Its us again! Here to bring you yet another exciting community topic!!!!
This topic is dedicated to any stories, lore, epic poems, novels, Role Playing...anything your heart desires to share!!!
We are always up for a good read and are excited to see what you all create from DS.
We will be featuring hopefully some neat post in this orginal post every so often. Maybe be something we liked or we though it need attention! So, aim your Ogrov at that writers block and get your fingers typing!
There aren't any rules, but we do have some guidelines to follow so that we all can participate and enjoy ourselves.-There is really no limit on what you post just as long as it is Distant Stars related.-Most members are participating in a single large story with the occasional side story or two. While this thread is certainly not limited to just that story, for the benefit of all readers and participants, please begin your post with how we're supposed to handle it. (Personal Story) (DS RP) (Trader Space) Examples of this can be found all throughout the thread or by looking at this post. https://forums.sinsofasolarempire.com/372058/page/21/#2596003 This will help us all out by letting us know if you're trying to set yourself up to join the main lore, if you plan on just telling your own story, or if you're just writing lullabies for children to sing before they go to bed.-While we don't expect you to 'Play the game' in your stories, we do ask that you keep any liberties that you take be grounded within the game. For example: Talking about your space marines invading another ship is not something the game covers, so feel free to be inventive on how it would happen. However, carrying point singularity rifles that open up little black holes is beyond the scope of the game and will not be allowed. Soldiers with phasic armor that prevents them from being wounded let alone even being hit, while being relevant to the technology in the game would also not be allowed. The point is to be fair to the other people. We encourage you to ask yourselves, would this work in the game, and how would I feel if someone used this on me? If You feel strongly that it would work and you'd be okay with it being used against you, then by all means, use it. Fantasy posting, dream sequences, and April Fool's postings are of course, immune from this guideline.-We highly encourage you to message other members for help or advice. There is a TeamSpeak channel that is frequently used by the regulars to talk issues out or just shoot the breeze behind the scenes. Everyone is encouraged to take advantage of these resources. Also, 'regulars' may send you messages with suggestions, concerns, or advice. It's nothing personal, so please do not be offended, they're just trying to help keep the lore consistent within these guidelines. If there's any doubt at all about anything, just message one of the people who you see posting a lot. If they don't know, they'll pass your message along to someone who does or tell you who you need to talk to.-It is also highly recommended that you message other RPers before posting anything involving their stuff. If you don't, you're likely going to find all of DS rising up against you.-In an effort to reduce clutter, we're asking that Out Of Character (OOC) commenting be either sent to the individual for whom it is intended by using the private message feature, or take it to another thread. https://forums.sinsofasolarempire.com/366762 is a thread frequented by many of the lore writers and random comment posting about anything under the sun is highly encouraged there as well in an attempt to get the thread locked. Enjoy.
Here are other stories found within the topic:
-Reply # 103 Coloniel3 has started a interesting story. We look forward to more from him/her soon! JUMP TO STORY
-Reply # 107 Cadalancea has shared some great stories from his/her own writtings!! Again we look forward to more from him/her!! JUMP TO STORY
Some resources that we have spent hours, days, and weeks working on that will help out all participants in this thread. We ask that you look through these to help you better understand the region.-About Distant Stars- https://forums.sinsofasolarempire.com/372058/page/11/#2532381This post will give you a lot of basic information on what the region of space is like, how to get there, and who is there waiting for you.-Distant Stars Maps- https://forums.sinsofasolarempire.com/372058/page/23/#2604760This post provides you with a quick look at the region and provides you with a download link where you can get yourself a copy of the posted maps in their unreduced forms. They're very helpful when trying to figure out where to go and who you're likely going to run into when you get there. Maps of individual systems are posted throughout the thread. They're generally posted by the first person to explore the system. If you don't know if a system has been explored or not or want to see a map of a system that has been explored, ask around via PM or TeamSpeak. Someone will point you to the place.-Character Biographies- https://forums.sinsofasolarempire.com/372058/page/11/#2532380This post is a general collection of the main RP characters whom you will likely have contact with. We ask that all people posting in the main lore post their main character(s) bio as soon as possible so that the rest of us have a little background on who your character is, how they like to fight, where do they come from, and why they're there. Read the existing bios for examples on what we're looking for.
-Player made TEC Fleet Ranking Structure- https://forums.sinsofasolarempire.com/372058/page/17/#2581279
-UE Fleet Rankings- https://forums.sinsofasolarempire.com/372058/page/18/#2582667
-David's Lions Fleet Rankings- https://forums.sinsofasolarempire.com/372058/page/18/#2581491
-Advent Social Structure/Rankings- https://forums.sinsofasolarempire.com/372058/page/18/#2581615
-Potential Gas Giant Colony Designs- https://forums.sinsofasolarempire.com/372058/page/30/#2617791
ITS SUGGESTED YOU READ ALL THE LORE POST, IF YOU WISH TO JOIN US. THIS ALLOWS YOU TO UNDERSTAND AND CATCH UP ON ALL THE CURRENT HAPPENINGS.
(No longer necessary view edit for original post)
no longer needed
I use fleets mostly mid to late game. Lots of micro managing against a fleet of equal or larger size.
