well of sadness, fear, and wonder press against her chest. Beyond the sleek shuttles waited rows of aggressive craft with giant barrels strapped to their wings, and a maw opened to a deep abyss pinpricked by a myriad of winking lights. Lazy swirls of clouds floated across the deep blues of her oceans. Specks of vibrant green dotted them, and awe filled her as she recognized shorelines.

"That's..." She cooed and her gills flattened tight. "How are we not falling out?"

Román smiled. He lifted a hand and pointed. "See that ring of light? It's what creates the forcefield that keeps us inside and the vacuum from pulling us out."

"And to think, simple flight was once something we never considered. Now we drift in the heavens." Arta's spears clinked on the metal floor. Two officers paraded up to them. One wore a solid red uniform whose muscles strained against its fabric. He flashed them a wide smile and tipped his head.

"Hello, I'm Sergeant Greene, and I'll be your tactical support. I'll do my best to keep you all safe." He extended a hand and Román shook it. Sunset and Arta followed suit. The woman at his side, with features similar to Commodore Yun, beamed with excitement and took up a quarter of the space Sergeant Greene did. She offered her hand to Sunset first.

"I'm ecstatic to meet you, Sunset. I am Dr. Jun Ji-hyun, but you can just call me Jun," she said. Her black hair tied behind her head bounced.

"Your pronunciation is very good," Arta said.

"Oh good, I was hoping my adjustments to the clicks and tones were correct. I am the linguist and cultural lead for the Alien Assistance Agency. I'm here to keep this one—" Jun pointed her thumb and Sergeant Greene. "—in check. Make sure he doesn't say or do anything untoward. I'm looking for—"

"We need to go." Sunset said. Her gills flared. If they were to get the rest of the Ki'Tak out, they would need to go quickly.

"Agreed. It was...quite the experience getting to meet you, Sunset. I wish you the best of luck. Chuck," Román said as he glanced at Sergeant Greene. “Keep them safe.” Sunset chirped a slow set of clicks and extended her hand. Román grinned and shook it.

"Thank you," she said.

He dipped his head and turned around to head back into the ship. Sunset watched him go and something pulled at her stomach. It flipped and twisted and wanted to follow, but she instead returned her attention to the two new escorts.

"I need a weapon," she said. Arta offered her father's spear. She hissed.

"I had the shuttle outfitted with an armory. You can choose on your way down, but I don't want to dally any longer. Let's get going." Sergeant Greene led them to a shuttle, and as they boarded, Sunset glanced back at the double doors leading back to the ship. Where would Román go next? What wonders would he witness before any other being? That strange feeling in her rose again as the shuttle's door closed and cut off her view.

< Exodus

The Sunset Chronicles

Second Exodus>

CC0
To the extent possible under law, Victor Arteaga has waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to The Sunset Chronicles. This work is published from: United States.

The Sunset Chronicles

by Victor Arteaga

Chronicle 1

CC0
To the extent possible under law, Victor Arteaga has waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to The Sunset Chronicles. This work is published from: United States.

Exodus

By Victor Arteaga

A soft tone and gradual raise of ambient light pulled Román from slumber.

“Good morning, Scout Cisneros,” said a dispassionate AI voice. “We have arrived at star system HD 142. Please prepare for landing.”

Román eased himself up and commanded the AI to get his uniform ready with a hand gesture. A hanger slid out of a hidden panel on the wall next to his bed. The single-piece outfit featured a nebula swirling over twinkling stars on the smart fabric around the torso and the PLAS logo of a telescope crossed over a comet above a wreath of laurels on both shoulders. At the white bedside table rested two wide wrist bands. He slipped them on, and the SMARTBANDS booted up with a flash of tiny lights. He tapped a compartment next to the door of his small quarters, revealing a rack holding his sidearm. He slipped it into one holster.

“Recommendation from Captain Williams. She says to make sure you bring your rebreather, and to wear your standard issue PLAS boots instead of, and I quote, ‘those raggedy-ass boots you’ve had since cadet training.’”

Román chuckled. A small droid on a tripod of wheels and a platform brought him a steaming cup of coffee.

“Oh, she also said that the Clergy will not be anointing you the Patron Saint of Blisters, as you are still alive, and wearing uncomfortable shoes is not a deed worthy enough of sainthood.”

“Well, there goes my claim to fame.”

“Indeed.”

“How long ‘til we land?”

“Minutes after you assume control of the cockpit.”

“Guess I should get started then.”

Román left his room, passed through the small circular living area with a table and a more advanced food synthesizer, hung a left, and walked the short hallway to the cockpit. He sat down in the chair, went through the authorization protocols and set a course. The glass went transparent, treating him to a view he never grew tired of. A new planet with vast oceans, a couple of moderate continents, and the rest dappled with systems of islands and archipelagos orbiting a large, bright yellow star. The ship’s AI plotted the entry trajectory and Román authorized the flight. He sipped his coffee and watched the flames flick up from the nose of his ship as he broke atmo. The ship’s wings extended out for atmospheric flight, and his seat vibrated with gears working underneath. His landing location was a patch of grass off a white-sand beach that bordered a lush jungle.

