Authors: Philip Bosshardt
Tags: #ocean, #scuba, #marine, #whales, #cetaceans, #whirlpool, #dolphins porpoises, #time travel wormhole underwater interstellar diving, #water spout vortex
When the steady drone and beat of the Time
Twister reverberated throughout the cockpit, they all knew they had
come back to the same time and place.
Chase had been nervous, wondering if the
Umans would do something with the Twister that might affect the
Farpool. From here though, everything seemed the same.
An hour’s navigation brought them to
the project site, near one of the Twister’s mooring cables. It was
a shallow ravine, wedged between small hills, festooned with
shattered lava tubes and strange dark pits along the seabed.
Scattered across the ravine were scores of tents and platforms,
where the Omtorish worked on their part of the dismantling project.
Huge fiber nets swollen with collected chronopods were tied to
stakes in the seabed. Other sacs contained
mah-jeet
and other creatures used to break down
the machine’s foundations.
Veskort drove them to a larger tent on a rise
overlooking the ravine. There, Kloosee and Pakma and other kelke
were helping wrestle a chronopod inside.
They were overjoyed to see Chase and Angie
again.
“Ke’shoo…ke’shoo
!” cried Pakma. She helped Angie
squeeze out of the kip’t and nuzzled and nosed her up and down,
pulsing happiness along with some fatigue, and a touch of sadness.
“I’m so glad you came back…how are you…
litor’kel ge
!”
Chase and Kloosee nuzzled each other in the
Omtorish way, beak to beak, with whistles and clicks and screeches
in between.
“We barely made it back,” Chase admitted. He
thanked Veskort for some remarkable piloting skills. The prodsman
grunted, pointing to the battered cockpit.
“We were lucky…look at that. It’s a wonder
the cockpit wasn’t torn right off…this sled’s ready to be
scrapped.”
Chase winced at the beat of the wavemaker, so
nearby. “Sounds like nothing has changed. I guess I’m glad…at least
the Farpool worked.”
“Here,” Kloosee placed Chase’s hands
alongside the chronopod. “Help us with this…Longsee’s inside. He
wants to take a look at one of these Uman devices…see how it
works.”
Pakma and Angie swam off to another tent.
Pakma wanted to hear Angie’s latest echopod journal and show off
some new scentbulbs. Chase, Kloosee and Veskort helped wrestle the
chronopod inside the tent.
Longsee was inside, hovering over a small
sling. They managed to nestle the pod into the sling. Longsee then
saw Chase.
“Thanks to Shooki, praise be unto
him…at least, you made it back…things have changed,
eekoti
Chase. The Umans are reneging
on their agreement…it’s bad…we must talk…you have to go see the
Uman commander soon—“
“What’s happened?” Chase asked. “The
wavemaker sounds as loud as ever—“
Longsee tried to explain, even as he nosed
and poked around the chronopod, trying to find a way inside. “We
must learn how these things work…in case the Umans leave.”
Presently, he found a tool that looked like a multi-pronged claw
and was able to prise his way in. The interior was crammed with
boards and chips and small spheres enmeshed in some kind of
gel.
Longsee went on. “You’re not
mistaken…right after you left, we got notice on the
signaler.
Eekoti
Dringoth
wanted to talk. I went up, hovered just below the
surface…communication was poor and there were
misunderstandings…that’s why we need you. If I understand
correctly, the Uman enemy—the Coethi—have returned. Attacks
continue. The great sky-light grows darker every day, so they say…I
haven’t seen it…
eekoti
Chase,
I’m an old man. To be so near the Notwater…” he scrunched up his
nose and shivered, shaking his tail “…it’s hard. It’s painful. You
must go talk with the Umans and learn what has happened. Dringoth
says they can’t shut down at this time.”
They poked around the insides of the
chronopod for awhile, then Kloosee said he would take Chase to the
surface, to Kinlok. They would signal the Umans, request a meeting
right away.
