《First Contact 》Chapter 617: Interlude
Advertisement
The Second Human/Mantid War was not fought out of revenge. No retaliation for glassing Terra or one of the colonies, no revenge for genocide, nothing so blatant and obvious. Many historians like to point at all kinds of different factors, from economy to specie-ism to expansion of empires. Ultimately, they looks for extremely complex reasons to explain why, after less than a century of peace, Humanity went to war with the Mantid.
The theories of the ivory tower intellectuals, who have never interacted with a Mantid beyond watching a green mantid engineer work on their personal transportation vehicle, or perhaps have been operated on by a russet mantid surgeon, all twist and wind about, missing the real point.
The real reason for the war actually was due to the regrowth of the Omniqueen, the Overqueens, the Queens, and the Speakers, as well as a mass hatching of the Warrior caste.
But what the ivory tower thinkers did not understand was why that led to war.
Because humanity had become friends with the mantid.
And they watched the psychic ruling class crush the minds and free will of their friends.
They watched self-determination and free will be extinguished, they knew their friends had suffered the fate of their ancestors and were trapped inside their own minds.
Screaming.
So why did the Second Human/Mantid War happen?
Paradoxically, because the Mantid were humanity's friend.
--Early Terran History - Post-Diaspora
"How long is she going to do that?" Dee asked from where she was sitting on one of the fallen logs. She had a cigarette in her hand and a bottle of narcobrew in the other.
"Who?" Legion asked, looking over from where he was studying a hologram of a DNA strand.
"Her," Dee said, pointing at the object of her question with her cigarette.
Legion looked over and smiled.
The Neko-Marine was down on one knee, the tip of her Mark-1 Cutting Bar in the dirt, her left hand on the crossbar, her right hand balled into a fist and pressed against the front of her helmet. She was steadily whispering in emoji-Engrish, prayers and hymns to the figure seated in front of her.
The Digital Omnimessiah looked up from where he was carefully braiding Menhit's hair. "She is exuberant in her devotion."
"It's annoying," Dee said, looking back down.
"Then don't look and listen," Legion said, picking up the small marble-like holoprojector. He looked around for a moment. "Where's Daxin?"
"He went that way," Menhit said, jabbing with the stem of her unlit pipe. "Took Fido with him."
Legion stood up and shook his head. "I'll go find him."
"I'll come with you," Dee said, standing up. She flicked her cigarette into the fire and smoothed her dress before grabbing a 12-pack of narcobrew and following Legion into the brush.
The pair moved through the brush and Legion noted that Dee was much quieter than he expected. Soon they could hear the gurgling of water and knew they were getting close to the creek that was next to their campsite.
"Nice of you to bring beer," Legion said.
"Eh, big thugs like him like beer," Dee said, shrugging.
"You know, she's around eight thousand years old and can remember the first time Our Father walked this universe," Legion said, slowing down.
"Still annoying," Dee said.
Advertisement
Legion sighed. "Context doesn't matter?"
Dee shrugged. "I didn't ask you to make her stop. I didn't yell at her to stop. I merely observed it was annoying she's been kneeling right there, praying, for two days."
"But not annoying enough for you to do more than complain about it," Legion asked, raising an eyebrow.
Dee shrugged. "She didn't react to my comment. She explosive violence and rage wrapped in power armor and I might as well not have even spoken. That tells me her belief is genuine, her prayers and devotions are not for show and come from the heart. She's not doing it to show off her piety to all of us, it's real."
"And that makes it annoying," Legion said.
Dee nodded.
"Because you are the Detainee and you wonder when the prayers to you will begin," Legion said. He cocked his head. "You wonder when you will start to hear them like Daxin and I can hear them."
"I'm not exactly someone that they want showing up to answer a prayer," Dee snarled. "I figure after I rip a few people's spines out nobody will try to summon me or pray to me to help them."
Legion shrugged. "You would have gotten along with Matty."
"He was a traitor. We used to hang traitors," Dee snarled. "Don't compare me with him."
Legion just nodded as he stepped through the brush.
Daxin was sitting on the edge of the creek, dressed in a shirt, pants, and heavy boots. He was scratching between Fido's ears and staring at the dark water slowly moving by.