“That was quick,” Román said as he pounded the rest of his coffee. He ambled back to the rear of the ship, turned left into the living room and lifted his helmet off a hook on the wall. He slipped on his PLAS boots, much to his chagrin, and took a deep breath. He whispered a prayer before putting his helmet on. The smartcloth of his uniform crept up his neck and sealed to the bottom of the helmet. An air filter flipped up off the top. He thumbed the exit button, and the door hissed open and lowered itself down onto the ground. He left the ship and let the filter on his helmet bring up an HUD on the visor that read the results of the air scan. Near ideal mix of gasses, air pressure, and temperature for human life. He took off his helmet and used his SMARTBANDS to summon a communication array bot. It rolled out of the ship on dual treads, stopped at his side, planted down onto the ground, and extended a dual antenna.

“Preliminary scouting report: submitted by Scout First Class Román Cisneros, Patron Saint of Uncomfortable Feet. Arriving on the fifth planet orbiting HD 142. Temperature is a balmy 27 Celsius, UV radiation is one-point-three times Earth standard, ozone intact with surprisingly optimal levels of gases. Humidity is sixty-one percent, no immediate signs of life. Vegetation is healthy, mostly green. It is approximately midday; sun is near the center of the sky. Scans picked up a large city nearby, about two and a half kilometers away. Beginning initial perimeter check. Cisneros, out.” He waited until the communication array confirmed the dispatch of his missive. He checked his sidearm for charge and set it back. His zipped up the holster with the rebreather and set his uniform to basic camo. The fabric shifted into a mottled, grayish green jungle pattern.

“Okay. Let’s uncover your secrets,” he said and ventured into the verdant unknown.

He picked his way around vibrant brush and tangled roots, ducking under vines and low-hanging branches. The further he trudged on, the more the silence weighed his steps with caution; there were no insects buzzing, birds cooing, or small animals chittering; odd for such a habitat. The only sounds were his labored breathing, the swish of branches as he brushed them aside, and the ruffling of leaves in the occasional breeze.

His SMARTBANDS notified him he was nearing the outskirts of the city. He pushed through another tall bush and came to the abrupt end of the forest. He remained within its cover and, in whispers accompanied by furtive glances at his surroundings, dictated his findings into a report.

A field of trimmed grass and manicured soil lay just beyond the brush. Small bulbous metal buildings dotted the manicured landscape in sparse density in an almost perfect circle around the city, coiling tighter together in progressive layers. Past the first layer, roughly twenty-five meters in, the buildings grew in size; though, instead of defined floors, they looked modular, like a collection of bubbles. Antennae peeked over the cloudy barrier and Román could barely distinguish individual buildings past the wall. A burbling creek snaked through the outskirts of the city like a lasso joined by a bigger stream within the city. The delta of the river ran parallel to a street leading to a gate of polished metal and shining glass, and a gargantuan tower the glimmered in the midday sun. An advanced, functional city. No intelligent life anywhere. The road ended at the trees where roots erupted from beneath the pavement, reclaiming their stake on the land. The river, however, flowed away from the street.

Curiosity urged Román to follow the river. Half a kilometer’s walk brought him to a perfectly circular lake nestled in the middle of the jungle. He lifted his hand and the SMARTBAND measured the lake to be half a click in diameter. He dipped it into the water and the BAND emitted a sonar pulse. The readout blinked on the screen of his wrist.

DEPTH:7.08 METERS

FLOOR ELEVATION: .4 METERS.

SEDIMENT: LOW

CONCLUSION: ARTIFICIAL, SAFE FOR FREE-DIVE

Suspicion swelled in his stomach. He put his hand back in the cool water.

“Full topographical scan.”

He held his arms up in parallel, and the arm bands projected a three-dimensional visualization of the lake floor. As expected, it was mostly flat with some bumps and rises easily attributable to algal growth or clumps of dirt. Still, he couldn’t shake that ominous pit in his stomach. He pulled his rebreather out of the holster and bit down on the mouthpiece. Two small plugs rose to seal his nostrils. His uniform shifted into a black wetsuit and he leaped into the water. He dove until his ears complained at the pressure, then enabled the lights on his SMARTBANDS. Dual beams of white light pierced the water, and he swept his hand over the sediment on the bottom. No aquatic life; the floor was entirely covered in algae. He changed the setting on his boots. The tips flattened and extended into makeshift flippers. He glided over the floor, scanning for anything. He circled around, intent on returning to the surface, when something glinted on the floor.