(Personal Story/Planet Galan, Advent Colony) (Personal Note:) I thought i would add this after reading _Ue_'s post that the RP seems to be running off course. I hope i am not contributing to that running off course, but will try to clarify where i am coming from. Basically, my character Teir, is a farm girl off of T'Lan in the T'imo system, with three worlds, the farthest out, an out world system on the rim of Trader space, the first worlds to be attacked by the Vasari as they enter the Trader worlds space. As a refugee, with her mother fleeing the attack on T'Lan, Teir and her mother and the other escaping colonists are offered safe passage and harbor by the Advent. Who transport them all in converted shipping frigates to the Galan system, some eight weeks travel from T'Lan to Galan. Galan is an Advent colony system, with a single star, Galan Prime and a single world, Galan beta. Both are simply referred to as Galan and the world is largely a mechanized metropolis with traders, off worlders, immigrants and refugees and transients. The thrust of where i am headed is to get Teir onto the colony Advent world and to have her slowly come to know what the Advent and Unity culture is. Eventually the faction that she joins is going to be called the Kin, a fundamentalist group that is trying to keep to the original roots of the Unity faith as it was originally formed on the Homeworld, in opposition to the various many off-shoots that have broken down into rebellion and self fullfilled prophets that have changed the Advent from what they were, into something else, many of them radical and fringe terrorist groups. The Kin are peaceful and devout, though strict in their beliefs. What all of this is leading up to, is that eventually, Teir will be forced out of Trader space with a group of devout Kin devotionalists into DS space. It is at that time that i propose to make her the head of her faction. First, Pro-Tem, and then after the bloody battle with both Traders on one side and Vasari on the other, into the Empress of her faction, seen as the true form of what the Advent originally were. This will all take time, quite a bit of it, if i can tell it well, perhaps several months from now and perhaps several dozens of postings. Provided of course, no one gets bored with my story or feels i have taken the RP too far off course. Anyway, please let me know what you think, and if this seems reasonable. Take care, -Teal Part Three of Teir - -Teal ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Teir- The Convent – The walls were white, the rooms stark and bare of all but the essentials. Windows only when necessary, beds, chairs, small washstands with ceramic bowls and pitchers, chipped and ancient, though still serviceable. Plain gray or brown blankets and white or black dresses or shirts and kitren pants for the men, though they were seldom seen, as the genders were separated by wings. The first day was a whirlwind of getting down from the orbital dockyards, then through the city, a warren maze of ‘crete streets and store and house fronts to the edge of the glassteel concourses and rising superstructures to a garden of white elm and pine planted seemingly out of nowhere for the ten septacres on the grounds of the Convent proper, and then melding quickly back into ‘crete and glassteel again beyond the Convent. It was a rush of glittering lights, blaring sounds and hawking vendors that lined not only the shopfronts but the walkways and the side streets as well. Not all of them looked to be honest in their trades, or their bargaining, even when they affected saddened frowns, or pursed their lips in seeming defeat at being out maneuvered in their sales. The carts here were all steam carts, hydro –powered bouncing jalancies with buttoned up windows and glaring frontlights cutting the knife edge of the dim streets below the bright towers that rose around them. A rush of people pushing and going here and there, most benevolently blind to the sisters in black that moved through the throng as they disembarked from the heaving machines still rumbling at the street edge, as they crossed the last mirrored walkway that led like a fairy bridge in a leap of height and span, seemingly unsupported by any structure other than its own form the last 100 yards from the edge of the city that crossed over into the strangely out of place garden and the convent of the advent beyond. That bridge was white and the walkway that winnowed through the green of the grass like a sea beyond and the low buildings with the high walls and the single prayer tower in the center all white as well. It was a heaving journey through the smoke and sound and civilized debris that struck Teir as they made their way, and then a calmness that came down, like a fine rain in the spring of D’selda back home. The dozen or more of the Advent, a lone Sister with an attendant and straggling 11 novices that came out from the steam carts and came across the white stone bridge, silent and walking in measured unhurried though unwavering in their journey to the white walls and the white single prayer tower of the convent. Then into the buildings themselves, built like concentric circles that encompassed each other and the hallways between. Plain wooden shutters lined open windows and the hallways themselves were a hive of activity as the novices and Sisters alike glided quickly by carrying blankets or boxes of foodstuffs that were either being brought in, or carried out to the more normal yeet-pulled carriages in the outer courtyard in front of the domed buildings. They were taken to the dining hall, a largish room as plain and white as the rest, though filled with a hundred tables that could easily sit five or six. Benches lined most of these, though some held chairs and table clothes with silverware already set. Evidently for the Sisters, as most of the tables at which still sat any diners, were all benches lined with novices in their gray or white skirts and white blouses. They sat with their hoods draped across their backs eating quietly, though here a there a few peeked at the newcomers that came into the hall carrying their bags and boxes in their arms or strapped across their backs with rope. “Oh my!” Teir said in a hush as she came into the large hall. It was easily as large as the barn at home which has housed over a hundred of the animals, yeets and N’hel alike. Several of the novices giggled at her sudden voice in the silent room. The older black clad Sister that had offered them sanctuary here merely smiled, but said nothing. It was a strange homecoming, a place like and unlike home. It was a peaceful refuge in a crowded and too strange city among people strangely dressed and strangely speaking. And yet there were all the novices, tall and short and slender or heavy girls with curls or long hair wrapped or pulled back in white ties with thin faces or plump cheeks, small mouths or impish ones with grins and bright eyes or dull, or calculating. Just like girls anywhere in any place, like any of the farm girls from home, from the school houses where she had grown up. She and her mother ate with the novices and Sisters and then were led away in small groups with their bags and boxes to their spare and bare rooms with white walls and slender wooden framed beds with heavy mattresses with brown blankets and thin pillows. Her mother gave a weak and tired smile and undressed, laying her clothes over the back of the one chair in the room and kissed Teir on the forehead and climbed into her bed and closing her eyes was quickly asleep. It had been a long day. An eventful day of disembarking and finding their way, and all the strangeness and newness to absorb, Teir was glad her mother was able to rest. But though she was exhausted, she couldn’t sleep. She sat in the chair, feeling the smoothness of her mother’s clothes against her back, she wished she could sleep, but there were still so many questions, so many things running through her mind, that she wondered if she would be able to sleep at all for days until she had them all answered. Would they come and wake them in the morning? At what time and would they expect her mother and her to wear the gray or white that all the novices wore? Could they stay? And if so what did they expect in return? Would she have a job here, in the convent? Cleaning laundry or cleaning dishes or scrubbing floors? Did the Sister expect her to join the Unity? And though she remembered those on the crossing that had seemed touched by that joining, what did it mean? Did you lose yourself and become something else? Something less? Too many questions, too many questions… And without realizing, she fell asleep in the chair, leaning back against the softness of her mother’s clothes, without any of her questions answered. But perhaps for now, that was not as important, as having found a place. A safe and green place, a peaceful place in the midst of an alien world, some place to rest and think, and work, and find a bit of that peace and put off bit by bit the strangeness, the tiredness and the fears that had come to be so large since she and her mother had left T’Lan. She fell asleep, and did not even dream. But it was restful. And in that sleep with the smell of her mother’s clothes against her back, she relaxed for the first time for what seemed months. And night came down out in the world, and even the docks in orbit quieted, and the cables for the elevators slowed and stopped and those long glassine hallways of that place grew quiet and still.
