Step 1: Dialogue
“This is how we save it. This sacrifice is how we ensure another opportunity, for whatever comes after us. It is our duty to them.”
“I didn’t sign up for this. Do you see my name on the dotted line? You and your people are deciding the fates of our whole world and just like that, throwing it away! You think we’ll stand for this? I don’t care what reason you say you have. You don’t have the right to take our lives away. We are justified in fighting for our survival!”
“Of course you are. And we may not have the right, but we do have the capability. So although I would love for you to agree and willingly make this sacrifice, I understand if you cannot. And I will take no joy in forcing you to.”
“What makes you think you will succeed? You may have the technology to move vast distances, but I have seen your fleet. I don’t see any weapon that we don’t also have. And we have another benefit. You came here with your little armada, but we have been the caretakers of this world for millennia. We’ve got a bigger and better base of operations here, we outnumber you massively, and we will be fighting with absolutely everything we have, because we will be fighting for our lives. You will lose. Why don’t you just leave, and fight for your own survival, somewhere else?”
“I’m afraid that we cannot do that. The universe is already in its death throes. What could it possibly matter if your people survive? In the face of the endless blackness stretching infinitely for the rest of eternity. How long would you survive? Millions of years? Billions? Maybe you will discover how to lengthen your eventual demise to even a trillion years. But all that time is but a paltry nothing in the face of infinity. We owe the universe this chance. We have had our chance at existence. It’s time to ensure that someone else gets theirs.”
“If you won’t back down from this, then prepare yourselves. We will kill you all to defend ourselves.”
“I know. I admire you and your people. Such ingenuity, such a drive for life. And you have been incredibly successful. I’m sorry to see it end. But everything must.”
Step 2: Description
A clean, cold room. Smooth and reflective black metal floors, broken up by lines of light, letting off a pale blue glow. The walls curve slowly upwards, following the shape of the ring. It slowly spins around it’s axis, as the ship floats weightlessly in space. Outside the window a planet can be seen, not far off. A band of green runs around it’s middle, and on one side of the band lies an endless night. Pure darkness. On the other, the green slowly fades into the color of an immense desert. Forever pointed towards the sun, locked, staring. That half of the planet has been baking in the heat of the sun’s embrace for as long as the planet has been here. But back inside the cold room overlooking this planet, two people sit in chairs at opposite sides of a table. At opposite sides of an idea.
One of the figures is a man, probably nearing middle age. His eyes lock onto those of his opponent, pupils bright and sharp. His expression seems to suggest a seriousness, an awareness and an intelligence. But his posture is slumped and comfortable. He frowns as he rests his cheek upon the curled fingers of his right hand. His body seems soft, his skin pale as though he had rarely seen the sun. But he is strong. He looks like he could pull your arms off. He has short, dark hair. It’s all the same length, as though it had grown out after being shaved bald. He wears a simple dark green jumpsuit that looks suited to manual labor, but he his various patches and insignias indicate a higher level of responsibility. A circular metal band runs around the collar of his suit, ready to have a helmet screwed on to provide protection from the cold vacuum of space. His heavy boots, with electromagnets for their soles, rest crossed comfortably on top of one another, as he leans back and props his feet up on a vacant chair next to himself.
This man’s most important relationship is to his planet. He cares about the people he meets too, he is not a cold or impersonal individual. But he simply can’t help seeing the big picture. He has lived his life for the betterment of his world. He has no family, except for very elderly parents for whom he feels a kind of longing, pitying love. He values his friendships most with people he works with, the smartest and hardest working people around. Those that have proven themselves in the never ending effort to keep this green-banded planet alive.
What he does for a living is what he views as the most important thing you could possibly do with your time. As the planet slowly loses atmosphere and small particles to space, it’s mass is slowly decreasing. Given enough time, this would mean that his world would lose the particles necessary for life. He used to operate one of the ships, orbiting near to his planet, trawling for micro-particles so that they could be returned to the planet for re-use. Now he has moved up in his responsibility, and he oversees every space operation dedicated to keeping his planet alive. The micro-trawlers, the solar arrays gathering energy for his world, ships coming and going from the surface, and monitoring equipment set up throughout their solar system. His job is to safeguard his world against any kind of threat it might face from space.
His greatest fear is his eventual failure. He will not live to see it, but he knows that perfection is physically impossible. No matter what he does, time will march on, his sun and world will age, and one day they will die, along with every living thing remaining. He fears the endless darkness, the pure infinite nothingness that comes after the last star in the universe burns out.
What he wants most of all is to break the rules. He wants to find a way to let his people keep existing forever. He would die happily and contentedly if he knew that was the case. But he knows that it can never happen. It’s not possible.
Scene 1: Before
Fen Arthson floated, arms crossed behind his head. He looked up at the seven stars in the sky, and the blackness that surrounded them. His eyes locked on the red glow of Belthea. A red giant, about halfway through it’s death throes. It wouldn’t last more than a few million years. And then… One less star in their sky.
A quiet notification signal buzzed beside him. He turned his head towards the green glowing screen. Analysis complete it said. Time to go do his job.