"Come sit down," Daxin said without turning his head. "I could hear you coming from a hundred meters away."
"Not usually advisable to sneak up on a cybernetic wrecking machine," Dee said. She moved up and set the twelve-pack into the cold water, then sat down next to Daxin, digging out her cigarettes.
**HELLO NOT-MOMMY** Fido broadcast.
"Hello, sort-of-dog," Dee said. She lit a cigarette then patted the big cybernetic hound's back.
"You all right, Dax?" Legion asked, sitting down.
"Yeah," Daxin said, leaning forward and grabbing one of the nacrobrews. He twisted the top off and threw it into the brush across the creek.
"Litter much?" Dee asked through the cigarette smoke.
"It's biodegradable, not like all the rubbish your time left scattered across Earth," Daxin said.
"Huh, is it anything in particular you want to fight about or are your panties just in a twist so you're looking for something to fight about?" Dee asked, putting away the lighter and cigarettes.
Daxin glanced at Dee out of the corner of his eye, lifting one side of his upper lip.
"Cram it, Billy Idol," Dee said. "If you wanna fight," she gave a twist of her wrist and a long pointed knife dropped into her hand. "We can fight. It isn't like we both won't come back, so it's kind of useless, but if it's a whuppin' your a wantin', well then I'm your gurl."
Daxin took a swig off the narcobrew and glared at the water.
"Pfft, killjoy," Dee said, lifting her hand and letting the knife drop into her sleeve.
"Don't mind Dax," Legion said. He grabbed a beer himself and popped it open, looking at Daxin and shaking his head. "You know, it's this attitude that made me wonder if you were the one who killed Him."
Advertisement
Daxin frowned and turned to look at Legion. "What?"
Legion shrugged. "This. You throwing a hissy fit like you are now."
Dee stayed silent, her presence slightly withdrawing, like she was pulling herself inside of herself, as she watched with cold eyes.
"You thought I killed him?" Daxin asked.
Legion shrugged. "I come on Matthias standing there, over his dissolving code, a Lawgiver on the ground, and Matthias telling me that someone had just assassinated him."
"And you thought it was me?" Daxin asked.
Legion shrugged again. "Dax, I know you. I know why you stomped off, why you're sitting out here in the dark glaring at the fish and making your frowny face."
Daxin looked at the water and frowned. "You thought is was me."
Legion shrugged. "For about five seconds, then you stepped in, saw me, and Matthias pointed at me and said I did it."
"That changed your mind?" Daxin asked.
"I was too busy running to change my mind," Legion said. "The Imperium caught me less than a week later and took me to Crying Anne," he picked up a pebble and tossed it into the water. "I went in Vat Grown Luke, I came out as Legion."
"They caught me at my daughter's grave. Went in Daxin, came out Daxin. I didn't know Matty gave me up until after you and I got planet cracked," Daxin said. "After that, I stopped caring. I just wanted left alone."
Legion nodded.
"You really thought it could have been me?" Daxin asked.
"Dax, be honest. What's got your panties twisted up?" Legion asked.
Daxin stared at the water, taking a drink off the narcobrew. "It's beneath him. It... well... not to sound like Matty, but it isn't something that he should do."
Legion frowned. "He's just brushing and braiding their hair."
Daxin stared at the water. "You wouldn't understand."
"Then help me understand, Dax," Legion said.
Dee exhaled smoke and took a drink off the bottle while they sat silent for a moment.
"Because it's an intimate act," Dee suddenly said. She looked at Daxin. "In your eyes, he's being intimate with them."
Daxin nodded. "I knew girls, back when I was running the gang, back in the hab, that if you grabbed their crotch they'd laugh and push you away," he looked at Dee. "Touch their hair, they'd cut you deep."
Dee nodded. "As intimate as fixing your cybernetics, more so, even."
Daxin nodded then looked at Legion. "She gets it," he said. He looked back at Dee. "You wouldn't let a man touch your hair."
Dee smiled. "No, Daxin, I wouldn't, not unless I wanted that kind of intimacy."