(Personal Story/Planet Galan, Advent Colony)
(Personal Note:) I thought i would add this after reading _Ue_'s post that the RP seems to be running off course. I hope i am not contributing to that running off course, but will try to clarify where i am coming from.
Basically, my character Teir, is a farm girl off of T'Lan in the T'imo system, with three worlds, the farthest out, an out world system on the rim of Trader space, the first worlds to be attacked by the Vasari as they enter the Trader worlds space.
As a refugee, with her mother fleeing the attack on T'Lan, Teir and her mother and the other escaping colonists are offered safe passage and harbor by the Advent. Who transport them all in converted shipping frigates to the Galan system, some eight weeks travel from T'Lan to Galan. Galan is an Advent colony system, with a single star, Galan Prime and a single world, Galan beta. Both are simply referred to as Galan and the world is largely a mechanized metropolis with traders, off worlders, immigrants and refugees and transients. The thrust of where i am headed is to get Teir onto the colony Advent world and to have her slowly come to know what the Advent and Unity culture is.
Eventually the faction that she joins is going to be called the Kin, a fundamentalist group that is trying to keep to the original roots of the Unity faith as it was originally formed on the Homeworld, in opposition to the various many off-shoots that have broken down into rebellion and self fullfilled prophets that have changed the Advent from what they were, into something else, many of them radical and fringe terrorist groups. The Kin are peaceful and devout, though strict in their beliefs.
What all of this is leading up to, is that eventually, Teir will be forced out of Trader space with a group of devout Kin devotionalists into DS space. It is at that time that i propose to make her the head of her faction. First, Pro-Tem, and then after the bloody battle with both Traders on one side and Vasari on the other, into the Empress of her faction, seen as the true form of what the Advent originally were. This will all take time, quite a bit of it, if i can tell it well, perhaps several months from now and perhaps several dozens of postings. Provided of course, no one gets bored with my story or feels i have taken the RP too far off course.
Anyway, please let me know what you think, and if this seems reasonable.
Take care,
-Teal
Part Three of Teir -
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Teir-
The Convent –
The walls were white, the rooms stark and bare of all but the essentials. Windows only when necessary, beds, chairs, small washstands with ceramic bowls and pitchers, chipped and ancient, though still serviceable. Plain gray or brown blankets and white or black dresses or shirts and kitren pants for the men, though they were seldom seen, as the genders were separated by wings.
The first day was a whirlwind of getting down from the orbital dockyards, then through the city, a warren maze of ‘crete streets and store and house fronts to the edge of the glassteel concourses and rising superstructures to a garden of white elm and pine planted seemingly out of nowhere for the ten septacres on the grounds of the Convent proper, and then melding quickly back into ‘crete and glassteel again beyond the Convent.
It was a rush of glittering lights, blaring sounds and hawking vendors that lined not only the shopfronts but the walkways and the side streets as well. Not all of them looked to be honest in their trades, or their bargaining, even when they affected saddened frowns, or pursed their lips in seeming defeat at being out maneuvered in their sales.
The carts here were all steam carts, hydro –powered bouncing jalancies with buttoned up windows and glaring frontlights cutting the knife edge of the dim streets below the bright towers that rose around them.
A rush of people pushing and going here and there, most benevolently blind to the sisters in black that moved through the throng as they disembarked from the heaving machines still rumbling at the street edge, as they crossed the last mirrored walkway that led like a fairy bridge in a leap of height and span, seemingly unsupported by any structure other than its own form the last 100 yards from the edge of the city that crossed over into the strangely out of place garden and the convent of the advent beyond.
That bridge was white and the walkway that winnowed through the green of the grass like a sea beyond and the low buildings with the high walls and the single prayer tower in the center all white as well. It was a heaving journey through the smoke and sound and civilized debris that struck Teir as they made their way, and then a calmness that came down, like a fine rain in the spring of D’selda back home. The dozen or more of the Advent, a lone Sister with an attendant and straggling 11 novices that came out from the steam carts and came across the white stone bridge, silent and walking in measured unhurried though unwavering in their journey to the white walls and the white single prayer tower of the convent.
Then into the buildings themselves, built like concentric circles that encompassed each other and the hallways between. Plain wooden shutters lined open windows and the hallways themselves were a hive of activity as the novices and Sisters alike glided quickly by carrying blankets or boxes of foodstuffs that were either being brought in, or carried out to the more normal yeet-pulled carriages in the outer courtyard in front of the domed buildings.
They were taken to the dining hall, a largish room as plain and white as the rest, though filled with a hundred tables that could easily sit five or six. Benches lined most of these, though some held chairs and table clothes with silverware already set. Evidently for the Sisters, as most of the tables at which still sat any diners, were all benches lined with novices in their gray or white skirts and white blouses. They sat with their hoods draped across their backs eating quietly, though here a there a few peeked at the newcomers that came into the hall carrying their bags and boxes in their arms or strapped across their backs with rope.
“Oh my!” Teir said in a hush as she came into the large hall. It was easily as large as the barn at home which has housed over a hundred of the animals, yeets and N’hel alike.
Several of the novices giggled at her sudden voice in the silent room. The older black clad Sister that had offered them sanctuary here merely smiled, but said nothing.
It was a strange homecoming, a place like and unlike home. It was a peaceful refuge in a crowded and too strange city among people strangely dressed and strangely speaking. And yet there were all the novices, tall and short and slender or heavy girls with curls or long hair wrapped or pulled back in white ties with thin faces or plump cheeks, small mouths or impish ones with grins and bright eyes or dull, or calculating. Just like girls anywhere in any place, like any of the farm girls from home, from the school houses where she had grown up.
She and her mother ate with the novices and Sisters and then were led away in small groups with their bags and boxes to their spare and bare rooms with white walls and slender wooden framed beds with heavy mattresses with brown blankets and thin pillows. Her mother gave a weak and tired smile and undressed, laying her clothes over the back of the one chair in the room and kissed Teir on the forehead and climbed into her bed and closing her eyes was quickly asleep. It had been a long day. An eventful day of disembarking and finding their way, and all the strangeness and newness to absorb, Teir was glad her mother was able to rest.
But though she was exhausted, she couldn’t sleep. She sat in the chair, feeling the smoothness of her mother’s clothes against her back, she wished she could sleep, but there were still so many questions, so many things running through her mind, that she wondered if she would be able to sleep at all for days until she had them all answered.
