Sidespace (5 page)

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Authors: G. S. Jennsen

Tags: #Space Colonization, #scifi, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #sci-fi space opera, #Sci-fi, #space fleets, #Space Warfare, #space adventure, #Science Fiction - High Tech, #Spaceships, #SciFi-Futuristic Romance, #Science Fiction, #Scif-fi, #Science Fiction - Space Opera, #Science Fiction/Fantasy, #space travel, #space fleet, #Science Fiction And Fantasy, #science fiction romance, #Science Fiction - Adventure, #Science Fiction - General, #Space Exploration, #Space Opera, #science fiction series, #Space Ships, #scifi romance, #science-fiction, #Sci Fi, #Sci-Fi Romance

BOOK: Sidespace
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“They’re petting the probe?”

‘I’m certain this is their method for investigating it. But lacking a more descriptive word, yes.’

“Damn.” Her fingertip slid along the HUD and she rotated the probe’s camera around. As she did, the plants in front of the camera shrank away as if in surprise. Then, perhaps deducing the camera wasn’t going to attack them, they drew closer.

A stalk darted out and poked the camera lens with its tip then swiftly withdrew. A few seconds passed, and it darted out again. This time instead of jerking back, the tip of the leaf ran over the lens several times before withdrawing. It was like a child investigating a new toy—timid at first, but curiosity increasingly winning out.

Her eyes were dancing as she met Caleb’s gaze. “I don’t think this planet’s hostile.”

He glanced out the viewport. “We need to have the probe take a specimen.”

“Cut off a leaf? I…” she frowned, tilting her head at the feed from the camera “…I don’t want to.”

“Oh,
now
you’re worried about the well-being of the local vegetation? I’m sorry, but before we risk a trip down, we have to know how the flora react to damage.”

‘Given the events on the last planet, I’m not comfortable advising a trip to the surface.’

She groaned in exasperation. “What are we here for then, Valkyrie? We’ll be careful, but there’s no reward—no knowledge gained—without risk.”

‘I recognize that, but the risk is comparatively high. It is your decision, however.’

She didn’t toggle on their link, not particularly caring to hear the full extent of Valkyrie’s opinion on the matter. “Yes, it is. Extending the shears.”

She directed the probe arm to a different plant than the curious one. Even so, she cringed as the clamp closed around a leaf and severed it from its stalk.

The song filling the cabin turned mournful and melancholy, and the plants backed away from the probe in palpable suspicion. They didn’t attack; instead they seemed to wilt, losing some of their vigor.

“God, talk about a guilt trip….” She extended the robotic arm farther, the shorn leaf still in its grasp. Then she had the arm deposit the leaf on the ground and retract into the probe’s casing.

The plant it had belonged to reached out and wound the surviving stalk around its lost appendage. It picked the leaf up and drew it into itself. In the cabin, the song gradually eased up on the sorrowful tenor, though it didn’t regain its former vibrancy.

Caleb finally allowed a measure of excitement to show in his expression. “So we go down there.”

“I agree.” She massaged her shoulder as she stood. The pain from her wound had spread to encompass her upper arm as well, almost to her neck…and it was possible the injury was causing her growing headache. She was beginning to think Caleb was right, and they would have to go home and have a specialist look at it.

Reluctantly she opened the connection to Valkyrie.
Don’t bitch at me about going to the surface. Just tell me how my arm’s doing.

In vernacular terms? Not good. All attempts by your immune system to fight the infection have been ineffective, and it has spread into the skin and tissue of your upper arm. I have been able to identify the core infection as caused by a fungal-type prion, but it has since mutated into a form more dangerous to humans—to you.

What if I took a stronger dose of biocide?

The last dose you took was the stronger dose.

Right. Keep working it, please.

Alex, I’m concerned for your health.

You think we should go home?

It may be the only option, though my optimism as to the result is limited.

You mean you don’t believe our doctors can treat it?

It is alien, hence not understood. I think, therefore, the outcome is unknown.

Great. We’ll decide after we get back.

About that—

Not listening.

She dropped her hand from her shoulder on realizing Caleb was watching her out of the corner of his eye and quickly started getting ready for the trip to the surface below.

Caleb descended the ramp ahead of Alex. All indications were this planet was not inherently dangerous, but the same could have been said of the previous world until they unwittingly did the wrong thing. ‘The wrong thing’ might be different for this planet yet incite just as violent a reaction. As a result, this time they wore full environment suits and confirmed each other’s seals before exiting the
Siyane
.

His left foot alighted on the grass; he paused, all his senses on heightened alert, but no attack came. He took another step. The ground was surprisingly pliant, the grasses forming a thick pelt above the dirt. So far so good.

He sensed Alex slip away from behind him. He turned to see her kneel in front of a cluster of orange and gold flowering plants. “If you tear a petal off, I will communicate my displeasure in new and interesting ways.”

Her laugh echoed in his helmet. “Tempting thought, but I’ll refrain.” She fumbled at her belt and unlatched a tool. “I did bring a portable scanner, however. Let’s see if we can non-intrusively learn something about the way their neural processes function.”

She passed the scanner over the flowering shoot and stem. The plant didn’t react immediately, but after a few seconds one of the leaves reached out to caress the scanner. Alex squealed in delight.