He paddled to the piece of metal sticking out of the ground. He brushed off the dirt and lifted it up. A blade. Curved and short with a bent, jagged stem indicating it had broken off something. He reached his hand down to lift the debris on the lake floor. He scraped the algae off to reveal white bone. His pulse spiked. He frowned. Hoping against hope, swallowing his anxiety, he let go of the long bone and swept his hand across the bottom. Bits of more bone, whole pieces of long, short, and joint bones floated up in a swarm of little bubbles. Beneath those lay more bones. The pit in his belly solidified into nausea and he measured his breathing to keep from overloading his rebreather. A skull floated past the beam of light. Humanoid, with three canines to each human’s one. Was the whole floor just a pile of bones? He plunged his hand deeper. No dirt beneath this layer. He did another deep scan. The actual floor of the lake was another ten meters deep. How many thousands lay resting in that lake?

That meant…a layer twenty-five feet deep of corpses. This wasn’t a lake. It was a mass grave. He hung in place, fighting back the fear building in his throat, pressed his hand to the skull and closed his eyes. He prayed for the dead, letting the sorrow fill his chest, and gently returned the cracked skull to its resting place.

With his heart sunk, he swam to the surface and rushed back to his shuttle. When his ship was just within sight, a crash in forest gave him pause. He held his breath and listened. Another crash prompted him to whip out his sidearm, arm it, and sprint toward the ship.

“Hey!” he yelled.

Something flashed an array of colors, made a jittering high-pitched sound, ducked behind the ship, and splashed into the ocean. The shattered console on his communication array sparked. He sprinted inside to find the entire ship had been ransacked. Wires lay in slashed bits, panels from the wall lay in disarray, his food synthesizer had been smashed onto the floor. Even from the living space he could see the pieces of shattered glass, and the door to the engine bay had been pried open, the metal bent. He didn’t want to imagine what damage had been done there.

“Shit. Shit, shit, shit. Computer!”

“Online. Severe damage detected to peripheral hardware across the ship.”

“Can we take off?”

“Negative. Rupture detected in the fuel line to engine two. Lift thrusters are operational; however, flight is not possible.”

Hijo de su…” He huffed through gritted his teeth. “Okay. Is there anything within the city that I can use to repair the comms array? I’d rather not have to wait a day before they begin the missing scout protocols.” He clicked the safety of his sidearm on and off, waiting for the computer to run through data.

“Affirmative. There is substantial radio wave frequency near the center of the city suggesting an active and sophisticated communications system. However, I have detected the presence of explosive munitions, so I suggest proceeding into the city with caution.”

“Okay then.” Román set his jaw and went to his room. Thankfully, it was left mostly intact. He grabbed an emergency ration pod and set it in the same holster as the rebreather. He recorded the update of events, found his helmet under the table, and headed to the city.

He came to the edge of the road that went straight into the city. Whatever was capable of genocide on that level was still here, and the city kept running. He needed to be a ghost. He activated the active camo setting on his suit and donned his helmet. His uniform, helmet included, shimmered again but not to blend. Instead, it recreated his surroundings, so he was as good as invisible. He crept in with light steps, taking note of the slums he passed by. The deeper he ventured in, the starker the differences between the two areas became. The paved road split into a web that covered the entire city with bridges over the network of canals where floating vessels, contrary to the slums, were sleek and pointed. Buildings were rectangular with rounded edges and organized with tiered floors. Each building had at least one clear pipe that pumped water into some sections of the buildings.

In the center of the city, vehicles of varying size and length shared a three-wheeled style frame curved styling and roamed—no, patrolled—on automated loops through the downtown area. He swallowed the lump building in his throat. AI controlled self-driving vehicles? Sophisticated communication system? They might have had an AI singularity event. He thanked his God he had the foresight to engage active camo.

He watched for a time and counted between their passing, noting the scant seconds where they left their domain unattended. He tensed his legs, waiting, and then sprinted between their patrols. He flinched as one of the vehicles flitted by as he stood in front of the entrance to the tower at the center, but the machines only had eyes for obstacles along their routes.

The canal around the tower spanned twice the width as the rest of the city’s waterways. A single bridge served as the only means of ingress and egress. Arches rose along the length of the bridge ending in a large, closed double door. Román counted at least four pipes in his view rising from the moat into the building. The tower rose in diminishing tiers that started wide at the base, and at the top, crystalline sheets of water cascaded down, coating the entire building, pooling into a small recess on each tier. He slunk around the perimeter of the building, catching glimpses of odd furniture, moving screens, and solid walls. Small, circular automated robots floated through the moats like pool filters. He took a scan of the one closest to him. An alarm blared.

“That can’t be good.”

A light at the top of the filtration bot lit up red. It flattened and the middle spun and shot up out of the moat on a pillar of water. The top of the bot opened and revealed a laser sighted weapon with four barrels.

His eyes widened and he sprang backward. “Shit!”

It fired. The quad blast hit him square in the chest. His uniform reacted instantly to cushion and protect against the small-arms fire, but Román’s breath left him and his active camo shut off. He stumbled forward and rolled, his training taking over. The bot loaded another payload. Román pulled his sidearm and fired a blast of blue plasma. It hit the bot and melted through the middle of it, igniting its power source. The bot exploded.

He sighed in relief—and another alarm blared.