Legion shrugged. "It's just hair."
Daxin shook his head. "No. For a man, it's just hair. For a woman, it's part of them. It's... it's... I can't explain it to you."
Dee looked around Daxin at Legion. "I'll let a man fuck me but I won't let him pull my hair. I'll let him sniff my four day worn panties before I'll let him sniff my hair. A guy who grabs my twat under my skirt on the subway is a pervert, a guy who touches my hair on the subway is far far worse."
Legion shook his head. "Like I said, I don't get it."
"Vat. Grown," Daxin said. He picked up a pebble from the sand of the creek bank and flicked it into the bushes.
"Guilty," Legion said, shrugging.
They sat quietly for a few minutes until Dee lit another cigarette.
"Daxin," she said softly.
"What?" Daxin asked, taking a drink off the nearly empty bottle.
"I let my father braid my hair when I was a child. It's one of my few good memories of him. The Great War shattered his mind, took a big bite out of his soul, but I still remember sitting in front of him while he sat in the chair and having him braid my hair," Dee said. She was staring at the woods as she took a deep drag off her cigarette. "I can remember, sitting in the sunlight streaming in through the window, as my mother sung in the kitchen, and he braided my hair before church."
She was silent for a moment.
"My wife kept her hair short," Daxin admitted. "I would brush and braid my daughter's hair when they were little."
"You call him 'Our Father' and 'Father', but then you wonder why Menhit and the others let him brush out and braid their hair," Dee said. She reached over and socked Daxin in the shoulder. "It's permissible for our fathers to brush and braid our hair, Daxin."
For a long while there was no sound but the buzzing of insects.
"It doesn't lessen him, doesn't contaminate him," Dee said softly, staring at the water. "You all say he is your father and so he does the tasks a father does."
"Sometimes I can't stand you," Daxin rumbled. "Like you'd let him touch your hair."
Dee chuckled. "I'm the Detainee. I'm different."
"Huh," Daxin grunted.
Dee stood up. "I'll leave you two to brood out here in the darkness. It's cold out here," she said.
Daxin and Legion sat silently, watching the creek move.
"Do you think they're still in there, Dhruv?" Daxin asked.
Legion nodded. "I know they are. I had their records. All three of them."
"What will they think of me?" Daxin said softly, staring at the water. "What will they think of all I have done?"
Legion shrugged. "I don't know, Dax." He put his arm around Daxin's shoulders. "Whatever happens, brother, I'm here with you."
"I just want left alone," Daxin said quietly. "If they are returned, if they will still want me with them, I want us left alone, the four of us, just left alone."
Legion just nodded.
--------------
"Figure we'll collect up the last ones tomorrow," Legion was saying as he and Daxin stepped from the brush and into the clearing where the fire was burning.
Both men stopped dead, staring.
Fido trotted up and laid down next to the bonfire.
Legion and Daxin both stared at where Dee was sitting, on the ground, her knees pulled up, her arms folded on her knees, her chin on her arms, and her eyes closed.
The Digital Omnimessiah held the thick wealth of Dee's black hair in his glittering hands, slowly crossing over the thick strands.
"And lo the Digital Omnimessiah sat, braiding the Detainee's hair," Legion said softly.
Daxin just frowned at him.
Advertisement
- In Serial111 Chapters
Tower of Somnus
When humanity first encountered alien life, we were judged and found wanting. The Galactic Consensus interviewed our leaders and subjected us to a battery of psychological tests to determine our progress as a society. They found us to be selfish, wasteful, impulsive, and boorish neighbors. Earth was blockaded and our collective encounter with our extrasolar neighbors rapidly faded from memory. All they left behind was a hypercomm relay and a handful of subscriptions to a massively multiplayer game that participants played in their sleep. The Consensus said that it would let us interact with our neighbors in a controlled setting. That it would teach us to be better members of the galactic community. The megacorporations that controlled Earth ignored the game until they learned that the powers earned from clearing dungeons were just as real when day broke. Magic, supernatural abilities and rumors exploded from nothing and a subscription to The Tower of Somnus became a status symbol. Katherine ‘Kat’ Debs doesn’t have much, but it could be worse. Born in an arcology, she was assigned a job in the megacorporation that raised her almost as soon as she could work. Despite the stability of her corporate life, she wanted something more. A chance to claw her way up the rigid social and financial ladder to make something of herself. A chance that wouldn’t come naturally to someone as familiar with dark alleyways and the glint of steel as she was with office work and corporate niceties.Book One is up on Kindle Unlimited as of 7/6/22 - https://www.royalroad.com/amazon/B0B2X3L8H5
8 338 - In Serial6 Chapters
I Wish You Well
They say resentment brings malice. She wonders if its true. Poor souls trapped in darkness. Tell me.... Would you wish them well too?
