Summer's End (part 10)
Mr Zoat
Dedicated ragequitter
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Full
Start
I raise my right hand in greeting as Artemis and Buddug return to the reading room.
"Good trip?"
Artemis nods, and I note that her quiver is fully restocked with quill arrows.
"All of the zombie children are back where they should be. And your gene analyser is being set up in the lab."
"Thanks. Did you get to see much of Caergwaed while you were there..?"
She drops into a nearby chair and starts loading up the next batch of research files.
"Not really. Things got a bit… Tense, when I told them the Queen wouldn't be coming back." Behind her, Buddug heads in the direction of the archive kitchens. "Thought I should probably keep my head down."
"Probably wise. The last thing we need is the Sheeda cities going to war with one another."
"Yeah. Anything new on your end?"
"I'm pretty sure that the Vampire Sun isn't Mageddon, which is a bit of a relief."
"Really?"
"Yes. Mageddon has about four thousand times the mass of Sol. Aside from how aggressive it is, there's no way the Earth could survive close to it for any length of time. And the images Mother Box and the archivists have been able to piece together of whatever it was that killed the Justice Legion don't show a star or star-like object."
Artemis watches me for a moment.
I watch back.
…
"Grayven, what's Mageddon?"
"Oh, an ancient.. sun.. weapon system.. thing. It's supposed to have been made by the people… The people before the New Gods who manifested Source attributes. We usually call them 'Old Gods', for… Obvious reasons, though that term also gets used for gods who emerge from the Dream."
"And that's… Around in our time?"
"Yes, but it's anchored outside of our galactic cluster and extremely well guarded. Last time Darkseid tried taking a fleet there to study it, he was one of sixteen survivors out of a total crew of two million. No recoverable ships. I'm led to believe that one of the defenders was mildly bruised." I shrug. "Anyway, that was the only thing I could think of that came under the category of 'evil sun'."
"So if it wasn't a sun, what was it?"
I shake my head.
"Humanoid. It appeared to either have dark skin or prefer dark clothing." I shrug. "Either it killed everything that got a good look at it, or it was so long ago that all the records have degraded to near-uselessness. Or more likely both."
"Just… One guy?"
"Or possibly girl, or other or none. I couldn't even tell you whether or not it was conventionally humanoid. I've still got a lot of reading to do, but the outline appears to be confirmed from enough sources that I'm prepared to accept it. A single immensely powerful being comes out of nowhere and gradually starts destroying everything in its path. Fleets are sent and fleets are destroyed. The 'Justice Legion' are called in. They fight, lose, rally… Until eventually they run out of time and decide to go all-in. There aren't any mentions of the organisation as a going concern after that final battle, so I assume that was about it for them."
"So what was that stuff about trying to understand it?"
"Ah, that is interesting. It's not entirely clear, but it looks like someone collected samples of biological material from the site. And sent those samples to various places, including to the forebears of our friends in Caergwaed."
"And they used it to make the Sheeda?" She shakes her head. "Why?"
"Maybe the same reason why Lex Luthor commissioned Kon: use the strength of the one you hate to beat them."
"And that's where they got the Highborn? Yeah, they're.. strong, but they're not 'kill the galaxy's greatest heroes' strong."
"No, I don't think it was that. Remember, Earth went through multiple alien occupations. It isn't the centre of human civilisation in the future-past. There's no obvious reason why a laboratory here would be given vital work when there would be better expertise in other places."
"Maybe they were specialised."
"Maybe. Magic-rich worlds are unusual, and unlike modern… You know what I mean, humans, they all use magic."
"So they needed magic to beat him."
"What makes you think they won?"
"The planet's still here. The.. Sheeda are still here."
"And we haven't seen a single baseline human since we got here." I shrug. "A lot of things are possible."
She nods slowly. "So what's the next step?"
"Full genetic work-ups of every Sheeda creature we can get. And while that's going on, the local Vat Masters and I have been trying to work out how to create an organic Bleed membrane instability generator. Because even if the rest of the universe stopped existing, the Bleed should still be there."
"The Bleed. That's the thing between parallel universes, right?"
"Indeed." I nod. "Because if we can generate electrical power, then even if we have to immediately funnel it into some sort of organic system, all of our problems become a lot more manageable. And even if the sun somehow eats it, then at least we'll learn more about what it can-"
"Grayven?"
"-do-. Yes?"
"How long have we been here?"
I smile. "Less than a day."
She huffs, closing her eyes and bowing her head. Then she lifts it back up and looks me right in the eyes.
"How long, Grayven? And don't tell me it doesn't matter because if we get a time machine we can go back to whenever. I've eaten meals, I've slept, and… Everything outside is the same. There aren't any days here and my computer's busted so I've got no idea how much time has passed. How long?"
"What makes you think I kn-"
"Don't dodge the qu-"
"-ow-? I'm sorry."
"-estion!"
"I'm sorry, I… Genuinely don't know either. Humans tend to default to a twenty five hour day cycle if they can't see the sun, but neither of us are human."
She considers that for a moment.
"What about your mother box?"
"She's struggling to operate, and I've got more important things for her to do than use her connection to the Source to measure time."
"Can you build a clock?"
"Um. Probably? But I've got nothing to peg it to."
"Yeah, I… Think I need something. Not being able to schedule things is… Really confusing."