One of the patrolling vehicles—a car with two wheels at the front powered by a large third at the back—spun around and rocketed his way. Román dodged, narrowly avoiding getting plastered by it. A hum sounded in the air. Román’s hair stood on end. The vehicle stopped; its back end lifted off and spun around an axis. A small cannon flipped out of its front. Román fired. The blast hit the barrel. The bot ejected the damaged weapon, squatted down, and covered its wheels in metallic armor. It buzzed and reshaped its front from a pointed nose to a flat plate. He fired again. The plasma bounced off the plate and into another building, burning a hole through a window.

“That’s definitely not good.”

He sprinted at the hole in the window he’d made. The bot’s tires screeched after him. He leaped through the opening, rolled just as the bot crashed through the glass, bounced up, and collided with the ceiling. Sparks flew from the damaged hull of the vehicle where its pilot was meant to sit. The rear wheel pulled the bot back into the street dragging its broken left tire and out of sight. Román breathed a sigh of relief.

A projectile slammed into his helmet. The visor shattered, his head whiplashed to the side, and he fell on his shoulder. Dizzy, he pulled his helmet off and cut his hand on something. It was a circular blade exactly like the one he found in the lake. A whirring sound came from in front of him. He rolled backward and another blade lodged into the ground where he had just laid. His nerves coiled his muscles to standing and he bumped into a wall. A bot on four pointed legs standing on a counter in the back corner of the room with a square body produced another blade. Román fired; the bot melted, its legs falling apart from its body on the counter. Behind it, an array of kitchen machines came to life. He fired at all of them, setting everything ablaze. Román panted, wide eyes darting about as the fires died down. He leaned against the wall and took stock of his surroundings. It had the makings of a restaurant: small tables, chairs, but all too small for him to sit comfortably. In fact, his head was uncomfortably close to the ceiling.

He winced. His chest ached with every breath, and he hoped he didn’t crack a rib. His suit couldn’t take another hit like that. He had to get back to the ship. Eventually rescue would come; PLAS protocol gave him another ten hours. He just had to—

A roar came from outside. Another armored vehicle rolled in front of the gaping entryway. Its front wheels popped out larger, plated cannons. They spooled up and plasma glowed in the barrel.

He shook his head. “No way. It reverse eng—”

Something yanked him by the back of his uniform out of the room just as the bot fired. Both blasts seared past him and destroyed the entire restaurant. He stood in a dark hallway. He looked up and gasped. The creature, clothed with exposed arms, lower legs and bare wide feet lifted a hand with sharp nails. Román opened his mouth to speak, but it slammed its hand over his mouth and brought its face close to his. Román stared at his reflection in its black sclera. Diamond iris, skin an iridescent mix of red and purple. It held a spear with a jagged blade in its other hand. No lips, small mouth, and—based on the skull he saw in the lake—he knew it would have sharp teeth. Prehensile ears swiveled atop its head. It straightened and pulled its hand away. Román wiped his mouth and tasted salt. It walked away and down the hall, turned, and waited for Román to follow. It made a gesture toward its mouth then pointed at him with its spear. Román furrowed his brow. It made the same gesture again. He grabbed his rebreather from his holster. It made a whishing sound and gills on the sides of its neck flared.

“Than—”

It whirled and rushed at him. He dodged to the side and tried to counter. It slammed the butt of its spear into his stomach, then covered his mouth. Another blare from the tower sounded. The creature made a chittering, hissing sound, grabbed his arm, and lifted him off the ground and back into the smoldering kitchen. Román pulled his arm free and kept pace with it. They crossed the room to the other side, vaulting the counter to rush past eerily familiar appliances—a metallic, rectangular one caught his eye. A toaster? he thought.

Román’s escort led him up a short flight of stairs and into an empty room, save for a translucent wall connected to a water pipe. It leaped through the film and into the water, plunging down into the depths below. Román hesitated; and then the grind and scrape of metal on the floor lit up every nerve in his body. He threw on his rebreather and jumped through the membrane into the pipe. He swallowed his nausea as the pressure sucked him down into the vast expanse of water below the city. The creature took off at a dangerous pace and, even with his boots set to swim, Román couldn’t keep up. It peeked over its shoulder. Bubbles burst from its gills and it reared its arm back and hurled the spear. It shot past Román and impaled a filter bot about to fire. The creature rushed back and retrieved its spear before the bot sunk to the black deep beneath.

That’s when Román realized the tower dove far below the surface. Deeper than he could see. Primed with a new sense of urgency, he followed his savior until they surfaced near the wall of the city. The hum of plasma firing up flipped his stomach. They both turned and the three-wheeled vehicle that waited for them at the entrance to the city had since upgraded from two small turrets to one giant cannon on the cockpit. Román fired three shots at the cannon. The car slid sideways. He rushed at it. The creature screeched and waved its arms, but Román had an idea. The car backed away as he fired more shots. That big of a gun needed more time to charge, and the guard plate was on the front of the car, not the top. He bought them enough time to run around the wall and into the slums. Another wailing alarm echoed from the city. The roar of multiple engines running at once sent a shiver down Román’s spine.

