Chapter Three
Castor's descent
was sluggish through the thick mud of the shallows. He took a moment
to glance up through his faceplate; watched Bram, peering back at him
from over the lip of the rind, waver and blur in the increasing
murkiness, then disappeared altogether.
He was no novice,
making regular dives along Vit'r Reef to harvest shards of crystal
bloom with which to stock the studio of his Sciriceen apartment. The
eeriness of this dive, however, filled him with a dread excitement of
curiosity unlike any before.
And on The
Nikata'Kal!
This observation had
only served to heighten both curiosity and dread, further compelling
Castor to defy reason and dive regardless. Reason to which the
worried Bramaria had appealed via an emphatic onslaught of chirps,
barks, and odors as Castor had entered the murky mud, his mind set to
investigate the vibrating luminescence below.
He kept a diligent
eye about him for dangers in the mud: jonke and shadow hunters
primarily. The squirming, blood-sucking jonke were generally harmless
on dives as they were not keen attacking other than bare flesh. Not
that they didn't attempt it on occasion causing the odd nasty
bruise. Shadow-hunters, in contrast, held no compunction with
ambushing anything that moved. They were exclusively bottom dwellers,
however, and neither they nor jonke ventured far into the thicker mud
of the shallows; certainly not halfway between the reef and the shore
here near Scir Island.
The arrest of the
glow diminished as he descended; the breathy thunk/wheeze
of the gill bound to the back of his neck gave way to the hum of
vibration increasing around him. The vibration's liquefying effect
on the mud enhanced the slipstream effect produced by the repulsor
charges buzzing the micro-weave plating of Castor's submud suit. He
adjusted the controls a bit, lessening the intensity of the charge,
steadying his descent.
For Castor, the
experience seemed soaked in the surreal and he was overwhelmed. There
were too many things not to understand in this moment. He considered
that the thing below him was but a phantasm of the Nikata'Kal. But
phantasms are silent, fleeting; materialized in the mind to haunt for
a while, only to disappear without a whisper. Whatever this
was, it was not that:
neither silent nor fleeting. Rather, louder, brighter, and more
distinct.
Great Bagad'i.
If this is any part of you, please be kind!
He prayed.
Castor was struck
with the brief worry that Bramaria might abandon him--run home, flee
the strangeness of the mysterious glowing rind. But he knew better.
Bram was a brave girl. And, for reasons Castor often didn't
understand, a fierce friend.
The outline of the
object came into view. A craft of some kind: as large as an average
harvester, but of unfamiliar attribute. He could now also make out
the source of the glow. A protrusion from what he took to be the
front of the craft: Wide. Elongated. Bubbled. Details of details were
still out of focus as the whole of the scene was filtered, dreamlike
through a lens of hazy purplish-brown mud.
Near the object, his
body dropped with a sudden jerk, feet landing on the flat, even top.
It occurred to him then with astonishment his legs occupied an absent
void below the knees; caked mud fell from his boots and suit forming
a pile on the dry hull. He looked forward up the craft, then back,
then across the thing, knowing the thin void extended the entirety of
the hull. The intensity of the ultra-low vibration radiated through
the soles of his boots, caused his feet to itch.
Charge plate?!
His
confusion grew.
Castor reasoned this
was no phantasm come to haunt him. But he also hadn't decided
whether it might yet be some element of The Bagad'i. He trudged
along the hull, toward the large glowing bubble. Switching the suit
controls to maximum rendered his movements nearly unfettered,
assisted by the vigor of vibration in the thick mud. How odd a
sensation for the bottom of the shallows was this?! He felt he could
sprint the distance as if through air, laughed aloud behind his
faceplate at the strangeness of it; every
single aspect of it!
The hull atop the
craft was unremarkable, constructed of an otherworldly gray metal
alloy, affixed to the craft as if sprayed on in a single sheet--not
a seam visible. Castor kept his gait slow and deliberate. He didn't
know what wonders lurked within the bowels of the thing, just that he
preferred not to rouse them, if any remained rousable.
Dare I intrude on
such a marvel as this? I mean no offense, Bagad'i,
he thought as he walked up to the rear of the radiant bubble. Castor
could now see it protruded about five meters forward from the sloped
nose of the craft, all glass but for thin panes arcing along its
length and width. Not
crystal-glass,
Castor observed, though the differences were subtle. The glass itself
maintained the same mudless void around its shape as that of the
hull.