Would they come and wake them in the morning? At what time and would they expect her mother and her to wear the gray or white that all the novices wore? Could they stay? And if so what did they expect in return? Would she have a job here, in the convent? Cleaning laundry or cleaning dishes or scrubbing floors? Did the Sister expect her to join the Unity?
And though she remembered those on the crossing that had seemed touched by that joining, what did it mean? Did you lose yourself and become something else? Something less? Too many questions, too many questions…
And without realizing, she fell asleep in the chair, leaning back against the softness of her mother’s clothes, without any of her questions answered. But perhaps for now, that was not as important, as having found a place. A safe and green place, a peaceful place in the midst of an alien world, some place to rest and think, and work, and find a bit of that peace and put off bit by bit the strangeness, the tiredness and the fears that had come to be so large since she and her mother had left T’Lan.
She fell asleep, and did not even dream. But it was restful. And in that sleep with the smell of her mother’s clothes against her back, she relaxed for the first time for what seemed months.
And night came down out in the world, and even the docks in orbit quieted, and the cables for the elevators slowed and stopped and those long glassine hallways of that place grew quiet and still.
***
(NO LONGER NEEDED, SEE EDIT FOR OP)
Part Four of Teir -
No Names –
They had no names. The girls with ruddy cheeks, the girls with long blonde hair, the short ones, the tall ones, the ones with squinchy noses and pursed lips, or bright eyes, or dull eyes. They were all simply “we” or “one”.
But they no longer had names.
They were only novices.
But not even the Acolytes, or the Sisters had names.
They ate in the dining hall, scrubbed pots in the kitchen, ran blankets out to the various corners of the city and carried warm pots of soup, or loaves of bread in warm cloth wraps.
But no names.
The golden haired girl at the dining hall giggled each time Teir came into the hall, but then apologized, with a hand to her mouth and whispered, “I’m sorry, but you remind me of my eldest sister, when we were small on Tev’ran, it is a small world, not as fancy as here of course, but she used to pretend not to notice me at all, but then she would chase me, when she thought I wasn’t looking and she would tickle me. She wore her hair like you do. In long braids down her back, and you reminded me of her when I saw you. I haven’t seen her since the war started and I miss her.”
She bowed her head and frowned for a moment.
“I’m sorry if I embarrassed you.” She looked up then, her eyes bright, but with small tears at the edges.
“I didn’t mean to make you upset.”
Teir gave a small smile and smoothed the other girl’s arm.
“It’s all right, really, I wasn’t sure, but it is all right now that I understand.”
The girl looked up and gave a weak smile.
“I thought you were going to chase me and tickle me…” she said, her voice trailing off.
“It’s silly really, I don’t even know you, and yet, I thought…”
Teir gave a mischievous smile and reached out as if to tickle the girl.
“Maybe I should!” she giggled.
The other girl laughed and jumped back, almost falling over the bench.
The other girls at the table laughed quickly, but then fell silent as they all looked over at the Sister who stood at the front of the hall.
“What is your name?” Teir asked. And the girl looked at her oddly for a moment.
“We don’t have names here.” She said slowly, her voice low.
“We are preparing for ‘The Crossing’, when we will become Acolytes, and hopefully later, as Sisters.
The Unity doesn’t have names. We will all be ‘One’.”
The girl gave a quick uncertain smile then, as if not quite sure, not quite convinced.
“People should have names.” Teir said, a bit louder than she had intended. Her words carried across the hall and the other novices became suddenly silent. They turned back to their plates of vegetables and broth and bread and coarse cheese.
The girl looked uneasily at her for a moment, but then gave a small smile, “Gelle” she said quickly, then curtsied as she stepped back to the table and turned away.
“I am Teir” Teir said, and smiled, forcing herself to be brave. People should have names.
The other girls in the hall glanced quickly at her, but then away just as quickly.
“It’s all right,” she said to the girl, to the others that were looking away. “And maybe I will tickle you sometimes.”
She went to her table then and sat down slowly while the other girls studied their plates intently, not looking up at her as she sat down.
Across the room the Sister at the doorway looked across the distance, her white eyes blank, but she wasn’t frowning, her cheeks not pulled down or tight or jaws clenched. She simply stood and looked, then smiled and went back to overlooking the hall.
From across the short distance, “Gelle” looked back over her shoulder and gave a quick tentative smile.
Teir smiled and picked up her spoon and began to eat. It was a cool morning outside, clouds rushed by the open windows and there was a small hint of rain in the smell of it. “Selene” was her mother… she was Teir… Her father was Ab’rim… and now she knew Gelle.
People should have names! She thought furiously. And their kindnesses be darned, if they took that away from people when the Advent saved them.
She looked up from her plate for a moment glancing back at Gelle and giving a smile, then stared across the distance at the Sister at the doorway who no longer even glanced at her.
Teir stared for a long moment, before she picked up her spoon and started to eat again.
Inside her chest her heart was beating rapidly, but she was as angry as she was afraid. Inside her mind she wanted to shake her fist at them and tell them it was good for people to have names. Gelle needed her name, needed what it meant and where it came from, even all the hurts mixed with the joys. They all needed names!
And until they threw her out, she would make sure they all knew it.
“It’s going well sir,” Major Kolt said.
“It sure looks like it,” Thenos replied. They were watching the parade rehearsal in progress. A rally had been planned by the council in order to keep morale up. Morale seemed fine to Thenos. What interested him about it was the fact that this Heirarch Chosen called Setsuna was here. A fine display of loyalty to the Advent cause would be sure to make him smile on the efforts of the Collective, and Thenos wanted to make sure that he looked like a better servant of the Unity than the High Psintegrat, even if he wasn’t actually a member of the Unity. This Setsuna was the only person currently in Distant Stars that could contest with the High Psintegrat in terms of social rank. If he could be persuaded of the High Psintegrat’s treacherous nature, then Thenos would have plenty of opportunities for recruiting new followers.
“What of Knight Ilena?” Thenos asked.
“Her last message said that she was caught up in combat with a Vasari fleet. She says that her fleet will take fewer losses if they fight than if they run.”