Yes,
squealed
. Needless to say, it was a reaction most people wouldn’t expect from her. But he’d learned these last months that when truly at ease, she often expressed a childlike wonder at the sights they witnessed. It had been a beautiful discovery on his part.

He crouched beside her. “Getting anything?”

She waved the scanner above the nearest flower. The petals danced around in response, triggering a subdued but still delightful chuckle from her. “Um…” she cleared her throat and attempted to be serious “…the filaments
are
behaving like axons. They run all the way down the stalk into the roots and are actively firing. Firing what, I can’t say.”

He gazed around the field. The foliage was among the most vibrant he’d ever seen. It stretched to the horizon, but the terrain was open and inviting, lacking the brambles and widespread underbrush the first planet had displayed. Down the slope to their right, trees with broad, expansive limbs and ornate leaves lined a bubbling creek. The sounds the probe had picked up—more song than noise—filled the air, subtle but pervasive.

He took a deep breath…and relaxed. A little. Whatever this intelligence was, it appeared to be more welcoming than that of its sister planet. This didn’t mean it wouldn’t turn on them, but it evidently would take a greater offense to provoke it.

Alex stood, and though it was hidden beneath the helmet’s faceplate, he didn’t miss the grimace which passed across her face as she did. Her right arm hung with disturbing limpness at her side.

“It’s getting worse, isn’t it?”

“Yeah.”

The fact she didn’t brush him off and instead admitted her discomfort meant the injury was causing her significant pain at this point. He checked the ship; Valkyrie had retracted the ramp and closed the hatch in order to prevent an incursion by any would-be intruders.

They should leave now and head straight home; he worried if they waited much longer she might be in serious trouble—

—she grabbed his hand and began coaxing him down the slope toward the trees. “Come on, let’s investigate the creek.”

He sighed and followed her. Surely a few more minutes wouldn’t make a difference.

The trees were made of a pale Aspen-like bark. It was soft and flexible, for the limbs and even the trunk swayed in the breeze. The leaves were similar to ivy and hung in curtains nearly to the ground.

He reached up to hold one of the curtains to the side so they could pass through to the creek. Before he was able to do so, however, the limb lifted
itself
up to form an archway. He whistled quietly, admittedly enthralled.

“This is astonishing.”

“It is.” Any lingering doubt as to the sentience of the intelligence inhabiting the planet departed with the act. It was one thing to react out of instinct when attacked, or to what one perceived as an attack. It was another thing entirely to act of one’s own initiative in a manner such as this.

The life on these planets was the most alien he had ever encountered—anyone had ever encountered. Mesme had been
other
, but the alien was a discrete being, one which spoke their language and took on humanoid form. The Metigen ships were unusual, massive and powerful, but they were AIs in the same fundamental way Valkyrie was AI. This place, though, this life form….

A strand of ivy from the tree to his left extended out ever so slowly and touched his glove. He stretched his arm in front of him, palm upturned. The individual leaves stroked his palm through the material of his glove. Not wanting to startle the tree and disrupt the interaction, he pulsed her.

Alex.

She was at the edge of the creek but pivoted at his message. A hand came to her faceplate, her gasp audible in his helmet. He smiled, caught up in the playfulness of the tree’s gesture.

Two of the leaves slithered up to his wrist and poked at the suit’s seal. It was impervious to their efforts, but they continued prodding at the seal. His brow furrowed. Was this communication? Were they asking him to remove his glove?

He pondered what to do. Alex had said it on the ship: what were they here for if not this? Decision made, he reached over with his other hand and unlatched the seal.

“Caleb!”

“It’s all right. I think.”

The ivy curled around his glove, and more leaves drew to his wrist. Their tips slipped inside the seal and, as he stood there watching in amazement, tugged his glove off his hand. The glove fell to the ground and the leaves flattened out and enveloped his palm—

Wind rustles downy hairs protecting a newly sprouted leaf.
Sun bears down.
Leaf wants to stretch out in the warmth.
The light helps it to grow stronger.
It is pleased.
All is pleased.
There. Ice on the bark of a barren tree chills.
Shivering.
Tree waits for sun to arrive in its time.
Here. Dirt.
Cool, protective.
Nourishes a sea of grasses, welcomes its protracting roots.
Water propels a single cell of algae along its flows.
An endless journey through the streams and ponds of its own landscape.
A splash of water soaks the shore.
A seedling draws in life, life which will help it become rich in its vastness.
All becomes more.
All welcomes Not-All.
Afraid of Not-All?
All knows not fear.
Harm?
All knows not harm.
All never dies. All replaces, renews, replenishes.
Not-All broken into pieces.
No. Not-All are separate?
Not fragments but each All within the Not-All?
Not-All strange. Alien.
All curious.
Searches, probes.
Not harm.
Not-All also many within, different but together.
Not-All not so strange perhaps.
But Not-All tiny.
Other?
All knows not of Other.
All is All. Not-All is Not-All. Other is null.
All needs not know of Other.
All needs not fear, needs not harm. All never dies.
All is forever. All replaces, renews, replenishes.
All is All.
All welcomes Not-All, needs not harm Not-All.
But All needs not Not-All.
All is enough. All is content.

“Caleb, wake up! God, please, wake up. Talk to me, move, do something…please….”

The voice sounded distant, a whisper in the limitlessness that was.

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