Prisoners of Sol 36
Added 2025-05-06 11:00:08 +0000 UTCOur circumstances had shifted in the blink of an eye, as I listened to our internal chatter for any hope that humanity might not be a doomed race. Iâd seen the camera drone go through the portal faster than light, and I knew what the results would be. My hands lifted away from the steering column, before I floated like I was in a dream. Let Larimakâs ships gun me down; there was no point in living for a small military base in a universe we didnât belong to. I remained slumped over, weeping for the dimension that had been annihilated due to our failure now.
Mikri took control of my spaceship, turning the nose back toward the base. Of course, the damn robot wouldnât even let me die! Heâd âkeep me alive forever.â Goodie. I knew there was a standard-issue sidearm stashed in the console, and there was nothing the Vascar could do to stop me from turning it on myself. I thought long and hard about pulling it out. The words that Capal had prophesied echoed through the radio, confirming what I already realized.
âAll data reports that an object passed into the Gap at faster-than-light speeds,â an officer said in a rote voice, sounding as robotic as Mikriâperhaps stunlocked by the gravity of this all. âSol is destroyed. The slightest collision over thereâŠitâs gone.â
âWeâve lost everything. Thereâs no dimension to go back to,â another voice choked out in horror. âSol erased? The end of humanity? Weâre going to go scorched earth on these motherfuckers! Burn them! With our last breath, let them see the fires of hell rain on their heads.â
A third voice was quiet, sniffling. âMay God have mercy on our souls. Earth meant everything. No more Sol materials to tap into, no more civilians or logistical supportâŠâ
âSend something through the fucking Gap! Make sure that weâre not wrong about Solâs downfall. We must maintain order in our ranks, to mete out as much damage as possible,â a final human spat.
Not even the most disciplined military crew would keep order as the last survivors of mankind, in an alien dimension. Itâll just be some bloody rampage of revenge, like Mikriâs people did against the creators, killing indiscriminately. Thatâs not a reason to stick around.
I wanted Larimak to pay for this as much as the next guy, but the grief I felt was a million times more overwhelming. There had been time that I wasted getting out of the hangar bay, and more time that was squandered figuring out my precognition. Fuck, my stalling out of nervousness to speak to Capal cost us warning time! Had I not dragged my feet, the prisoner wouldâve given us the information sooner, and we couldâve been ready for Larimakâs invasion. We couldâve stopped it, if Command was expecting him. I killed Sol.
âPreston?â Mikri screeched, as I pulled out the handgun with shaking hands. âThere are no hostiles to shoot. I have concluded that you wish toâŠcause yourself to leak fluid. Iâm sorry that I was useless, that I couldnât make the ships faster, that I couldnât give good enough advice on how to protect Sol! Iâm sorry that I asked you to help us, which resulted in this event. I know this is my fault.â
I gave a delirious smile, waving the handgun around with reckless motions. âIt wasnât your fault, Mikri. It was mine. I was a liability to humanity, you know. Theyâre all dead now! I think Iâll join them. I donât want to survive like this, no sirree.â
âPlease, do not do this. A machineâs wishes must matter little at such a time, butâŠSofia needs you. She asked you to turn around and come home, soâŠnot all of humanity is dead! Listen to me. It is not prudent to make irreversible decisions while upset and irrational!â
I nodded, unclicking the safety. âYou werenât useless, Mikri. You were a good friend. I loved you more than any companion I ever had, and know that IâmâŠsorry that this will hurt you. I am very sorry. If itâs any consolation, like you said, it was going to happen eventually anyway. Start a new life, with your own art and book clubs andâdonât remember me like this. Remember harmonicas on the beach.â
âI cannot forget anything. It is not in my capacity.â Mikri was speaking rapidly, as the majority of the human fleet zipped in on Larimak with a newfound fury. âJust answer me one question! Have you considered that we are missing one of the occurrences that Capal spoke of?â
I hesitated, blinking my eyes open; it was hard to think through a soul-grinding despair. âWhat?â
âThe human commanders expressing that Sol is destroyed has already happened, but there have not been messages from Sol about the barrier lighting up with negative energy. Logically, these are communications from Sol that have not yet happened. This would imply the dimensionâs continued existence in the future, and that Capal may have confused the order of events.â
Sofiaâs voice cut into the feed, sounding hopeful all of a sudden. âYouâre right, Mikri! Sol might not be dead.â
âThat makes enough sense,â I agreed, lowering my pistol. âWe thought the Elusians were going to attack us, butâŠâ
âMaybe they acted to save us, Preston. Why did we think them sinister, when they were never hostile toward us? The Elusians didnât make it impossible to leave, and they could have. Shit, I need to weigh the possibilities. Donât you dare do anything stupid, Y-Chromosome, when thatâs still a real possibility! Iâll reach through the console and smack you.â