Later that day, Chase found himself slogging
through windswept pools of water on the beach and trudging up the
sand hill to the small hut that had been their preferred meeting
place. Outside, two Umans stood grimly by: Dringoth and Golich.
They seemed to recognize Chase and hurried him inside.
The Umans sat in chairs beside instrument
consoles. Chase leaned against a table.
Dringoth seemed pre-occupied, anxious. “Like
I told your friends, the Coethi are back. Sector Command sent
orders not to shut down just yet. We’ve got some housecleaning to
do, trying to sweep the bastards out of this sector. Already,
they’ve starballed the sun twice…she won’t take much more. My exec
thinks she’s might even go supernova one day…I don’t want to be
within a hundred light years if that happens. And Coethi have
infested dozens of timestreams around here as well. They’re like
rats…they’re everywhere and we’ve got to clean ‘em out.”
Chase felt like he’d been put into a
difficult position. On the one hand, the fact that the Twister was
still operating made the Farpool still navigable. He might not have
made it back to Seome otherwise. On the other hand, the Umans had
agreed to relocate the blasted machine and the longer that took,
the more damage to kels around the world.
This is like being a diplomat. What the hell
do I know about being a diplomat? I’ve been selling T-shirts the
last few years.
“How long will this…cleanup…take?”
Dringoth looked at Golich. “How old is the
universe…it’s easier to answer that. Coethi has somehow managed to
come up with hordes of new jumpships and they’ve infiltrated all
kinds of strategic timestreams, really important ones, critical
ones. If we don’t do our part, TACTRON says we may have to concede
the whole sector…maybe the whole Halo.” Dringoth spat on the
ground. “That’ll do wonders for my career, you know.”
“Can you get some help…from this Sector
Command?”
Golich cut in. “Maybe you don’t understand
what kind of enemy the Coethi are…Ultrarch-Major, maybe we should
show him the intel file, all the studies, the after-action
reports.”
Dringoth had a perplexed look on his face.
“I’m sorry, son…I’m just having a hard time believing I’m having
this kind of talk with a big frog…yes, of course, Lieutenant, get
the file.”
Golich produced a small tab from his uniform
pocket. He finagled with it to output a voice that would describe
the enemy, something compatible with Chase’s echopod. Then he
activated it. Chase heard this:
The Coethi are (thought to be) a
race of sentient semi-robotic aliens whose main weapon against Uman
forces is something called a starball. It is directed against the
sun or star of a targeted Uman planetary system. The only known
defense is a Time Twister. When a starball enters or is pulled into
the twist field of a Twister, it is flung out of local space-time
into the farthest reaches of the Universe.
Umans and Coethi are contending
for influence and territory in a region of the Milky Way known as
the Galactic Halo.
The main-sequence star
Sigma-Albeth B is near the center of a key sector of the Halo. It
has four planets, one of them Storm. Storm is an ideal site to
build and operate a Time Twister to defend this sector, known as
Halo-Alpha. The sector is above the plane of the galactic Orion
Arm, in which most of Uman space is located, including the solar
system and its strategic timestreams T-1 to T-99.
The Coethi originated in the
Perseus Arm and view the Halo sectors as convenient ways to expand
their territory and influence into the Orion and other arms in this
quadrant of the galaxy. But Umans are in the way.
The Coethi are a distributed
intelligence. They are a swarm of nanoscale robotic elements
several light years in extent, drifting through space.
The basic element of the Coethi is
a nanobot. An autonomous, nanoscale assembler/disassembler of
incredible sophistication and complexity.
Nobody knows how the Coethi came
to be, even the Coethi themselves. As an organized superorganism of
bots several light-years in extent, they have existed for a
substantial fraction of the age of the Universe. Best guess by Urth
scientists is 4-5 billion terr old.
The Coethi are a true superswarm
of vast proportions. In size and extent and connection density, it
exceeds the complexity of all the human minds that have ever lived
on Urth combined. It is a thinking sentience, whose true
environment is now interstellar space.