Fen leaned forward, grabbing one of the guide bars running throughout the ship. The observation room wasn’t big as rooms go, but it was bigger than any other room in his little spacecraft. Big enough to stretch out in while you waited for your computer to do it’s job. Fen twisted over, facing the passage into the middle of the ship, and began to push forward. He floated forwards, until he got to the center passageway. To his left was his bathroom, straight down was the rec and exercise area, and straight up was the pilot chair and work console. He pushed up.
As he floated, he let his hand lightly grasp the metal railing, slowly sliding along the smooth metal surface. When friction would slow his movement, his grasp would tighten and he would push himself onward once again. Even after all this time, being in space was still enthralling for him.
Once he got into the work room, he reached for the button on his sleeve that activated his boots. One quick press, and the lights on the sides of his boots were on, and suddenly he was moving towards the floor. Slowly his feet moved towards the metal walkway, and once they touched there was suddenly a down. He closed his eyes as he calmly reoriented himself, letting the sense of up and down return. When he opened them again, he was in a room with a floor and a ceiling. He smiled slightly. Some people never got very good at shifting perspective like that.
Sitting down in his chair, he looked into the screen of his work monitor. 99.99998% efficiency. He frowned. “Why are you worse than yesterday?” He looked out of the window at the force nets around his trawler, wondering if there was some damage on one of them.
Suddenly the computer alarmed, and then a voice came through. “Anomaly detected” Fen’s head snapped around to look at it. The voice of the controller sounded… frightened. That was never a good sign. “There is some kind of… Ship. There is a fleet of ships here.” The controller’s voice quavered in fear and confusion. When Fen turned back to his window, he saw them. Giant spaceships, floating in formation. The first evidence of another group of humans in millions of years, and they had just appeared on our doorstep.
Scene 2: Conversation
Across the table from Fen, the tall lanky man moved back and forth, his reflection blurrily following him in the surface of the dark table. “This is how we save it. This sacrifice is how we ensure another opportunity, for whatever comes after us. It is our duty to them.” He placed his hands on the table and leaned forward, his chair forgotten. He was trying to tell Fen why he should just accept his death. Fuck that.
Fen sat comfortably in his chair, leaning back. “I didn’t sign up for this.” He tilted his head and looked into his opponent’s eyes. “Do you see my name on the dotted line? You and your people are deciding the fates of our whole world and just like that, throwing it away!” He gestured angrily, his rage boiling. But an angry calm took control again, and he leaned back once again in his chair. “You think we’ll stand for this? I don’t care what reason you say you have. You don’t have the right to take our lives away. We are justified in fighting for our survival.”
“Of course you are.” The man wore an expression of a sort of sad sympathy. “And we may not have the right… but we do have the capability.” His tone turned serious, as he picked up a model of the planet Fen called home. “So although I would love for you to agree and willingly make this sacrifice, I understand if you cannot. And I will take no joy in forcing you to.”
Fen scoffed. “What makes you think you will succeed? You may have the technology to move vast distances, but I have seen your fleet. I don’t see any weapon that we don’t also have.” Fen leaned forward again, putting his elbows on the table and smiling. “And we have another benefit. You came here with your little armada, but we have been the caretakers of this world for millennia. We’ve got a bigger and better base of operations here, we outnumber you massively, and we will be fighting with absolutely everything we have, because we will be fighting for our lives.” Fen dropped his fist onto the table, making a small thunk as it impacted. “You will lose. Why don’t you just leave, and fight for your own survival, somewhere else?”
The man across from him put the model back down, a look of resignation on his face. “I’m afraid that we cannot do that. The universe is already in its death throes. What could it possibly matter if your people survive?” He turned to look into Fen’s eyes, imploring. “In the face of the blackness stretching infinitely for the rest of eternity,” He was practically whispering. “How long would you survive? Millions of years? Billions? Maybe you will discover how to lengthen your eventual demise to even a trillion years.” He walked around the table towards Fen. “But all that time is but a paltry nothing in the face of infinity. We owe the universe this chance. We have had our chance at existence. It’s time to ensure that someone else gets theirs.” He said, sitting down in a different chair, closer to Fen now.
“If you won’t back down from this, then prepare yourselves. We will kill you all to defend ourselves.” Fen said coldly.
“I know. I admire you and your people.” He looked away, out of the window at Fen’s world, its green band and sun baked desert beautifully visible. “Such ingenuity, such a drive for life. And you have been incredibly successful. I’m sorry to see it end.” He turned back towards Fen, a dead look in his eyes. “But everything must.”
Scene 3: After
Fen’s eyes were locked on Belthea as it began to move away. It seemed to slide sideways, slowly increasing in speed until suddenly… it was just gone. The sky was a little darker. Now there were just six points of light.
An immense feeling of loss welled up in Fen’s chest, and he hunched forward, gasping, trying not to cry out. He covered his face with his hand.
“They really took it.” Ralt said behind him. “They really can take our stars away.” She sounded like she was holding back tears too.
Fen looked up. Hearing her hurt by this had hardened his resolve, and anger began to burn in his chest instead of despair. He looked at the void where one of his stars had been. “They won’t take anything else.” He said through gritted teeth. “We need to call a meeting. We need to reactivate our old weaponry. We need to kill all of them, or else they will never stop.” He walked to his pilot’s chair and sat down, immediately entering in the route to the Hub. It was time for his people to go to war.
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