“So she’ll be a while then. Ah well, it’s good to see that civilians have been attracted by our broadcast as well. Great big cruiser arrived yesterday, with almost 1000 people onboard. They had difficulty getting here, but they did make it.”
“It’s going well then, my friend.”
“Very. How long do the doctor’s think it’ll be until you can go back to normal?”
“About a fortnight until I’m completely healed. They’ve regenerated the tissue, but it’s very fragile. No strenuous activity, they said.”
“They know more about it than I do. Bet the TEC wished they had healing technology this advanced, eh?”
“Ha! They’re too scared to use PsiTech though, so that’s that plan out of the window. Having said that, though, the tech could be useful for further trades with Roesh.”
“I hadn’t thought of that. Well, I need to book an appointment with our visiting HC, so are you okay to oversee the rest of the rehearsal?”
“Of course sir.”
Thenos boarded the shuttle that would take him to the Temple of Communion in orbit above Rebirth. Setsuna had been spotted there, wanting to make a transmission to somewhere. Thenos was sure that all attempts at communication with the High Psintegrat would be ended by a simple invitation to have a talk.
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Kind of short considering how long since I last posted, but beats nothing, right?
Ill start working on another post soon and will send you a copy Alpha as it will involve your guy meeting my guy.
DS Multiplayer recruitment propaganda
(Personal Story/Planet Galan, Advent Colony) Part Five of Teir - -Teal ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Teir- Work – For five days after the incident in the dining hall, Teir and her mother’s days were filled with simply sitting in their room. She worried over her mother, who was mostly silent, offering a word here and there only occasionally. Her voice had been soft, but reserved, as if the breath was barely there in her. It worried Teir constantly. Occasionally driven by her restlessness to do anything, she would walk the halls, filled with novices running about their chores or duties or errands. They would look away when she came close and grow quiet, until she passed and then they would whisper. The halls were too full for her, the looks and then the downcast eyes as she passed too despairing, and to escape she would wind the outside hall to the inner garden that held a single tree, old and gnarled and weathered, rooted in the center of the garden surrounded by a small pond of water that fed in a loop, down over stones and across the soft grass and dirt mud banks and then back around to a cistern that rose half the height of the tree and then fell from a rocky sprouted edge in a small waterfall to the pond again. Here she could relax for a moment in the quiet without looks or whispers, here she could feel the breeze of a cool wind and hear the rustle of branches leaves and not have to think, for just a brief moment, of her mother’s silence and her dull voice. She had always been so happy before. Teir could see it in her eyes when her father came home and her mother would look at him. The soft smile on her mother’s lips, the quick laugh when her father would tell some silly joke to set them at ease after a day of hard work in the fields, and especially when the warships of the Vasari had entered orbit, just before the S’verkin walkers came down in their steel and gleaming spider legged machines. She was lost in thought when the Elder Sister approached. She hadn’t heard her, but somehow she knew when the Sister had come out from the building, though it was over a hundred meters from the edge of the pond and the base of the great tree where Teir stood. She didn’t turn around, but spoke as the woman came up to her. “We have done nothing, six days now and we have sat in our room and I have tried to help my mother, but she is my Mother… what can any child tell their Mother that she does not already know?” The Sister pursed her lips, as if in thought for a moment and then said quietly, “Each person finds their own way. Each person finds their own time. How can I ask when you are not ready? How can I know what you will feel, or think? When silence and letting you have your time is what you most need. Not our words?” “Will you throw me out then? My mother and me over a talk with a girl in the dining hall?” “You will not be asked to leave. You may only leave when you have chosen to, and where you choose.” “How can you support us, I know we are only two people, but surely you can’t just feed us and clothe us and let us be for days or weeks or months?” The Sister smiled then, her white eyes blank, but soft. “We feed this entire world, we clothe the world and our ships take them where they need and from where they need to escape. We have done this for over a century here now. Do you think we can do less for two people who stay at the Convent to protect them from the city outside? Not all come here. Some many feel more at home in that steel city than here. It doesn’t matter where they choose, or why. We are not diminished more by two here than any of the other billion that live and work and breathe out in the rest of the world.” “I will work then.” Teir said almost defiantly. She felt angry for being angry when the woman seemed so reasonable. “And perhaps we can find something for my mother that will help her.” The woman simply replied, “Yes.” “And I am not to be reprimanded for speaking to the girl about names?” “No.” it was a simple word. Unadorned without comment or explanation. “Will they be punished? For my asking, for my asking her name?” “No.” again unadorned. Tier could feel the anger swell in her chest. She felt angry for being angry, for being taken care of and not having to do anything for it. For the Sister’s easy acceptance of her questions and her feelings, when she knew, she KNEW that the novices told the truth. That the Unity had no names, there was no place for them as individuals in that Unity. It was a soothing balm against anger and hurt and pain. Even madness, but there appeared to be a price for it. A price Teir felt was too high. She rounded on the elder Sister then, standing there with her eyes flashing, her hands on her hips facing the woman with the blank white eyes. Her voice rose. “Why? Why am I not to be punished? Why are the girls not to be punished when the Unity takes their names away? Why!” “Why is it alright to not be an Advent and to say no to their rules?!” The elder Sister stepped back for a moment as if stunned, but then looked at Teir, her blank white eyes focusing on her, and her mouth opened, but she said nothing for a moment. “Be… because…” she started, but then stopped, as if unable to recall the words she had just been about to say. “Because…” she simply stood there. “Because… you…” and then she stopped again, as if that were enough to say. As if it explained everything. Teir stood there angry, eyes wet with tears for her mother’s fears, for her father’s conviction, for the strangeness in the world and the people in it, the anger at the Vasari and the loss of her homeworld. Of the small smile and troubling answer when Gelle had told her, her name. “Because.” Teir said flatly, her voice still angry, still wanting to strike out at something, and this woman and her Unity and their no names made her want to strike something! The elder Sister backed away another step, but then stopped, peering again at Teir with those white and empty eyes as if she could see her perfectly. “Yes.” She said to the slim, dark braided haired girl standing in her brown skirt and blouse, “Yes, that is why.”
Part Five of Teir -
Work –
For five days after the incident in the dining hall, Teir and her mother’s days were filled with simply sitting in their room. She worried over her mother, who was mostly silent, offering a word here and there only occasionally. Her voice had been soft, but reserved, as if the breath was barely there in her. It worried Teir constantly.