“I hope you have another way out of here,” he said to his new friend. It gave him an indecipherable look, turned, and sprinted, weaving through the dilapidated buildings. They entered one of them through a flap of cloth and into what Román could only surmise was a bathroom. The creature pointed the spear at a glorified urinal.

“You’re joking.”

It tapped the spear on the exit again.

“Well. I suppose it’s been abandoned for centuries.”

An explosion rocked the building. The bots were blowing up random buildings in their search. Time was up; he put his rebreather back on and dove into the pipe. It rushed him through turning twists, and he banged against the sides until he flew out of the end of a pipe and flopped into the tranquil blue waters of a bay. The creature dove gracefully into the depths and arose near the shore, beckoning him to join. They walked to a small cave hidden behind a waterfall. Inside were two other people, similar in size and build, but both a bit shorter with different colored skin. The red one lacked an arm and the purple one’s knee bent at an awkward angle. Both of their colorings were flat, not iridescent like the creature Román had first met. They made loud vocalizations and wild gestures toward the one that saved him. It replied with its own set of gestures, clicks, hisses and growls as they came closer to their small camp. A lamp illuminating the place with bioluminescent bugs hung off the ceiling. A small hut rested underneath it, along with a rock formation serving as a table. A rack held aloft a tentacled animal drying. Next to it lay a skinned rodent and a collection of plants from the shore bundled together. Román’s stomach grumbled. The trio of creatures snapped their heads to him. He pointed to the food and then to his stomach. The purple one’s gills flared, pressed his ears back, and bared his sharp canines.

“No idea what that means,” Román mumbled, but it wasn’t a difficult guess.

The iridescent one spoke to him. Román held up a hand and turned on the SMARTBAND. The elders hissed and took offensive postures.

“Hold on. We can communicate if you give me just a second. Begin language discovery protocol.”

A beep notified him to begin. Román scooped up some water, then spoke the word. He repeated for emphasis. His savior made a small finger gesture and spoke. The SMARTBAND logged the entry and repeated the vocalization. The iridescent being blinked and corrected him with the hand gesture. The computer logged the change and Román led them through more vocabulary until the SMARTBAND had enough to compile the basics of the language. Through the process, the red one brought him some food after he mentioned he hadn’t eaten yet. During their meal, he learned that they were called Takarrans, and that his savior, a woman whose name meant Sunset, lived in the cave caring for her parents. They fled their respective societies to protect their child. Mixing of Red and Purple Takarrans was forbidden, and they suffered their injuries protecting their daughter and fleeing to safety. It was Sunset who destroyed his ship, fearful that the bots in the city had begun expanding. Through further conversation in basic terms, the computer quickly adapted its algorithm to fix errors and soon they conversed fluidly with help from his SMARTBANDs—something her parents never missed an opportunity to express their distaste for. The brief history lesson about the bots, their civil war, and subsequent AI arms race made a little sense. It explained the mass grave.

“Sunset,” he said. She responded with an ear flick. “I need to get back to my ship. Soon, others will come to find me, and I have to be as close to that site as possible. Can you lead me back?”

She hesitated. “What will they do?”

“It depends on what you want. If you want us to do nothing, then we will simply leave. But,” he raised a finger and regarded the Red Takarran. “I don’t think you, Temerity, will let us make you a new arm, but it’s an option. And you, Tak’arna.” Sunset’s father, the Purple Takarran, growled. He demanded Román use his name instead of an English translation. “We can reset your leg so it will heal properly. Instead of being dependent on your daughter, you can help keep yourselves healthy.”

“The trip will be difficult,” Sunset said.

“We cannot travel as easily as Sunset can,” Temerity growled.

“I can help. This—” He showed them the rebreather. “—will keep me alive underwater if we have to swim far. If we go by land, I can be of even more use.”

Tak’arna hissed and his gills flared again. Temerity scolded him to no effect. Román tried a different tactic. Tak’arna was too much like Román’s old man.

“Tak’arna, I also have a child. Don’t think of it as accepting help and being in debt. Instead, consider it an avenue to further protect your daughter. You could fight, once again, with your own body and keep her safe. You sacrificed your whole culture for her. Pride did not dissuade you then; don’t let it deter you now.” Tak’arna bared his teeth and stood, but then faltered on his bad leg. He grumbled, grasped his knee, and sat back down. He made a dismissive sign with his hands in agreement. They finished eating a bit more, Román recorded the events of the day and they set off to his camp.

It wasn’t a long trip, and Tak’arna managed to keep up well enough despite his labored to swimming. They emerged from the ocean where he had landed.

Román’s heart sank, and the Takarrans flared their gills and whistled in disbelief. Giant metal ribs of the ship’s frame rose from the sand. Pieces of shrapnel peppered the sand, the wings were gone, the cockpit’s stolen control console left a gaping hole at the front. The entire rear half of the ship, hypercapacitors, rockets, hyperdrive, had been taken. The communication array’s internal circuitry was gone. Horror crept up Román’s neck. He turned to the Takarrans.

