Lorewoven is in early beta — help us test it

๐Ÿ“– Stories

Captain "Nova"

๐ŸŽฎ Starfield

by Novalith

Clear

Showing 4 of 4 stories (filtered)

Toxic

๐Ÿ“… 2330-07-22

The ship's PA system activated seventeen seconds after they boarded.

Attention all personnel. Hazardous microbial life has been detected aboard this vessel. All personnel should evacuate immediately. Thank you for your cooperation.

Nova looked at Muira. Muira looked back with the expression she reserved for things that were going to happen regardless of her opinion of them.

He walked deeper into the ship. She followed.


The samples were in the cargo hold โ€” orbs of something biological, translucent, drifting near the ceiling in a loose cluster. Nova began collecting them with the methodical attention of someone who had decided this was useful.

Muira watched this for a moment.

"Those are the hazardous microbial life," she said.

"Probably," Nova agreed, and pocketed another one.


The crew were in the quarters. Desiccated, arranged by circumstance in positions that suggested they had not seen it coming. Muira found the desiccation less alarming than the ongoing mold collection happening behind her, which she felt said something about her current life choices.

The logs were sparse. Several entries of mounting unease with very little supporting detail โ€” ship feels unclean, though air filters nominal โ€” and then, in the final entry, the observation that food had been going missing from the galley.

"They died," Muira said, reading over his shoulder, "because something ate their food."

"There may have been other factors."

"The last thing they wrote was that someone ate their food."

Nova closed the terminal. "I have the samples."

"You have the hazardous microbial life."

"That's what I said."


The PA activated again as they reached the airlock.

Attention all personnel. Hazardous microbial life has been detected aboard this vessel. All personnel should evacuate immediately. Thank you for your cooperation.

"We're leaving," Muira told it.

VASCO was waiting back in the Razorleaf. He looked at the orbs in Nova's hands, and then at Muira, in the way of a robot that had learned to accurately assess situations without necessarily knowing what to do with that assessment.

Nobody said anything. They left.

Doing Good

๐Ÿ“… 2330-07-24

I was still in Denebola when the distress signal came through.

VASCO fielded it before I'd fully processed what I was hearing. The LIST designation, he explained, stood for League of Independent Settlers โ€” frontier families who'd claimed land out here beyond the reach of the UC and Freestar, trying to build something that belonged to them. He gave me this information in his usual manner, which is to say efficiently and without editorializing, and then waited to see what I was going to do about it.

I set a cruise heading for the signal's origin.


The man who came out to meet me had a rifle leveled before the Razorleaf had finished landing. He held it there for a moment โ€” long enough to make the point โ€” and then lowered it when it became apparent I wasn't a Spacer.

His name was Alban Lopez. He was genuinely surprised that I'd come, which I found strange. You send a distress signal into the dark and then express shock when something answers? I didn't say that. I made a mental note that he was the kind of man who complained loudly about the problems he'd caused himself, and filed it away.

His problem was this: the Spacers had taken over the Denebola system. Not just his land, but the whole system โ€” four settler families cut off from each other, their communications satellites either taken offline or left to decay. He needed someone to get the satellites back up. He needed that someone to fight through whatever the Spacers had left guarding them. And then, if those satellites happened to re-establish contact with the other three families, maybe something could be organized.

I told him I'd handle it.


The satellites were spread across the system. Between each one, I had time to watch the stars drift past the viewport while the Razorleaf cruised on, unhurried, through the quiet between distances that would have taken lifetimes before grav technology made them unremarkable. There is something I keep noticing about space travel: that the scale is so far outside human intuition that the only honest response is to stop trying to feel it and just let it happen.

The Lopez satellite had three Spacer ships waiting. I cleared them and made the repair.

With comms re-established, Alban pointed me toward the remaining three.

The Banda satellite had three more. Same result.

Chanda Banda โ€” a name that his parents either loved him very much or not at all to give him โ€” seemed surprised to hear from anyone, let alone Lopez after I'd re-linked their comms. The conversation was brief, with Alban recommending a meet up.

The Lemaire satellite had three ships. I took them down and made the repair and waited on the comms.

Jackie Lemaire came through sharp and tired in the way of someone who had been holding things together through force of personality alone. She had words for Lopez even over comms, but agreed to meet in person.


The Wen satellite had no ships guarding it.

I noticed that on approach and understood what it probably meant before I'd finished the thought. I made the repair anyway. Ran the full sequence. Sent the connection request.

No response.

The system stayed quiet on that frequency. I sat with it for a moment โ€” the particular silence of a signal that goes out and finds nothing on the other end โ€” and then set a cruise heading for the rendezvous point.


The meeting was aboard a Lemaire family ship, which Jackie had insisted on and nobody had argued with. The three family heads were already in the same room when I arrived, which meant Lopez and Lemaire had been in the same room for several minutes, which meant the argument was already well underway.