Occasionally driven by her restlessness to do anything, she would walk the halls, filled with novices running about their chores or duties or errands. They would look away when she came close and grow quiet, until she passed and then they would whisper. The halls were too full for her, the looks and then the downcast eyes as she passed too despairing, and to escape she would wind the outside hall to the inner garden that held a single tree, old and gnarled and weathered, rooted in the center of the garden surrounded by a small pond of water that fed in a loop, down over stones and across the soft grass and dirt mud banks and then back around to a cistern that rose half the height of the tree and then fell from a rocky sprouted edge in a small waterfall to the pond again.
Here she could relax for a moment in the quiet without looks or whispers, here she could feel the breeze of a cool wind and hear the rustle of branches leaves and not have to think, for just a brief moment, of her mother’s silence and her dull voice.
She had always been so happy before.
Teir could see it in her eyes when her father came home and her mother would look at him. The soft smile on her mother’s lips, the quick laugh when her father would tell some silly joke to set them at ease after a day of hard work in the fields, and especially when the warships of the Vasari had entered orbit, just before the S’verkin walkers came down in their steel and gleaming spider legged machines.
She was lost in thought when the Elder Sister approached. She hadn’t heard her, but somehow she knew when the Sister had come out from the building, though it was over a hundred meters from the edge of the pond and the base of the great tree where Teir stood.
She didn’t turn around, but spoke as the woman came up to her.
“We have done nothing, six days now and we have sat in our room and I have tried to help my mother, but she is my Mother… what can any child tell their Mother that she does not already know?”
The Sister pursed her lips, as if in thought for a moment and then said quietly,
“Each person finds their own way. Each person finds their own time. How can I ask when you are not ready? How can I know what you will feel, or think? When silence and letting you have your time is what you most need. Not our words?”
“Will you throw me out then? My mother and me over a talk with a girl in the dining hall?”
“You will not be asked to leave. You may only leave when you have chosen to, and where you choose.”
“How can you support us, I know we are only two people, but surely you can’t just feed us and clothe us and let us be for days or weeks or months?”
The Sister smiled then, her white eyes blank, but soft.
“We feed this entire world, we clothe the world and our ships take them where they need and from where they need to escape. We have done this for over a century here now. Do you think we can do less for two people who stay at the Convent to protect them from the city outside? Not all come here. Some many feel more at home in that steel city than here. It doesn’t matter where they choose, or why. We are not diminished more by two here than any of the other billion that live and work and breathe out in the rest of the world.”
“I will work then.” Teir said almost defiantly. She felt angry for being angry when the woman seemed so reasonable. “And perhaps we can find something for my mother that will help her.”
The woman simply replied, “Yes.”
“And I am not to be reprimanded for speaking to the girl about names?”
“No.” it was a simple word. Unadorned without comment or explanation.
“Will they be punished? For my asking, for my asking her name?”
“No.” again unadorned.
Tier could feel the anger swell in her chest. She felt angry for being angry, for being taken care of and not having to do anything for it. For the Sister’s easy acceptance of her questions and her feelings, when she knew, she KNEW that the novices told the truth. That the Unity had no names, there was no place for them as individuals in that Unity. It was a soothing balm against anger and hurt and pain. Even madness, but there appeared to be a price for it.
A price Teir felt was too high.
She rounded on the elder Sister then, standing there with her eyes flashing, her hands on her hips facing the woman with the blank white eyes. Her voice rose.
“Why? Why am I not to be punished? Why are the girls not to be punished when the Unity takes their names away? Why!”
“Why is it alright to not be an Advent and to say no to their rules?!”
The elder Sister stepped back for a moment as if stunned, but then looked at Teir, her blank white eyes focusing on her, and her mouth opened, but she said nothing for a moment.
“Be… because…” she started, but then stopped, as if unable to recall the words she had just been about to say.
“Because…” she simply stood there.
“Because… you…” and then she stopped again, as if that were enough to say. As if it explained everything.
Teir stood there angry, eyes wet with tears for her mother’s fears, for her father’s conviction, for the strangeness in the world and the people in it, the anger at the Vasari and the loss of her homeworld. Of the small smile and troubling answer when Gelle had told her, her name.
“Because.” Teir said flatly, her voice still angry, still wanting to strike out at something, and this woman and her Unity and their no names made her want to strike something!
The elder Sister backed away another step, but then stopped, peering again at Teir with those white and empty eyes as if she could see her perfectly.
“Yes.” She said to the slim, dark braided haired girl standing in her brown skirt and blouse, “Yes, that is why.”
Good point.
The Russundova Nebula I designed had the primary points going through the nebula in the center, with a single planet off the stars. Should it be changed to have all points come off the nebula? Then it would work like you are going into the nebula to get to the system, even though the game mechanics make one phase jump to the star first.
Just want to get the main idea down... Thanks!
(Personal Story/Planet Galan, Advent Colony)Part Six of Teir --Teal ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Teir-Work Part II–For each day for three months then she worked, rising at dawn each day, helping to dress her mother whose eyes receded into a blank unrecognizing stare at her daughter as Teir buttoned her dress and washed her face with a damp cloth and kissed her cheek. "Go to the garden today Mother, it will be good for you, please. I will see you tonight after i finish my work."
And then she dressed in a gray long skirt that fell all the way to her ankles. She wore thin leather slippers and a gray blouse with tie strings instead of buttons. She pulled her long hair back and wrapped a quick ribbon around it quickly as she had no time to do the braids she normally wore.
She smiled.
Today, when she looked least like Gelle's elder sister, perhaps it would be a good time to tickle her then. She wanted to laugh all of a sudden, but then just as suddenly looking at her mother she was pulled back to reality instead of playful silliness. Her mother depended on her. Without her father, her mother seemed to have lost the will to go on, at first in slow degrees, but since arriving on Galan, she seemed to have given up entirely and rarely spoke, rarely moved, wouldn't dress herself unless Teir dressed her. She leaned forward and gave her mother a kiss on her cheek. "I have to go mother." She said quickly and then left the room, reluctantly, though she felt she had no choice. The Elder Sister had given her a chance to work, and Teir was paying the price she felt she needed to to provide for her mother and herself here.