Unheard of! A
glass of charge plating?!
He bent close,
careful to keep the gill above the inverted mud surface, peered down
through the bubble exterior. There, he found perplexing familiarity
marking contrast amidst the colors and shapes of myriad nameless
controls and readouts. Pilots' seats not far different from that of
the skiff, perched behind a console above which hovered a long
holo-projection scrolling with colors and data much like those of a
quadraglide. Even more peculiar were the arrays of hanging screens
from which dim luminescence cast scrolling text and images directly
upon their rectangular faces.
Such ancient
technology! Surely this is a remnant of Origin!
Castor knew the text on the screens would prove itself of the Old
Forms,
the forbidden before-dialect
now the sole domain of the Bun T'Lal Baga themselves.
He felt off-balance
from the off-balance nature of the experience, knelt to the flat hull
while shaking the sensation. He re-stood, turned toward the rear of
the craft.
I must get
inside. I must!
Castor thought.
But
could that not be the greatest blasphemy? An unforgivable violation
of doctrine and the will of the Baga? Of Bagad'i Itself?
The answer came in
the form of another pulsing glow contrasting in color and intensity
with the overall radiance of the craft. In his amazed state, he
hadn't previously noticed the thing. Either that, he reasoned, or
it had illuminated when first he'd touched the top of the craft. He
trudged back along the hull, following the flash to its source: a
recession housing a whirling, green beacon, far brighter than its
tiny size should allow. On the hull surface behind the beacon--with
flush seams and joints rendering them but indistinguishable from the
surrounding plate--was a series of segments, the same shape as the
claw blades of Castor's nakh dagger. The segments were fitted
neatly within a nearly imperceptible, circular housing. Next to the
housing, an inset screen sat dark and lifeless, inviting Castor's
curiosity. Castor knelt, ran his gloved finger across the smooth
glass of the screen creating a finger-width line in the quartz dust.
After a moment's hesitation, he unlatched one glove at the wrist,
removed it. Once again, he ran a finger across the screen. This time,
prompted by the touch of his bare skin, the plate came alive with
words and simple renderings backlit on the glass. Castor jolted his
hand away nearly sinking it above the inverted mud surface, alarmed
with the thought of bare skin within the hazardous, silica-rich
medium.
The Old Form
verbiage on-screen was of little surprise to Castor. He scanned it
finding some words familiar. 'ENTER' and 'LOCK', were
overlaid on two of four icons at the side of the screen. Another was
labeled with a word similar to 'lock' but prefaced with an
unfamiliar 'UN'. Given the context of all before him, he felt
confident of its function. The fourth label he found
incomprehensible.
He'd come this
far. He would go another step further. The compulsion to know
dispelled all doubt of his actions as his finger pressed 'UNLOCK'.
The green light of
the beacon turned red, and he perceived, first a guttural thunk,
then
a distant, muted beeping.
There must be
atmosphere within the void,
he reasoned. There would have been no vibration of the mud without
it. Surface craft relied on natural atmospheric pressure to create
the slipstream within the charge field of their plating; his own
submud suit expelled pressurized air into its microns-thin field for
the same purpose.
This was a submud
vessel! Ancient--yes, though now less of an anomaly. Bagad'i or
no, it fit this place! It belonged here
with him--within the mudsea of Corieal! In that moment, the mystery
of Origin
felt less distant than ever.
And yet, one step
further.
Just a slight
hesitation before the pressing of the 'enter' icon sent the
claw-shaped segments receding flat into the hull. There was a moment
of panic whether the charge field would retain its integrity but was
quickly dismissed. Certainly, the opening was designed for this
express purpose. The countless tons of mud above the inverted surface
remained intact.
Castor peered down
over the lip of the opening; recalled Bramaria doing the same from
the rind just a short while ago; a while which now seemed hours to
Castor.
The cylindrical room
below the entry was well lit, containing a ladder extending to the
grated floor. Another screen, identical to that of the hatch
controls, was situated on one side of the curved wall. Castor
observed little else of note. He dragged a finger across one end of
the gill housing, triggered a switch concealed beneath the casing of
the controls located there. The pitch of the gill's thunk/wheeze
raced in laborious complaint as the O2 bladder covering his back
filled with enough compressed air to sustain him for roughly twenty
minutes out of contact with the mud. He slipped the hidden switch to
full off and the gill went silent; his breath now pulling from the
bladder.