Jackie's position was that Lopez was a scammer, that she wouldn't give him an ounce of Helium-3 if her life depended on it, and that she saw no reason to formalize an arrangement with people she didn't trust.

Chanda wanted everyone to work together and said so with the steady optimism of a man who had learned not to lead with how tired he was.

I let it run for a while. Then I talked to Jackie.

She had the most ships. She knew it. She'd framed that as having the least to gain from an alliance โ€” if they were already the strongest family, why share? โ€” and she wasn't wrong, exactly. I told her she had that backwards. The strongest family was the most visible target. The one the Spacers would come for first when they finished consolidating. She had the most to lose if this system didn't hold together, not the least.

She was quiet for a moment.

I may have also mentioned that driving Spacers out of an entire solar system was, objectively, a good story to tell.

She laughed. First real laugh I'd heard in that room. Then she said fine, she was in, but if Lopez pulled anything she'd leave him to the Spacers herself.

I told her that seemed fair.


Alban told me there were two clusters of Spacer ships that needed to be cleared before we could move on the station. He offered to send ships from all three families.

I told him to save them.

This was partly confidence. Partly I didn't want to be responsible for what happened to anyone else's family members if the fight went wrong. And partly โ€” I'll be honest about this โ€” I wanted to see what the Razorleaf could do in a real engagement, with something actually at stake.

Eight ships. Two groups of four, stationed at different points in the system. I cleared them in order, cruising between them, and by the time I reached the second group I'd found a rhythm that left me feeling unbeatable. A dangerous mindset, perhaps, but a boon in confidence for certain.

When I reported back at Lopez's farm on the moon's surface, he was excited to have won a bet with Chanda. At least he bet on my success, I suppose...

He then informed me that he hadn't been idle while I was risking my neck. he'd used the commotion to triangulate the location of their base of operations. That would be our next target, and this time we'd send everybody.


The base, a derelict star station in orbit over Denebola II, was the kind of structure that Spacers adopt the way rats adopt abandoned buildings โ€” not because it's good, but because nobody else wants it. We came in together: the Razorleaf, and the ships from three families who two hours ago hadn't been sure they could share a room.

We cleared the ships around it. Then we boarded.

Muira was at my side through the interior. We'd done enough of these now that we had something like a system โ€” I don't think either of us had named it, but it existed. She took one side, I took the other, and we met in the middle, and the Spacers in between had a very bad few minutes.

The station had been used as a staging point for a while. There was gear, supplies, weapons. There were Galbank safes ripped from somewhere and stacked against a wall, which raised questions nobody left alive was going to answer. I found the key eventually and discovered they were full of credits and good weapons, which I distributed between the Razorleaf's storage and crew.


When it was over I spoke with Alban on a bridge in the station. The system was clear. The families were talking. Something that looked like a future was taking shape out here in the dark, which is what they'd come out here for.

He offered the reward credits.

I told him to keep them.

He started to argue โ€” out of form, I think, more than genuine protest โ€” and I said what I actually meant, which was that their survival was less certain than mine. They were going to need those credits more than I was. The Spacers would be back eventually, or someone like the Spacers, and when that happened I wanted them to have every resource they'd earned.

He accepted that without making it sentimental, which I appreciated.

On the way back to the Razorleaf, Muira walked beside me and said nothing. Part of me wonders if she was disappointed with me for not taking the credits.

I thought about the Wen satellite on the cruise back out of the system. The signal that went out and found nothing. Four families who'd come out here together, and now there were three.

I don't know their names. There was nothing in the station records that helped. Somewhere between the dream and the attempt, the Wen family ran out of time, and I arrived too late to matter, and all I could do was make sure the same thing didn't happen to everyone else.

That's the job, I think. You can't save everyone. You do the math on what's still possible and you work the problem in front of you.

It doesn't make the silence any easier to sit with.

Unity

๐Ÿ“… 2330-08-15

The Hunter said a word before he left the Lodge: Unity.

Matteo knew it. Or knew of it โ€” the way people know the edges of something without being able to see the center. His faith, the Sanctum Universum, had a version of the idea. It was... deliberate. Explicit. Matteo simply couldn't shake that it was relevant somehow.

That was worth following.


Keeper Aquilus met me at the Sanctum with the careful attention of a man who has been asked many questions and has learned to wait for the one that matters. I asked about Unity. He gave me what he had, which was partial โ€” fragments of a thing larger than any one tradition had preserved. But he also had some breadcrumbs for me. He told me to talk to the other major "religious" orders operating in the Settled Systems. The House of the Enlightened, which was explicitly an Atheist organization, but apparently had early records that came off as prophetic in nature. and the Zealots of House Va'ruun. Fortunately both were readily accessible in New Atlantis.

I will spare the details here of what specifically I learned, and I do so ostensibly because I am not sure yet that it's information that I want anyone to ever be able to stumble across in the future. But in the end, I did find myself on a remote planet, in a sort of abandoned compound, reading the diaries of a man who seemed to have been following a similar path... or, has followed a similar path. It is... confusing. But this point in the path lead me to a new location. And this location had its own strangeness, its own puzzle.