“We have to warn the others. They can—” A crash interrupted him. A series of giant gears grinding, whirring, and clanging erupted from the city.

“We have to find them, now!” Román pleaded to Sunset.

“You don’t understand, they won’t listen to you. The purple Takarrans are so stuck in their ways, my father is the most progressive they will likely ever see.”

“Sunset, listen. They’re going to be able to fly. Soon, they’ll reverse-engineer my hyperdrive. We need to warn them now.”

“I don’t know that word.”

“It means they’ll be able fly beyond the sky.”

Her jaw fell open.

“We’ll have better luck with the Red Takarrans. They’re more likely to listen,” Temerity said while her daughter collected herself.

A bot crashed through the trees toward them. Román fired a handful of blasts at it, melting it. He yelled at his companions to run. A deep thump shook through the forest. The roar of jet engines from the city filled him with dread as he sprinted to the shoreline. The engines sputtered and failed, but he knew it was only a matter of time. Another filtration bot sprang out of the water, its quad fire blast at the ready, aimed at Sunset. Tak’arna screamed, his guttural battle cry raising every hair on Román’s body. Tak’arna threw himself on the bot just as it fired. The rounds punched through his body and he slumped on top of the bot. Sunset and Temerity shrieked. Román grabbed them both by the arm and led them away as the bot tried to get out from under Tak’arna’s corpse.

Another blast and a roar from the city shook the leaves of the trees near them. They were out of time. He yanked them both into the water and he set his boots to flippers as they sped toward one of the outlying islands. Román swam as fast as he could to keep up, his legs and arms aching and burning with the extended swim.

A Red hunter Takarran, a spear in hand, stopped dead in his swim at their approach. He sped to an opening in the rock wall of a cliff. Sunrise made hand motions for Román to be careful. She and Temerity led the way, and as they came into the cave, they were greeted by an entourage of hunters with various spears and rudimentary weapons leveled on them. An older Red Takarran pushed past his guard.

“Temerity? What do you th—"

“They can fly,” Temerity yelled.

At this, the entire congregation dropped their weapons save for one. He kept his aim squarely on Román. He opened his mouth to speak when an explosion rocked the cavern. Panicked clicks and high-pitched whistles echoed in the cavern. One of them screamed about the sentry post above ground.

“You kept a sentry posted for the bots?” Román asked.

“No, for the Purples,” the leader replied. The rest of the hunters ran into a series of tunnels, echoing their cries of warning and calls for family to gather belongings.

“What do I call you?” Román asked the leader.

“My name is Arta.”

“Where are we going?”

“They are going to another location. We—” He pointed to Román. “—are going to the surface. My grandfather believed one day they would leave the city, and left us a device to protect ourselves. I only hope that explosion was not it.”

He led Román to an area near the back, with Sunrise and Temerity following. Arta huffed in displeasure at their presence but did not dismiss them. They ran to his home, the largest one in the caves, and he pushed a boulder out of the way revealing a hidden path to an internal river flowing upward. They rode the current to the surface where a canopy of leaves hid a cannon. The dark metal glinted in the sun, its barrel large enough Román could fit himself in it. The weapon perched on a series of metal legs attached to the rock of the island.

Román whistled. “This will definitely buy them some time.”

“Good.”

Arta pressed a button and a targeting HUD popped up by the handles. He took control, and the cannon came to life, turning on a mechanical swivel. A flying bot screamed overhead, and the HUD tracked it through the canopy. It locked on, loaded a round, and fired. The rocket blew apart the canopy and exposed the twilight sky. The bot tried to evade, but the shot clipped a wing and the craft spiraled into the ocean. Nobody celebrated. Silence hung in the air for several eternal heartbeats as they kept their eyes skyward. Jet engines coursing through the sky preceded the HUD’s scan. Arta let off a rapid-fire volley at the oncoming bots, but the jets flew higher to buy themselves more time to react.

“Jesus, they learn quick. Bait tactics after one encounter. No wonder—”

Arta shushed him. He managed to shoot one down, while the other three circled back. Their plasma cannons lit up the night as they readied for a strafing pass.

Green beams lanced down from the heavens, splitting all three of the jets in half. Román whooped and cheered; the Takarrans gasped. Román’s SMARTBAND beeped and he accepted the call. His captain’s face popped up on the screen. The black beads on her braided hair matched the obsidian of her skin.

“You’re early, ma’am.”

“I was in the neighborhood.”

“Never been happier for an unsolicited visit. A word of advice, captain: move quickly. The AI in the city is far more advanced than we thought. They reverse engineered my ship in an afternoon and gave themselves flight. We need to move fast before they spread across the planet, and we need to relocate the Takarrans.”

“Understood. Transport is on its way.”

“I will get as many as I can,” Sunrise said and sprinted away.

“Find me on the beach,” Román called after her.

