c. 2024 Rod Ice
All rights reserved
(11-24)
Arbiter Goland Pick had been observing the Morningstar III carefully, from his console at the Toqua Platte Center, in Calimex. The foreign vessel had orbited Planet Earth for several days. A period long enough to make him believe that some sort of mission had been planned. This second appearance of the craft had him anxious about the possibility that superior forces from Mars might invade his coastal territory. Though the commander onboard had always described their colonies as being dedicated to non-violence, he did not believe such rhetoric. It was deeply imbedded in human DNA to seek dominance, and conquest, whenever possible. Any notion that a species of high-functioning apes could will themselves to be peaceful and content, seemed ridiculous. So, when the ship suddenly slipped out of its orbital circle, and turned back toward the Martian homeworld, there was a measure of disbelief hanging in its wake.
A cheer went up from the team on duty. But for the seasoned technician, there was only a sense that more questions had been aroused. Riddles that neither he, nor his officers, could answer.
As the sleek, silver transport faded from view, he turned toward his lead engineer, and called for a magnification of their search parameters.
“Increase our sensor range! Let’s follow that intruder until his drive signature has completely disappeared!”
Jordan N’Falah nodded in response, and tapped at his control panel. He had just begun his shift, after working twelve hours during the previous day.
“Aye sir, we can track them for maybe another 30 minutes. The C-drive gives them a capability to achieve stunning velocities. We don’t have anything so quick in our own fleet...”
Pick nearly roared at this comment. He flushed red, with irritation.
“OF COURSE WE DON’T! ESPECIALLY WITH OUR FAILURE TO CAPTURE THAT SHUTTLE VISITING THE RUINS OF OHIO!”
The assistant cringed slightly, and averted his eyes.
“I didn’t mean to rehash a bad memory, sir. It was simply a statement of fact.”
His superior at the center shook in his seat. Droplets of sweat trickled from his bald skull.
“The facts say that they came back here for some reason. Was it just to retrieve their wounded mule? I doubt it, but maybe. It seems like a huge effort just to rescue a lost pilot. We wouldn’t stoop to that level! Sacrifices have to be made! Yet I am just speculating. You don’t know, and I don’t know...”
N’Falah still felt groggy from having worked so many days in succession. His youthful constitution made it possible to survive such an ordeal. But his eyes struggled to focus.
“Their radio chatter is encoded, sir. I couldn’t pick up anything intelligible. They were in contact with a Mars base of some kind. Not a surprise, as that is their origin point. Still, I’d like to know what was said between here and there!”
Arbiter Pick groaned and clenched his right fist.
“OF COURSE YOU WOULD! I’LL BE QUIZZED BY LOTHARIAN GARDINO ABOUT THIS, UNDOUBTEDLY. HE WILL WANT ANSWERS, AND WE HAVE NOTHING TO GIVE. NOTHING, NOTHING, NOTHING!”
The junior engineer ducked his head as if avoiding shrapnel.
“Their course is steady now, sir. A short trip to the Red Planet, at cruising speed. It would take us a year to get that far.”
His top-ranked technician sputtered and spit saliva, as if he were having a seizure.
“SHUT UP! SHUT UP! I KNOW DAMNED WELL HOW LONG IT WOULD TAKE US! WE’RE STUCK LIVING LIKE CAVE CREATURES HERE! CAPTURING A C-DRIVE UNIT WOULD HAVE GIVEN US A CHANCE TO MAKE A QUANTUM LEAP OVER EVERYBODY ELSE ON THIS BIG PIECE OF ROCK!”
N’Falah nearly laid flat on his duty panel. He trembled while fiddling with the instruments.
“Aye sir! Aye, aye!”
Shortly after their verbal spat, the Morningstar III vanished from surveillance protocols. It had traveled far enough to turn invisible to the Pacific sensor array. Silence descended on the hub at Toqua Platte. Then, a rocket blaze curled over the horizon.
Goland Pick teetered forward in his swivel chair. A white-hot streak of energy crossed the viewscreen as he stiffened with uncertainty.
“Mr. N’Falah, what the hell was that? Did the Martian craft eject something on their way out of orbit?”
His technical subordinate battled a momentary rush of confusion.
“Our tracking devices show it came from the southern hemisphere, sir. A probe of some kind, sent from the region of... from the region of... Australia.”
The arbiter-in-command gasped and swooned in place.
“From where? C’mon now, you’ve got to have a better read on the situation! Recheck your displays! We haven’t seen or heard anything from that quadrant for decades. There can’t be much left down under, except for a few lizards, kangaroos, and stray Aboriginals...”
The junior technician shrugged and rubbed his eyes.
“It looks like a test firing of some sort, sir. Aimed toward the lunar disc. Our moon is at a convenient spot for study at this moment. Maybe they are curious, like us?”
Pick waved his palm across the control surface. A series of lighted tiles blinked in succession.
“We’ve been blind here for so long, how could they just appear out of the fog? We thought that isolated continent was dead...”
N’Falah brushed the dark skin on his forearms, while pondering. Then turned the sensor array to pick up any transmissions from the Australian land mass.
“I’m going to guess that this has no correlation to the Morningstar being in orbit, sir. It’s an odd coincidence, though. Things have been different since we realized that the Mars colonies survived and prospered, after the calamity of a century ago.”
The arbiter slouched in his seat, and huffed over this predicament.
“Prime Keeper Gardino won’t take any of this as happening by chance. He’s a suspicious wonk, always scheming for an advantage over his opponents. I doubt that he has any genuine friends, or allies. It’s a game of darts to that hard-nosed fellow. A matter of hitting targets and reaping the rewards...”
Sparkles of spent fuel trailed from the unmanned probe, as it streaked into the vacuum of outer space. No more activity registered on the Calimex monitors. Yet enough damage had been done to their confidence to last for weeks and months to come.
Jordan N’Falah began to fall asleep as the crew continued its work. He had pushed hard against his own limits of endurance. Now, it was time to surrender.