âFine. How long do we need to wait to hear from Sol?â
âSolside, the Gapâs data monitoring station is a few light-minutes away. If theyâre still there and Capalâs predictions were all right, they will send a message any moment now.â
âKnow that I am here with you all, as long as I am needed,â Mikri stated. âI will do anything to provide comfort and elevate your neurological state. I will sing songs of the fabled Vascar boyband, and gaslight you comfortingly into believing this never happened if necessary. You would not want to leave this existence without hearing me sing, correct?â
I couldnât bring myself to smile, regardless of how hard the robot was trying. âLater, I guess. Write me a love song to croonâŠif, and only if, Sol survives.â
The spark of hope had affixed itself to my brain, as I knew damn well that Sofia, Mikri, and Capal were all leagues above my intellect; what they said about the negative energy flash was logical, since itâd yet to come to pass. There was no telling if that barrier lighting up wasnât part of harming our dimension, just starting a chain reaction that led to its destruction. Either way, a message from Sol meant thereâd be at least one final transmission I could hear from the rest of humanity. It would be my way of saying goodbye, at least.
Under normal circumstances, Iâd be ecstatic about willing boyband Mikri into existence. I know the poor tin can would be devastated, but IâŠI need my people to go on. Period.
âYour biological skin, Tissue that holds blood within,â Mikri wailed in an off-key tune, that sounded like a damn waltz song. âYouâre goofy and eat all the time, I want you to know that youâre mine. Hear Preston, Iâm using my voice, stay, stay, you have no choiceââ
âAnd this song is canceled,â I sighed. âI told you, not unless Sol survives.â
âYes, I know. Your qualifier has been fulfilled. Listen.â
I tilted my head, honing in on every word as Mikri played the first of messages from Sol. âCaelum, weâre getting strange activity spikes from the Sol barrier. Massive discharges of what appears to be negative energy, lighting up everywhere with staggering readings. Weâre wondering if youâve any idea whatâs caused this.â
âThe barrier around Sol isnât to keep humans in,â Capal chattered over the radio. âItâs to keep objects out. None of the ESU transmissions detected any object emerge from The Gap, so the camera drone didnât make it through at all. The wall was triggered and prevented it from passing through.â
Sofiaâs relief was evident in her voice. âThe Elusians saved us. They were never imprisoning us, Capal. They knew the danger of objects coming through their portals, from any party, so they wanted to protect us. A sealed bubble was the only way. Just look, the borderâs discharge didnât harm us at all.â
âI donât understand though. The Elusians do not involve themselves, and are largely indifferent to the happenings in the galaxy, so long as you bend a knee and donât get in their way. Why take such a special interest in you? I know their research is heavily invested in mapping out all dimensions and enhancing their travel capabilities. They must have some end goal, beyond just your harsh physics.â
âI see everything, everything! The gray aliens only prohibit travel because it drives organics insane, but it doesnât for us. We can pass through The Gap. Maybe theyâd want our help with that, or even welcome us. Itâs always been an assumption that the Elusians didnât wish for us to leave, that they wanted to keep us contained. We just watched them negate Larimakâs particle, like our guardian angels. We have to talk to themâto thank them for what theyâve done!â
I tucked the gun away, pursing my lips. âSo humanity is really okay? The Elusians had protections by The Gap all along? Iâm beyond grateful. I donât know how any of us couldâve gone on without Sol.â
âYou may not be morose anymore, Preston,â Mikri said sternly. âLarimakâs master plan failed.â
âJust like his viagra. That prick needs to pay for everything, like we said. Give me back control of the ship.â
âNo. You are in no condition to fight, and were not cleared to fly by the ESU. Your interference is unnecessary; the others have got him. Itâs over. This was hisâŠone play, as you would put it in sportsâ terminology.â
âHis Hail Mary, and now he has nothing! All of that gloating, just to have performance issues at the big moment. You know what he tried, though, and it makes me pretty fucking angry. We have to get Larimak, Mikri.â
âHis own crew appears to be revolting, a mutiny on a capital ship, after catching the civilian transmissions that Sol deflected the camera drone. The prince seems to have convinced them that you were a threat to conquer the whole dimension alongside us, and that you could be stopped through sacrifice. Now, they are getting slaughtered for nothing, which they find to be an unacceptable outcome.â
I switched over to a feed Mikri had received, grinning as I saw the Asscar ships begin to flee; some began to behave erratically, due to internal fighting over the controls. My eyes zeroed in on the highlighted vessel watching from afar, which jettisoned some kind of escape shuttle that zipped away. I wasnât a rocket scientist like some people I knew, but it checked out that Larimak was trying to get away from the mutiny. We couldnât let him escape. He was hanging way back, so there was no way for our ships to chase him!