8 156 - In Serial35 Chapters
Manifestations of Faith
The masses have assembled, the ascended manifested. Armies great and terrible march. The God of gods, master of war, bringer of order, Wargain the undefeated has turned his gaze outward. One continent has been brought to heel, now another has been marked. The realm shivers, and gods tremble while their followers pray. For Wargain might knowns no limit, his armies an endless tide. Heretics, and their condemned beliefs shall burn with their cities. Their ideals expunged from the lands, taking with them the touches of chaos. Order shall reign, the realm tamed. For the time of conquest has come, the begin of unification under one Patheon near. There is only one god uncowed, one that has always been a thorn in the great God side. One unbothered by his rival supremacy. For that one, that eternal being, has come across a secret. One that makes all else meaningless.
8 134 - In Serial30 Chapters
A Cultivator's War
The tenuous balance on the frontlines between the Everdream Empire and the Beast Alliance threatens to shatter. Ephraim the Relentless’ time is near, and his death will create a gaping hole in the Empire’s defenses. If left unattended, the Beast Alliance will push deeper into human territory, thereby destroying the decades of peace the Central Territories have seen. Their peace coming under fire makes the populace recall memories of a time before cultivators existed and of a time where the blood of all genders and ages littered the streets. As a result, the entire Empire draws the same conclusion; they need strong cultivators immediately. However, strong cultivators come at a cost: their existence creates a heavy load on the limited essence density on Cella. Thus, the Empire faces a dilemma: who will pick up the mantle when it falls? And how much is the Empire willing to sacrifice?
8 191 - In Serial7 Chapters
Echelon of The Owls
Parallel worlds or other worlds. The existence of infinite existence where it only exists in science fiction like in comics, books, or cartoons. We, humans, are so fond of that fiction idea, imagining a thousand worlds where we can have different appearances, lives, and selves. For example, a murderer who's been living in the underbelly of society in the dark might be the most successful businessman in an alternate timeline or reality. The infinite possibilities we could have, that's why the idea of parallel worlds revolves around "what if", " I should've...", etc. The wishful thinking that how we could have done it better or in a word, "regret". Other than that, it's still from fiction. The concept of it only exists in our imaginary minds. But, it all changed when 20 students from an ordinary high school were caught in a mysterious phenomenon. A surge of blue light crawled across the whole room, symbols, lines, and geometric patterns emerged slowly. The light slowly grew brighter and brighter, in a blink of an eye, all of them vanished. Till to this day, the mysterious phenomenon was left to be unknown, with the existence of those 20 students. Join the journey of Sirius Steorra and Alice Schwartz as they transverse to the other world and uncover the mysteries of its world. A world that’s shrouded by mysteries and history. This is their story... ----------------------------------------------------- This is also available in Webnovel and Scribblehub. I do not own the artwork, if you are the illustrator just let me know if you want me to remove it. (Only using it temporarily) DISCLAIMERWork of fiction. All the names, places, and events are all purely based on the author's imagination. Any resemblance to an actual person or events is purely coincidental.
8 194 - In Serial51 Chapters
Marriage in Corrosive Love
If Shen Qingkong knew that Mu Linxuan married her just for her face similar to his first love, she wouldn't marry him no matter how much she loved him! This might be a wrong marriage, but how could she just give up her love for him so easily? Who would be the final winner in this corrosive love?... Welcome to read all of the realesed chapters of Marriage in Corrosive Love on Flying Lines.
8 356