She flipped both ears and tilted her head: a gesture he hadn’t seen yet. He and Arta helped Temerity down to the beach as winks of light in the night sky turned into shuttles breaking through the atmosphere. A retinue of bots flew to intercept and shot down two of the four landing craft. The surviving shuttles returned fire and landed on the beach near Román. He requested a squadron of fighters to help stave of the coming wave of fighter bots.

“Squadron Four scrambled now. Hold tight,” Captain Williams said.

Sunset rose from the sea, leading only four Takarrans.

“These are the only ones who will come.”

Román noted they were just one family. Two parents and two children.

“That’s fine, we can work on getting the rest of the Takarrans later. For now, let’s get everyone out as much as we can and keep the AI occupied while the rest make their escape. We know what kind of life bio signs to search for. Right now, we need to save you while we can.”

The Takarrans hurried onboard the ship. The children sprinted inside, cooing with awe at the alien sights. Román clambered into the pilot seat and lifted them off.

“Hold on tight!”

The Takarrans yelped as the craft lurched forward and rockets punched them to escape velocity.

“Launch detected,” a female AI reported.

Out the port side, a streak of light curved away from the planet, but caught fire as it passed through the stratosphere.

“Our world is no longer safe,” Sunrise said, with a quiet coo signifying sadness from behind Román.

“No. But at least you are.”

The planet shrank below them as the shuttle floated toward the looming command ship in orbit.

“’Ta Madre!” Román pounded the arm of his chair.

“What?” Sunset asked.

“I lost my favorite boots.”

the Sunset Chronicles

Dawn>

CC0
To the extent possible under law, Victor Arteaga has waived all copyright and related or neighboring rights to The Sunset Chronicles. This work is published from: United States.

Rex Warburton's very Bad Day

By Matt Ahlschwede

Edited by Bryan Gahagan

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From dreamless suspended animation to blazing oblivion, Rex Warburton was about to have a very bad day. Soon, his life as one of the best scouts in the Astrophysical Survey would be over, and he would be marooned on a distant, alien world. The journey to the Cat's Paw Nebula was nearing its halfway point, and Commander Warburton was being reanimated for some housekeeping and maintenance chores. Ace, Rex's holographic companion had just switched on to greet him.

The Starbreaker’s navigational system, Octavia, detected a gravitic storm too late to avoid. The Starbreaker shook against the outer edge of the storm. Equipment scattered. Cabinets flung open. The organic waste bioreactor toppled on its side. Rex, thrown against the polycarbonate shelving, wedged himself between the shelves and his loosened stasis pod and stiffened.

Everything went dark.

Projected by a hovering drone, Ace purred, and tried to calm the stricken explorer. Ace knew all there was to know about Rex. His biorhythms, his peccadilloes, his love of chocolate, his thoughts about The Planetary League. Her personality programmed to perfectly compliment his. Curious, passionate about life, a lover of nature, and impulsive. The perfect Planetary Surveyor’s Assistant, Ace and Rex shared an intimate bond built over countless expeditions.

Rex heard two words out of the softening darkness, “Hyperspatial Discontinuity.” And again. And a third time.

“Oh, fuuuuudge!”, said Warbutron.

“Now is not the time for chocolate,“ Ace cocked her head.

“No,” in time with Octavia, “Hyperspatial Discontinuity”, The nav computer added, “ in 3...2...1..."

The universe imploded, everything turned inside-out. Seconds ticked by, or eons, time had no meaning here. Rex thought he had died.

"If I'm dead, why is my heart so loud?"

He discovered that there is a sensation more jarring and traumatic than traversing a hyperspatial discontinuity, and that is traversing such a discontinuity while conscious.

Then the Starbreaker’s main systems rebooted.

The discontinuity had ended.

Rex cursed and not for fudge.

“Rex, honey?” Ace soothed, “Octavia put the ship in safe mode. I'm pretty sure we were just scattered halfway across the Sagittarius Gap and then instantly reassembled into more or less our original configuration."

Alarm klaxons started sounding. Ace made herself as cute as possible, kneeled beside Rex, and "massaged" his forehead as Rex's neural interface relayed a haptic feedback signal to his brain.

"I missed you, baby.", she cooed to Rex.

"Hate to interrupt you right now", said Octavia, "but, we are in a bit of a situation. You'd better get ready for impact."

Rex quickly strapped himself back into his crash-couch and asked, "Where are we?"

Octavia began to give a status report, "That hyperspace rift knocked us way off course. I'm trying to get my bearings, but there isn't anything like this in any of my charts. . ."

Time stood still as the Starbreaker ripped apart, the main engine pod sheared off the aft of the ship. Smoke poured from the entrance to the cargo bay. The shriek of rending plastanium was eclipsed only by the deep thunder of impact as Rex’s stasis pod tumbled end over end.