"Bagad'i and all
wheels of Earth and Scion forgive me," he prayed aloud then stepped
down onto the ladder and descended into the room.
* * *
Was there oxygen
within that hiss?
Castor looked around
the top edge of the cylindrical room. Just beneath the line of bright
lamps circling its circumference, a series of vents were arranged in
a like manner. Castor was assaulted by the ear-piercing hiss the
moment the hatch sealed shut; a feat which had taken several stabs at
the wall screen to achieve. The sound wasn't as offensive as it
seemed in the moment: sensitive hearing the result of extended time
spent enveloped in the muted dullness of the mud--post-dive
bellow
as it was known.
A sharp
snap--amplified
as well by this condition--caused Castor's entire body to flinch
and spin in a single motion. A portion of curved wall behind him slid
back on itself opening to a short series of steps leading down to the
floor of a short passageway. The passage beyond was lit by the same
continuous line of lamps found in the entry room and the same muted
hiss blew at him from similar vents. He stepped mindfully down the
steps, started up the passageway toward the front of the craft.
Just beyond the
passage was a large open area alive with that low-frequency hum so
prominent outside, now relegated to background noise and mixed with a
harmonious whine. Castor regarded the hum which, he surmised, no
doubt shared a source with the vibration outside; was struck then by
the lack of vibration within the craft-- its intense impact from mud
floor to surface rind, a memory. Here was housed several rows of
seats, twelve to either side of the cabin: padded, but not overly so;
utility over luxury fitting the motif of the whole of the interior.
Stretching between the seat rows, in the center of the cabin, was the
continuation of the path he'd followed out of the short passageway.
There was a bulkhead opposite him, bifurcated in the center with a
set of steps identical to those in the rear. At the edges of the
bulkhead, what appeared to Castor as large exit portals stood flush
to the hull on either side.
His eyes traced the
black flooring from feet to bulkhead, analyzing. He bounced on the
balls of his feet testing the reaction of its material. Slight,
reflexive give. Rubbery exterior.
Remnant of Origin
(if, indeed it is so) with a hull of charge plating--why not a floor
of nanoflex?! What a conventional mystery becomes the arm of the
Bagad'i!
Castor winced at the
heresy. He stepped up from the relative tranquility of the seating
area into the chaos of the bubbled nose. He was humbled by the
feeling as if this sacred place ignored millennia to present itself,
here and now, but to Castor in such a vibrant state as this.
Clearly, here is
a cockpit,
Castor thought, but
with familiarity so alive it breathes
with the mystery of Origin.
He could almost hear the chants of the Baga underlying the chirps and
hums of electronics.
Brushing fingertips
over seat backs, he inched with reverence toward a long forward
console, mesmerized by the pulsation of a holo-projection there.
About the cockpit, many distractions vied for his attention though,
somehow, this pulse seemed most consequential in the moment. At the
console, he surveyed the pulse and the projection hovering a
millimeter beneath it, across the icon-scattered, diamond-grid
pattern and to the words displayed vertically down one side.
'Scion II
Proximity'
The full measure of
this at first refused to take root. These words were Old
Form
known to all
Scionideans, taught them from childhood from by the Pedagoguery.
Scion, the It
behind the Who.
For, indeed, Bagad'i did express Vessel
of God; Nikata'Kal,
Time of Proximity.
He'd contemplated
all his blasphemy, accepted its possibility before even entering the
craft. But was he now under the witness of Scion?! Under Its watchful
gaze, the promise fulfilled of The Nikata'Kal?! The implications
turned Castor's guts to ice. His vision narrowed, knees weakened,
and the last sound ringing in his ears before losing consciousness
was the smack
of the gill housing hitting the floor just before the back of his
helmet did the same.
The ring of the
smack still echoed about the fringes of awareness but was being
overcome by an insistent buzzing. When Castor opened his eyes, the
onslaught dance of radiance around him melded with sickly flashes of
white cast from his own throbbing head. He raised himself up onto
elbows, gave the sensations time to pass and regain a bit of bearing.
That insistent buzz
now commanded his full attention--as designed. His glance snapped to
the O2 meter attached to his forearm, now glowing red with hazard,
flashing with only twenty seconds left of air in the bladder.