When I warped to where the trail had ended โ€” the final star of the Scorpius constellation โ€” I was greeted by a familiar ship. A Starborn ship. The Hunter's ship.

I boarded.

On this ship were two Starborn: The Hunter, who had killed Sam and tried to kill the rest of Constellation, and the Emissary who had confronted me in orbit over Neon. The two Starborn we'd encountered, in the same room, waiting. They each spoke, spun a tale that I'm hesitant to believe even with the evidence before my eyes. I almost don't want to divulge what I've learned here, either, but I feel I must.

The artifacts form something referred to as the Armillary. The Armillary leads to the Center of the Universe, and at the Center of the Universe there is... The Unity. And when one glimpses the Unity they are presented with an option: The chance to ascend humanity and become Starborn. But it is not without cost. You leave your world behind, travel to another universe, much like this one but wholly different at the same time.

I never would have believed any of this were it not for what happened next. The Emissary revealed their face to me, and it was one I knew all too well, and one I never thought I'd see again. It was the face of Sam Coe.

But it was not Sam, at least not the one we'd lost at the Eye mere days ago. It was Someone else. A different version of Sam.

Alive. But not our Sam.


My theory โ€” human, or human-adjacent โ€” was correct. The Starborn are us. Were us. People who found the artifacts, found the temples, followed the path I am on now, and made a choice.

What infuriated me, what I am still furious about, is that the Hunter's argument makes sense.

He killed Sam. He attacked Constellation. He has done things I cannot forgive, and I am not interested in forgiving them. And his position on Unity โ€” what it is, what it costs, what repeating the cycle endlessly actually produces โ€” is not wrong. I can see the logic of it. I followed the thread of his reasoning and arrived, against my will, at a place where I understood it.

I hate that. I hate it in a specific, bone-deep way that I don't have a more precise word for.


Earth's moon. The Emissary says it's relevant. The next step.

I'm not going yet.

Right now I'm sitting in my room on the Naginata, staring at a lamp. I don't know why. I can't...

Lost in Thought

๐Ÿ“… 2330-08-27

The Alpha Tirna system has ten planets and a number of moons. He had been to most of them now.

He went alone. Every time. When Muira raised an eyebrow at the first landing he told her they were explorers. That was the last conversation they had about it.

She stayed on the ship. Mostly. When he came back from his outing, she was often standing outside the airlock in her suit โ€” not waiting, or not admitting to it. She found things to look at. Rock samples. Atmospheric readings on her scanner. She looked up when he approached, without a word, or sometimes with a dry remark about having to stop slacking off now that he was back.

There was more significance in what went unsaid between them.


The moons were not hospitable. That was fine.

Tirna II-a: no atmosphere, point-one-eight gravity, barren but silently beautiful. He took the rover out for two hours across iron-grey terrain that gave nothing back in any direction. The silence was total โ€” no wind, no atmosphere to carry anything, just the sound of the vehicle and his own breathing. Helium-3 in the rock. Nothing else of note. He catalogued what there was and came back.

Muira was outside. She appeared to be very interested in the landing strut.

Tirna VI-b: frozen, thin CO2 atmosphere, no life of any kind. The rover crossed ground that was pale and featureless in the way of places that have never had anything growing on them and never will. Chemical water locked somewhere beneath the frost. Eight different resources in the rock โ€” gold and Europium among them, which felt like a joke nobody was laughing at. He took his samples and left.

Tirna VIII: a gas giant, unbothered by the survey. He ran the orbital scans from the cockpit and moved on.

The crew had dinner ready. Model G had started placing the food and retreating without being asked, which was appreciated more than was acknowledged. VASCO asked how it went every time. Fine, he said. Muira didn't ask. She ate and read something on her datapad.


He was a striking figure on the surface of Tirna IV, if there had been anyone to see it. The suit was deep red, the kind of red that had no business on a geological survey โ€” a full-body shell of articulated plates, sealed at every joint, built for situations considerably more violent than sample collection. It caught the pale light of Alpha Tirna and gave nothing back. Even with his face obscured, he looked like a man broken into pieces and hastily glued back together.

He simply stood and listened.

Tirna IV had a sonorous lithosphere. The rock resonated โ€” mineral composition, internal structure, something โ€” and when the wind crossed the surface formations at the right angle the planet made sound. Low. Sustained. Felt in the chest before it reached the ears.

He stood there longer than the survey required. One hand flat against a rock formation, feeling it hum under the plating of his glove.

There was a thought nearby that wouldn't come into focus. The shape of something he'd been carefully not-thinking for weeks. He was almost at it when the comm crackled.

Noel's voice. Sam's funeral was tomorrow. She wanted to know if he was coming.

He looked at his hand on the rock. The planet kept humming.

"Yes."

โ† Back to Character