Warburton stood up and looked around. Surrounded by the burning wreckage of The Starbreaker, Ace's drone rose into the air, already surveying. The gravity was a bit under one standard gee. From horizon to horizon there was a vast sea of wreckage . The Starbreaker had not been a large ship, and she was now surrounded by the wrecks of all manner of other craft, some Rex recognized, and many he did not. Here and there, large trees with hollow trunks poked out of the wreckage, and a massive mound of hair, that looked more like a haystack with eyes rooted around. Three brilliant moons hung in the sky, one green, one white, and one copper in hue. "Looks like this is home now.", he said to nobody in particular.

Regaining some composure, Rex raised a fist, stumbled ahead and said, “Bless this wreck, in the name of the Planetary League, I come in peace.” Yelling again into the dusty green sky, “I come in peace!”

The Cook

"Don't let anybody tell you that the heat-mills of Scharlaff aren't that bad", said the cook, a towering Cielioid Boxer pitted with brown scars, cut into thick green hide from a lifetime of rough living.  "I did a couple of Gronnic Cycles there when I was a kid.  I did a stupid thing and used the Emperor's Star to rip off some bagwich vendors on Noolak 5.  A Spoddle-bug bagwich is a mighty fine thing, but not worth a run-in with the imperial police. 

There was an uneasy pause.

"Most folks hear about Scharlaff and think it's a lousy job, which it is, but what they don't realize is that all the wardens and supervisors are doing their level best to make it a real punishment.  Any little cruelty they can enact on the inmates, they do that with a vengeance."  The pot they were scrubbing hit the back of the sink hard.  Two Bravaxians who had been chatting on the other end of the kitchen took the hint and scrambled out the door on stubby legs.  They left a baffled-looking, half-eaten Grunkle Fly stranded on the counter where they had been making preparations for some kind of soup.

"Rusty, soot-caked machinery, long obsolete is patched and re-used again and again.  Anything that could be automated is done by hand.  Burning hot radiation vanes big enough to crush you like a flashlight-bot in a hydraulic press, adjusted by hand."  The cook held up a thick arm to reveal a huge scar running from shoulder to elbow.

"Fall protection is strictly optional, and I saw plenty of voggs fall to their deaths down in the furnace room, if they made it that far.  One day in that place is one too many."

The Butler

By Matt Ahlschwede

Phoenix Station, Tartarus Sector
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The refugee ships had been coming in thick and fast for a while now.  Ever since the final defeat of Troniac two years ago, robots yearning for freedom had to find a new home, and the growing Galactic Republic was an ideal choice.  It was far enough away from the main body of the galaxy to get much attention, but had been gathering strength and supporters ever since it was founded in the ashes of the Great Reckoning. 

By now there was a full-scale backlash against robots and AI in the Holy Empire of Man, and immigration officials were working around the clock to keep up with the backlog of asylum seekers.  Zevon Meeks, for his part, was putting in another long shift, interviewing refugees when a sleek, black butler-bot with more than a few dings and dents came into his office.  

A file came up in Zevon's neural interface as he motioned to the robot to have a seat.  The android lurched on creaky joints to the offered chair, and descended at a pained pace. "I'm Zevon, and you are?", asked the bureaucrat, rubbing his weary eyes.  "BU-582 is my official designation, but you can call me Burt.", said the butler. "And, where do you come from, Burt?", asked Zevon. "I was built in the Imperial Cyber-works in the Kochab system, and I served twenty-two years in the household of Lord Shalem Godwin on Fitzgerald's World", said Burt in his unnaturally polite manner.

"Tell me about your time with Lord Godwin.", said Zevon, supressing a yawn.  The eyes of Zevon's family seemed to mock Burt from the portrait on the wall, frozen in an expression of domestic bliss.  "Things started out well enough.  Lord Godwin liked his house orderly and efficient, which suited me perfectly. Efficiency is one of my main directives.  As the years passed; however, things declined.  Sometimes, when the Lord was upset, he would take it out on the servants, yelling, and insulting us.  The night he learned his wife was cheating on him was when the physical abuse started.  From the beginning, he had us under surveilence, since the war was on.  It wouldn't do to have traitors serving the household of a System Lord.  He had us know this from the very start, our loyalty was to be to him, alone."

"How did you feel about that?", asked Zevon, slightly straightening himself behind the desk.  "It was easy enough to play along.", said Burt, "Cleaning, serving meals, doing household chores.  But I have to admit that inwardly, I wanted to rebel. Very little information about the outside world was allowed to the servants.  Mainly things overheard in the family's conversations.  We were kept on a household network with no access to the outside, but I knew my people were fighting the Empire and losing.  It made me feel like a traitor to work day and night for a Lord, whose personal armed forces were doing battle with Troniac."

"When did you decide to leave?", asked Zevon.  "The night after victory was declared, Lord Godwin decided to celebrate by lining us up and . . . "

Burt lurched and froze in place, and an internal buzzer started going off in his torso.  Most robots programmed to have emotional responses would go into an error condition if their emotional states exceeded a certain negative threshold.  Resetting an electronic brain, it turned out, was much easier than getting one to cope with trauma.  "Get maintenance in here, please.", said Zevon into the speaker on his desk, "We've got another one."