III
But Behold!
As I lay down to die
Hunters from space I did spy
They entered my cave
Trying to be brave
I tried to fight,
But my strength was light.
With all strength spent
Humbly along I went
To their hideous city
Where they showed no pity.
They put me in a secluded room
Where I waited my doom
They cursed me with warmth and
food
Until my health was normal and
good
I wondered and my thoughts did
pause
On those who killed us without
just cause
Should bring me back to life
When I did not wish to live
without my wife.
# # # # #
Planet Able was over twice
the size of Terra Prime. Doing an in-depth survey of the four continents wouldn’t
be easy. One thing the ministry of reclamation hoped for was a spot or spots that
hid and supported life.
Scanners were sent out to search out any tiny
spot where vegetation still existed. North Able, South Able, East Able and West
Able were thoroughly plotted and scanned. Possible sites were pinpointed, and
search parties dispatched.
On West Able halfway
up the planet’s highest mountain a valley was discovered showing greenery. Commander
Maury led the expedition. He wanted to see for himself if life still existed
and could be used to resuscitate the planet.
The shuttle
craft was buffeted by 120 mile per hour winds and thick sand. Nearly half the
planet’s surface was in the air swirling in the high winds. Maury felt despair.
Writing in his log: How can we even attempt to make this planet habitable
again under such conditions?
A thousand feet
below the valley the winds died down. The dust and sand abated. The valley was ten
miles in length and five miles at its greatest width. A pin prick on the planet
Landing in a lush meadow with a flowing stream
the area was missing farmers. Crops were near harvest, trees were plentiful,
flowers bloomed. The air smelled fresh and sweet. Small animals, insects, fish
and other life forms were present, but none of the sentient inhabitants or farmers.
The scientists
started taking samples of all the life forms, hoping that they would discover
the needed nutrients to revitalize the planet. Some fanned out to photograph
and catalogue what was left of life on this planet. Others started exploring
the mountain above the valley and below it. There were thousands of caves.
A month later
reports came in that there appeared to be indigenous life forms inhabiting the
caves in four different directions. “They appear to be hiding from us. As we
get closer, they flee.” First Sergeant, Shanika Aziri, one of the explorers told
the commander,” She rushed up and blurted it out not respecting protocol.
Three months
later came bad news. Captain Mahmoud Jabbar reported, “We discovered the remains
of six farmers. Their tails were intact. From indications they died around two weeks
ago from dehydration.”
Maury looked at
the body bags, they can be cloned as are the other species presently growing in
artificial wombs, but they needed live ones to explain their special needs and
educate the children.
Openly weeping,
“I don’t blame them,” Maury spoke to the assembled group. “They were hunted down
to extinction like the Spikers on Orion Prime, the Uberkise on Taurus Prime and
other species all over this galaxy. We in the Prime Command thought this
problem was under control, but somehow it still plagues us.”
Jabbar spoke, “Sir,
give us a few more days, we might still find some alive.”
“Are all the
other teams finished with their assignments?” Maury asked.
Raj Digingi,
the second in command nodded, “Yes, commander.”
“Major, he
addressed Raj, “Pack up and send the shuttle back with all your specimens.” He
looked at Jabbar, “Captain you have one week to find one of them alive,” he
paused, “If you can’t find one by then it’s too late anyway.”
Thermal
scanners penetrated cave after cave. Some were little more than a hole in the
limestone while others went thousands of feet into granite. The explorers were
two days from recall and leaving the area forever.
“I found an image,”
Shanika radioed base camp. She fired a flare marking the spot and entered the
cave. Crawling on her stomach for ten feet through a narrow spot she emerged
into a large chamber. Lying to her right was a dead farmer, but recently
deceased as decomp hadn’t started. Another one was holding arms around the dead
one and shaking.
She moved
towards what appeared to be a female as there were enlarged breasts. The farmer
quickly swung its six-foot ivory tail lashing it out at her. Shanika backed away
feeling air whizzing by her as it narrowly missed.
The farmer
fell, sides heaving and looked like it spent its last reserves of energy with
the attack.
Speaking into
the com, “Have found one farmer still alive, need emergency response team ASAP.”