She closed the thin dark paneled door behind her and then walked as quickly as she could to the kitchens. Already the halls were starting to fill with novices and Acolytes, even Sisters here and there glided by in their Black gowns, their hoods pulled back and the white collars at their throats, white eyed and imperious. Some smiled, but most rarely so. It was as if to them all the world did not really exist. It was only a mirage in front of their white eyes like mist or clouds mixed against a green sky, even though it was the alien blue color here. Still, as if no more than a breeze which swept by that most of the Sisters felt they need not even recognize.
Teir ran down the hall and then the passage off the left that led out and down three floors to the ground level and the kitchens off that long winding hallway back toward the way she would have come if she were still three floors up.She went straight to Gelle, who was already there and finishing her eggs as Teir approached.
"Gelle, could you do me a favor, please?" The girl started at her name, but quickly nodded as she swallowed the last forkful of yellow mouthful.
"Yes, of course." She stood up and started to take her tray toward the kitchen window, but Teir took the tray from her hands gently.
"Can you take my breakfast to my mother upstairs? And make sure she eats it? Please?"The look on her face must have been so distraught that Gelle blinked when she looked at Teir as the girl took the tray from her hands.
"All right, yes, of course, i can do that. " She smiled then and patted Teir's arm as if to comfort her. It felt strange to comfort this intense and sometimes angry girl who had seemed so intent on taking on the entire Unity just over a name. But she was kind, and was now a strange kind of friend, but a friend none the less.
"Yes." She smiled again and went with Teir to the kitchen as Teir slid the tray and the dirty dishes into the wooden framed slot that led back into the washing room. She waited as Teir made a small tray of wheat oats and coarse grain bread and a cup of yeet milk and gave it to her.
"Thank you." Teir seemed to sigh then, as if a weight was off her. Too much, it seemed, the girl carried to much on her.
Gelle beamed back with her most confident smile and curtsied very precisely, not even causing the cup to waver at all.
"It will be alright Teir, it will be alright, I will make sure she eats every bite."And then she turned and crossed the dining hall and out the thin dark paneled doors.Teir sighed.
She could relax now, that she knew her mother would have something to eat, and she could work to pay back the Advent's kindness, even if she was still angry at their refusal to acknowledge names. The two seemed disconnected in her mind, as if one had nothing to do with the other. She crossed the kitchen then toward the wash room pulling a brown clean apron from a peg on the wall as she went and wrapping it about her waist then tying it off with a quick tie.
She walked into the kitchen, already, even with first light barely up for more than a hour the window at the end held more than fifty trays. She sighed again, but continued anyway as she stepped over to the ceramic wash basin and turned the water valve and started to fill the sink.
"Ahhh, we'll 'ave none 'a dat quite yet." came the Mistress of the kitchen's thick broguish voice from the front of the wash room. "Yool need 'at lest a bit 'ov a bite in yoo a'fore yoo start all that work, now go on about yoo. Git somethin ta eet, and i'll be doing all this while yoo doo. Den w'en yoor doon, den coom b'ack an we'll be about all this den, alright girly?"
The Mistress had a frown on her face that would give a Vasari pause, yet Teir wanted to hug the big woman. She was a dear. Even with all her fierceness and the spoon she waved in her hand as if it were a scepter.
"But I've had my breakfast-" Teir started, but she was cut off.
"Yoo'v 'ad noothin a da soort. Yoo'v 'ad yoor frind take a tray to yoor moother, which god bless the woman she needs moor den yoo oor I. Now off wich ya ta git a bit, an after weel talk an woork noo doubt as well."
The large woman smiled then and brandished her spoon as if she meant business, and Teir was sure that she did, even for all her smiles and scooted out of the wash room and back to the kitchen as quickly as she could. Where she made a small plate of oats and bread and milk and sat on a stool at the edge of the cutter's counter and ate as quickly as she dared not to choke. Bless the woman. She smiled and quickly ate and then went back to the wash room still wiping bread crumbs from the corners of her mouth.
The Mistress of the Kitchens turned then, up to her elbows in soapy water and dish and scrub brush in hand.
"Ahh, der wee are den. Perfect." She smiled. "Noow coom an giv m'e a 'and wit dis den."
She raised a pot out of the water and gave a fine chuckle. "Weel be about dis until i
spect loonch, an den weel do it all oover agin. A fine turnin ov da woorld, dontcha
tink?" She boomed a laugh that filled the entire kitchen and Teir blushed and laughed and smoothed her apron about her and she went to help.
They worked all morning on the dishes and the pots. laughing and telling tales of home, until Glina had to leave to start the lunch, but two other novices in gray joined Teir, until they were pulled away and all of them had a leisurely twenty minutes eating roast nil and fried crumbed keet with baked yapples as well, washed down with tall glasses of sweet yeet milk.
Teir felt, even tired, even when Gelle had peeked her head into the wash room and smiled and gave an ok sign with her fingers to let her know her mother had eaten, and she was ok. Gelle had mouthed 'garden' and it made Teir estatic that Gelle had
managed to get her mother to the garden, if only for a few hours.
Even exhausted Teir felt as if she was in a heaven, she surely never would have thought to find after leaving T'Lan behind in smoking ruin.
Glina took them out afterward, and gave them leave, three other girls standing behind her in brown clean aprons ready to fend the great wash room wall. They looked so glum, she wanted to cry for a moment, but then she knew that Glina would treat them well, and they would be ok, maybe tired, but certainly ok.
She spent the afternoon with two Sisters and four novices carrying bread and blankets to the carriages that awaited in the courtyard outside, and then even climbed abroad one at the end to help pass them out to the street people on the corners of the city where the carriages would stop and pass out their goods, until they were empty.
She came home at night, with the sun falling, the two moons rising over the edge of the trees in the garden, exhausted, but happy. Twin moons, like the story from home where
So'ren and Illia had loved each other so much, that even after life, they were together
in the heavens above. And so, here now on this alien world, that is what she named them.
So'ren and Illia. It made her smile.
She undressed in her room with her mother already asleep and kissed her forehead and climbed under the wool blankets and was asleep before she could blink twice.
Each day for three months her days passed in this way. And each day, she said hello to Gelle, and to Glina, and to Herriette and Samila. And each day, the seventh, the eighth, the ninth... she named as was the custom on her homeworld by a memory of that day, the kitchen day, the bread wagon day, the floor scrubbing day... each unique and different from all the days behind it, different from all the days ahead of it. With no months, except what they were named, S'alem for Working, Je'n for Warm months, G'rim for that sweltering month, each as different as the days, each as different from each one past, as each one to come. As was the custom on her homeworld.