There is an archive of knowledge
within the Coethi, a sort of computational cloud or main memory,
which retains all information ever created or experienced by the
swarm.
Within this Archive is information
indicating that the Coethi originated on an actual homeworld,
somewhere in M75 cluster in Sagittarius. The data show that the
homeworld was destroyed by a nearby supernova and the surviving
elements dispersed into space in a sort of interstellar diaspora.
As Umans reckon universe time, this happened at least 4-6 billion
terr ago, at a time when the Universe was approximately 7 billion
terr after the Big Bang.
There is no known head or
leadership group or body. The main part is called the Central
Entity.
Nanobotic elements of the Coethi
engage in some specialization to ensure that the swarm survives and
the Central Entity is maintained. Bots can specialize in such tasks
as logical processing, communication, maintenance, archiving and
memory, internal transport, navigation, world-seeding, orientation,
etc.
It’s not too farfetched to
consider the Coethi as a sort of galactic brain, although it
certainly doesn’t encompass the entire Milky Way galaxy.
But the Coethi have an Imperative
of Life which compels them to grow and expand the swarm.
Ultimately, they want to unite all world-based instances of swarm
life which they have seeded into a giant, galaxy-spanning swarm or
hive mind (like a neural network or computational cloud). To the
Coethi, this is the Imperative of Life itself. The Imperative of
Life is that life absorbs chaos from the Universe and adds or
builds structure or order. Life is anti-entropic.
In order to get their heads around
the idea of the Coethi, some descriptors our scientists have used
have been: galactic brain, interstellar neural network,
computational cloud, galactic internet, and universal web. The
basic organizing principle or topology of the Coethi is unknown and
can only be speculated about.
The general physical dimensions of
the Coethi swarm have been estimated to vary anywhere from a few
billion kilometers in breadth to several light years. Cosmologists
say that very few organized structures in the Universe are that
big. Astronomers point to some nebula, gas and dust clouds, even
black holes as objects of that dimension or larger. There are some
cosmologists who question whether the Coethi swarm is truly alive
in a traditional sense. Even biologists say the proven existence of
the Coethi stretches the definition of life and sentience nearly to
the breaking point.
The Coethi can manipulate quantum
states at the subscale fine structure of space itself to
communicate and affect matter at great distances. As one scientist
says, “If the Universe were a great quilt, the Coethi can yank on a
fiber at one end and untie a knot at the other.” Their ability to
use quantum entanglement as a means of manipulation is eons ahead
of Umans’ ability to understand, let alone emulate.
The Coethi launch a starball
weapon by amassing vast, concentrated quantities of what Uman
scientists call fusium. They concentrate the fusium and focus it
using part of the main swarm, then launch the starball at a star or
sun.
The starball affects the balance
between outward pressure of fusion in the star’s core and its
gravity. Basically, the starball slows down or inhibits the fusion
reactions so that gravity slowly wins out. The star collapses and
may, if massive enough, go supernova.
Voidtime is the Uman name for
transit ‘channels’ through space-time to other space and times.
It’s a sort of intermediate space between alternate timestreams.
For over four hundred centiterrs, Umans have been able to travel
back and forth in time. So can the Coethi. If the Coethi breach
Uman voidtime channels, they play havoc with official timestreams
and change Halo history. They could locate Commandstar and destroy
Uman presence in all Halo sectors, if this continued. Coethi
vehicles and weapons used for these probes and assaults in Uman
voidtime are called time crashers.
Vehicles for making this transit
between alternate timestreams are called jumpships. The process is
called a timejump. Much of the War has been fought between Coethi
and Uman jumpships in voidtime and in and among alternate
timestreams.
Uman strategy
now is to prevent the Coethi from expanding into Halo-Alpha and
also from penetrating the official timestreams that could cause
catastrophic damage to the Halo past and destroy Uman presence in
this sector. 1
st
TD operates the Time Twister to defend against
these possibilities.
Chase looked up when the audio ran out.
Golich and Dringoth studied his face, not knowing how to interpret
how something that looked like an alligator would react.