I nod. "Alright. I'll add it to the slate."
Start
I raise my right hand in greeting as Artemis and Buddug return to the reading room.
"Good trip?"
Artemis nods, and I note that her quiver is fully restocked with quill arrows.
"All of the zombie children are back where they should be. And your gene analyser is being set up in the lab."
"Thanks. Did you get to see much of Caergwaed while you were there..?"
She drops into a nearby chair and starts loading up the next batch of research files.
"Not really. Things got a bit… Tense, when I told them the Queen wouldn't be coming back." Behind her, Buddug heads in the direction of the archive kitchens. "Thought I should probably keep my head down."
"Probably wise. The last thing we need is the Sheeda cities going to war with one another."
"Yeah. Anything new on your end?"
"I'm pretty sure that the Vampire Sun isn't Mageddon, which is a bit of a relief."
"Really?"
"Yes. Mageddon has about four thousand times the mass of Sol. Aside from how aggressive it is, there's no way the Earth could survive close to it for any length of time. And the images Mother Box and the archivists have been able to piece together of whatever it was that killed the Justice Legion don't show a star or star-like object."
Artemis watches me for a moment.
I watch back.
…
"Grayven, what's Mageddon?"
"Oh, an ancient.. sun.. weapon system.. thing. It's supposed to have been made by the people… The people before the New Gods who manifested Source attributes. We usually call them 'Old Gods', for… Obvious reasons, though that term also gets used for gods who emerge from the Dream."
"And that's… Around in our time?"
"Yes, but it's anchored outside of our galactic cluster and extremely well guarded. Last time Darkseid tried taking a fleet there to study it, he was one of sixteen survivors out of a total crew of two million. No recoverable ships. I'm led to believe that one of the defenders was mildly bruised." I shrug. "Anyway, that was the only thing I could think of that came under the category of 'evil sun'."
"So if it wasn't a sun, what was it?"
I shake my head.
"Humanoid. It appeared to either have dark skin or prefer dark clothing." I shrug. "Either it killed everything that got a good look at it, or it was so long ago that all the records have degraded to near-uselessness. Or more likely both."
"Just… One guy?"
"Or possibly girl, or other or none. I couldn't even tell you whether or not it was conventionally humanoid. I've still got a lot of reading to do, but the outline appears to be confirmed from enough sources that I'm prepared to accept it. A single immensely powerful being comes out of nowhere and gradually starts destroying everything in its path. Fleets are sent and fleets are destroyed. The 'Justice Legion' are called in. They fight, lose, rally… Until eventually they run out of time and decide to go all-in. There aren't any mentions of the organisation as a going concern after that final battle, so I assume that was about it for them."
"So what was that stuff about trying to understand it?"
"Ah, that is interesting. It's not entirely clear, but it looks like someone collected samples of biological material from the site. And sent those samples to various places, including to the forebears of our friends in Caergwaed."
"And they used it to make the Sheeda?" She shakes her head. "Why?"
"Maybe the same reason why Lex Luthor commissioned Kon: use the strength of the one you hate to beat them."
"And that's where they got the Highborn? Yeah, they're.. strong, but they're not 'kill the galaxy's greatest heroes' strong."
"No, I don't think it was that. Remember, Earth went through multiple alien occupations. It isn't the centre of human civilisation in the future-past. There's no obvious reason why a laboratory here would be given vital work when there would be better expertise in other places."
"Maybe they were specialised."
"Maybe. Magic-rich worlds are unusual, and unlike modern… You know what I mean, humans, they all use magic."
"So they needed magic to beat him."
"What makes you think they won?"
"The planet's still here. The.. Sheeda are still here."
"And we haven't seen a single baseline human since we got here." I shrug. "A lot of things are possible."
She nods slowly. "So what's the next step?"
"Full genetic work-ups of every Sheeda creature we can get. And while that's going on, the local Vat Masters and I have been trying to work out how to create an organic Bleed membrane instability generator. Because even if the rest of the universe stopped existing, the Bleed should still be there."
"The Bleed. That's the thing between parallel universes, right?"
"Indeed." I nod. "Because if we can generate electrical power, then even if we have to immediately funnel it into some sort of organic system, all of our problems become a lot more manageable. And even if the sun somehow eats it, then at least we'll learn more about what it can-"
"Grayven?"
"-do-. Yes?"
"How long have we been here?"
I smile. "Less than a day."
She huffs, closing her eyes and bowing her head. Then she lifts it back up and looks me right in the eyes.
"How long, Grayven? And don't tell me it doesn't matter because if we get a time machine we can go back to whenever. I've eaten meals, I've slept, and… Everything outside is the same. There aren't any days here and my computer's busted so I've got no idea how much time has passed. How long?"
"What makes you think I kn-"
"Don't dodge the qu-"
"-ow-? I'm sorry."
"-estion!"
"I'm sorry, I… Genuinely don't know either. Humans tend to default to a twenty five hour day cycle if they can't see the sun, but neither of us are human."
She considers that for a moment.
"What about your mother box?"
"She's struggling to operate, and I've got more important things for her to do than use her connection to the Source to measure time."
"Can you build a clock?"
"Um. Probably? But I've got nothing to peg it to."
"Yeah, I… Think I need something. Not being able to schedule things is… Really confusing."
I nod. "Alright. I'll add it to the slate."
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