She took out
her water bottle and slowly moved closer to the farmer. There wasn’t a mouth. A
head with eyes, breathing holes, but no mouth or ears. She stopped perplexed. Small
hands rose to the bottle and snatched it from hers. The lid was already open,
and the liquid spilled onto the farmer’s body. It was immediately absorbed into
its fur. She could see the farmer take a bigger breath.
Lifting the
bottle higher is poured half of it onto its fur, then moved to the dead one
emptying the bottle on it. There was no reaction.
The farmer threw
the empty bottle at her and started to swing the tail again. Its hands were
flailing about and the eyes were staring daggers at her.
Backing away
she could hear the rescue squad trying to crawl through the bottleneck. She went
back where the opening enlarged, “Don’t try to crawl through,” she said. “It’s
only ten feet long and limestone, bring in laser cutters and enlarge it.” Pausing
for a second, “Slide me four or five water bottles.”
The bottles
came through and she took off the lid of one and extended it to the farmer.
Their hands touched. It was like being struck by an ion storm. She felt the
anger and hate expressed by eyes. It burned into her arms and legs settling into
her stomach making her retch. Breaking contact she went back to the opening to
catch her breath.
Feeling the
heat of the laser cutters she went to a neutral spot of the cave. She saw the
farmer try to hydrate the dead one to no avail. Again, it shook and focused all
its hate on her. She slid the other bottles towards it. The farmer twisted the top off of the next bottle and poured it onto its fur. She could see it gain strength.
“Hurry up guys,
this thing is starting to recover and it’s looking at me like I’m lunch. I guess
I’m lucky it doesn’t have a mouth and teeth, at least that I can see so far.”
With a crack huge
chunks of Limestone melted and dropped on the cave floor. A ten-foot tunnel was
now open. The farmer shrank back to its dead mate and quivered.
“Be wary of the
tail,” Shanika told them. Even nearly dead it is quick and powerful.”
Surprisingly
the farmer didn’t put up a fight. It left the other one and walked toward them.
It reached out and touched Shanika.
I know you mean me no harm.
She stood
absorbing the thoughts of this man. Turning to the group, “They communicate by
touch. I can understand his thoughts.” Shaking her head. “His name is Niqmiepu,
he may have tits, but this one is male, He is called “the nurturer.” The other
one is Ishme. She’s the mother.” Pointing at the closest member of the rescue
squad, “Treat her with respect when you bring her down.”
Niqmiepu went
with them, but Shanika needed to touch him again to convince him it was safe to
enter the flyer that would take them back to camp.
The female was
bound in a sack and placed in back of the flyer. Niqmiepu sat next to Shanika.
They held hands and he told her of the years they hid in the meadow. They were
content until the flying boxes started flying overhead and forced them into the
caves. The boxes flew day and night not allowing them to return to the meadow
for food or water.
The farmer was
transported to HQ on Able Moon Alpha. He cried upon seeing the desolation of
the entire planet. Shanika comforted him as much as she could by holding hand
and letting him know that the Federation would, with his help, turn his world
back to what it was. She imagined in her mind that Ishme and the others would
return and many more, not only farmers, but merchants and hunters as well.
Niqmiepu’s mind
went blank. He wouldn’t believe her lies. He was the last of his kind.
At HQ other
scientists looked him over, touched him and tried to communicate. He was shut
down. Water revived him, but none of the food they placed by him would he eat.
They brought some of the plants and animals that were in the meadow, but he
refused them.
“From what information
we can gather,” Shanika told Governor Maury. “The farmers mature in a year and
have a life expectancy of ten. We’re cloning the seven that were with him in
the meadow.”
“That won’t do
us much good if Niqmiepu dies,” Maury said. “There will be no one to teach them
how to farm.”
“We’ve put him in
stasis. When the others come out of incubation, we’ll revive him and upon
seeing those he’s familiar with, especially his wife, he should be willing to
teach them. From there we can expand the program.”
2 comments:
I love how the poem at the beginning tells the story from a different perspective. Keep 'em coming!
I'm trying, Berthold.
Post a Comment