No choice but to
indulge the more radical of his curiosity. Bagad'i, let there be
oxygen in that hiss!
He slowed his
breathing into the familiar cadence of perfect motion, calming nerves
into deep concentration to preserve what little air remained. He then
squeezed his eyes shut, pushed another hidden switch on the control
panel at his neck. The seal of the faceplate popped
at the seam. He then lifted the faceplate up just a crack and without
hesitation exhaled, sipped a shallow mouthful of ambient atmosphere.
Castor at least
expected the air, if any, to prove stale; instead experienced the
most pristine breath he'd ever taken. Besides the faint ozone of
active electronics mixed with an altogether unfamiliar, organic
scent, he smelled nothing but the pure lack of all
odor. He raised the faceplate fully up over his head, took several
deep inhalations. New dizziness swam over him, blending with the
waning effects of his drop to the floor. He presumed the cause from
an off-balance mix of oxygen and nitrogen--different from that to
which his lungs were accustomed. He'd experienced similar
sensations on dives when his submud gill was in need of calibration
and over-oxygenating the air it produced from the moisture of the
mud. Remaining in his recumbent state, he let his head clear as he
acclimated to the mix.
Presently, he pulled
himself back onto his feet. He stole a moment, sniffed the air,
followed the pervasive organic scent to the clusters of
seats--recognized the scent's origin in the dark material with
which they were covered.
Now free from the
tether of the air bladder, he undid the helmet's latches, removed
the helmet (along with the remaining glove), rested it all in an
awkward pile atop an unoccupied end of one of the many consoles.
Something had
sparked change in him. He felt it.
Castor recited aloud
a passage of tenet from the Basic Principles of Protection: "Strive
not, people of Scion, to regard the unknown. Disregard
curiosity over all blasphemy. For your way is clear. And all
things in their own times reveal." The words rang hollow for the
first time.
There was a serene
effect in the gentle, low-frequency hum which had been drilling into
his subconscious since he first stepped foot aboard the derelict
craft. Almost, but not quite, recognized at an emotional level;
presented for
him, in this
place, at this
time. It allayed his trepidations. For all the separations of time.
For all the unfamiliarity. Here, too, was a thing of veiled
invitation where Castor felt he did not entirely not
belong.
He felt...not forgiven for his trespass...rather, entitled,
with
nothing to forgive.
Against the
Tenets, The Bagad'i invites my curiosity! Rather
than feeling as if he jeopardized the promise of Earth-Beyond-Life,
he felt more confidently connected to it than ever before.
No more talk of
blasphemy. Castor unzipped the long pocket of his suit leg, extracted
a smooth fold of thin material. With sharp, whip-like shakes, the
material became a broad bag topped with a zipper like that of the
pocket. It was time to leave this place. Precious as it was, as was
his time spent here becoming, he grew worried about poor Bramaria
alone on the rind two dozen meters or so above him. She was a fierce
creature of the ivy, he knew.
But still...
He spied a peculiar
apparatus, clearly designed for wearing on one's wrist, resting
atop another, flat object with a clear screen covering its
face--itself resting on a textured square of material seemingly
built into the console. Unsure of their precise functions, Castor was
reminded of similar objects with whose forms these seemed to indicate
a certain parity. When lifted, the faces of both items lit up with a
wink, then became dark again, except for a thin light surrounding the
edges of each. He dropped both items into the bag and continued to
scan the area. Stepping backward, his boot kicked against something
solid which rolled and bounced to the bulkhead near the steps. There
were few loose items in the cockpit, but he'd somehow managed
threatening the destruction of one of them with his own clumsiness. A
fine steward of Scion, I am.
His face screwed up in disgust at the thought. He continued his
search glancing left then right until his gaze fell on a slender,
silver-tipped object nestled deep within one of several piles of ashy
dust scattered atop the consoles. He grabbed the object, blew the
dust off, dropped that also into the bag.
Bagad'i had been
inviting and kind; Castor did not wish to test that indulgence
further. Taking a last look around at the dance of luminescent
brilliance and cast shadows on the curved face of the bubble, he
descended the steps back through the bulkhead (stooping to pick up,
then stash the black globe he'd kicked a moment ago) and back
through the seating area to the awaiting hatch.
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