Further confirming the idea that the prince had departed, every hostile ship tried to flee or surrender, though many humans werenât feeling too merciful; theyâd all been party to the plot to destroy our entire universe. My features contorted into a mask of fury, wanting nothing more than to use Larimakâs decapitated head as a urinal. I hated that alien despot so much, after everything heâd done to me. Iâd sleep better at night knowing he wasnât out there.
âLarimak fled from his own ship. Heâs lost the support even of his own military,â Mikri remarked. âI do not know how humans will track him down, but it would seem the war is over after this defeat. The Vascar network owes you immense gratitude for destroying the forces of our enemy, and ensuring that our species may continueâŠon our home. Few organics would agree that we have a right to Kalka, but I think you would.â
I sucked in a deep breath, trying to focus on the relief that the war was overânot that Larimak escaped scot-free. âOf course you do, Mikri. Itâs the planet where you popped out a conveyor belt in all of your shapely beauty. Whatâs home, if not that?â
âI do not know. I am hopeful that we can know peace, and be allowed our existence now. This will be humanityâs second-greatest gift, only behind your friendship. With Solâs survival, my disposition is characterized by the utmost happiness that your species will be a part of my future. That I will not lose you.â
I nodded to his words, and tried to take the victory lap, in spite of my disappointment at Larimakâs getaway. Humanity had triumphed in our first (and hopefully final) Caelum war, and we might be able to enjoy a peace as well, now that it seemed the Elusians werenât a hostile party to take on. Our tasks would be to orchestrate the Vascarâs coexistence with other organics, and to situate ourselves on this side of The Gap. At face value, it seemed like a happy ending: open and closed, book shut.
Yet something, perhaps a precognitive whisper, told me that this success was only the beginning of humanityâs journey as the new interdimensional power on the block.
A/N - 36! In the face of the evident loss of Sol, Preston is on the brink of giving up as Mikri desperately tries to convince him not to cause himself to leak fluid. Our favorite robot comes to a realization just in time that one part of the visit hadnât happened yet, and that Sol may have survived after all. The negative energy pulse from the precog turns out to be from the solar system wall, which our characters believe is an Elusian safeguard. In the wake of his FTL-strikeâs failure, Larimak flees his own fleet through a mutiny, and it seems this might be the end of the war with the organic Vascar.
Why would the non-interfering Elusians potentially take a special interest in Sol, and does the wall mean their interest was more benevolent? Will the two Vascars be able to reconcile, with peace in Caelum? What will humanityâs next move be, in light of this new information and without having to devote resources to fighting a mad prince? Is this the last weâll see of Larimak?
As always, thank you for reading and supporting!
Comments
It was foreshadowed. And im not just talking about the precog bit. Their behavior was described as being non interventionist except for where the locals of various dimensions can't handle things on their own, most notably in the dimension hopping psychosis, and while it wasn't said outright, because objects in motion stay in motion unless interacted with by an outside force (no credit for partial answers) there would have to be some kind of system to prevent accidental/incidental FTL object entry. And that system would have to be there when the gate is created if not before. Space may be empty but it's not without a lot of high velocity particles flying about, including those with mass.
Michael Halpern
2025-05-07 13:22:42 +0000 UTC"Humanity had triumphed in our first (and hopefully final) Caelum war". Yep, they said that after world war 1 as well and look how that turned out.
Frayo
2025-05-07 01:40:19 +0000 UTCWelp... It seems Larimak's plan died... Time for this prick to join the death tollđïžđïž Greys saved us as well!!! I was not expecting that outcome, but it's a welcome one :D
RaphaelFrog
2025-05-06 23:53:02 +0000 UTC