Where days and weeks and months and years were as personal as the elm in the front of
your yard that you named ole gnarly, for the twisted and old and heavy limbed tree. Each
was unique and individual in the world, in the universe. As the creator had no doubt intended
when he raised up woman and man from the mud of the dirt and grass on those worlds and
gave them breath to breathe and a warm fire to sit and warm themselves against the cold night.
Work.
It was a life, and was life. And its simplicity and its continuity made Teir smile, even in her tiredness.
And so the days passed, each day unique and following the one behind, another following after for three months.
Until the Mother Superior sent down a note with a Sister who stood in the doorway of the small room at dawn as Teir dressed her mother and kissed her cheek. "Mother wishes to speak with you child." was all she said, and then waited while Teir dressed and dressed her mother and smoothed her mother's hair back with the palm of her hand. Waiting as if she could stand there until the mountains in the east, if there were any mountains there at all, eroded away into dust leaving only a plain in their wake.
"Yes." was all that Teir said back. Finishing washing her face and smoothing her mother's hair and kissing her forehead.
"love you mother." she said as the Elder Sister went through the thin dark paneled door before her. Wondering what this new thing meant. Could it mean anything good, when the Mother Superior sent a Sister for you at dawn?
She followed the Sister, smoothing her gray skirt nervously, even though it was freshly clean and there were no wrinkles at all.
Followed with her steps on the white tiles thudding so loudly she must think she was a clod.
Afraid.
A little bit.
What did this mean?
(Personal Story/Planet Galan, Advent Colony) Part Seven of Teir - -Teal ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Teir- What is in a Name? – “Come.” The Mother said. The dark paneled door opened slowly. <Rewind> The Hallways were dark, still dark. <Rewind> Dawn’s first light came up, slowly, the edge of the waking world falling into darkness, falling asleep. The light of first light comes up, slowly, the edge of the sleeping world waking from darkness, into day. The Hallways were dark, still dark. The Elder Sister glided down the white tiled hallways, clutching the note from the Mother Superior in her hand. She moved it to a pocket in her cloak, afraid she would dampen it with her nervousness. A child, the girl was still a child, how could she…? It was true she was an immigrant, newly arrived only some few months past, but still. All who came here, the thousands, the hundreds of thousands from ruined Tec worlds; from this “Thing” that now appeared at the edge of the galaxy, the rim worlds falling under some new and brutal heel. Of all those thousands on thousands, the Mother never interfered. Never called. It was of course her privilege. She was the Mother. But in all the years the Unity had been here, found a place, a haven to raise and nurture and provide, as was the original intent, never had the Mother called an outsider. The girl was not even an initiate. Why? The Elder Sister’s steps echoed on the floor tiles. Black and white, black and white, the choices we all make every single day of our lives. Black and white, choices… Why now? Why this outsider girl? She recalled speaking with her in the garden, and remembered the anger in the girl, her tone. How could she? And yet… She hadn’t responded as she had intended. The words fell from her mind as she was about to speak them. How could that be? She remembered the dining hall and the girl speaking with one of the novices and the mention of names. NAMES! And she had looked at the girl, AND SAID NOTHING! How could that be, that she said nothing? And yet… The girl… She stepped across the floor tiles, black and white… choices… Until she came to the door of the girl child, first light was coming up. The girl had already risen, was already standing at the washbasin washing her face. Already she had wakened her mother and was dressing her. The Elder Sister stood before the dark paneled door and tried to regain her breathing, her calm. How could this be? She knocked once, and it took the girl child a moment before the door opened and she stood there, dark haired, her hair pulled back and tied with a single white ribbon. Her eyes were bright, and there was no anger in her. Her mouth soft, not hard with her cheeks pulled tight, her jaws clenched. Her voice was soft. “Yes?” “The Mother Superior wishes to see you child.” The Elder Sister said. Her voice was soft as well. It surprised her. She hadn’t wanted to be angry, or even disturbed. She hadn’t wanted it to be flat. But with a certain firmness to it, of course, but it hadn’t been any of those things at all. Instead it had been soft. Why? “Yes, of course.” The girl child replied, and even smiled, though there was a hesitation in her voice, a weakness, a small fear? That also surprised the Elder Sister. The girl child wasn’t what she expected when she expected anything at all. When she expected compliance, she was not. When she expected fear, the girl was not. When she expected anger … the girl was not. She waited while the girl finished dressing her mother, finished smoothing her mother’s cheek’s and hair with the palm of her hand. Her gesture was soft. She smiled at the mother as if the Elder Sister did not exist at all. “Love you mother.” The girl child said, and the Elder Sister turned and walked through the thin dark paneled door. The girl child closed it behind them. The Elder Sister took the note from her cloak pocket and gave it to the child. The paper was still crisp, not damp at all. She breathed deep, though slowly, she didn’t want the child to know she was uncertain. In doubt, that she was nervous. She WAS NOT NERVOUS. She breathed again. “It’s all right.” The girl child said. How? Why? “What is…?” The Elder Sister kept walking, though her voice stopped. The black and white tiles of the hallway spread out before them, the ramp to the floors below. To the dining hall – WHERE – NO! She pulled her mind back from that. Toward the office of the Mother Superior, past the garden – WHERE – NO! She pulled her mind back from that. The Elder Sister closed her eyes for a moment… She was one with the Unity… She was one with the Unity… She was one with the Unity… How could this be? She felt adrift. Adrift. She had not felt this way in over fifty years, since she had stood as an initiate in the courtyard outside the Convent and waited the audience with a Sister, to join… “It’s all right,” The girl child said. “ I am afraid too. I don’t know why.” The Elder Sister opened her eyes and stopped. Standing on the floor tiles, black and white… black and white… Choices. She breathed and it came normal, no fear. Why? She wanted to not be afraid, but why was she afraid at all? She didn’t want to be afraid. But she wasn’t. And she didn’t understand. The girl child smiled. She didn’t understand any more than the Sister. And now she wasn’t afraid. But it was all right to not understand why. Suddenly, it was all right not to understand why. She swallowed and reached out slowly, adjusting the girl child’s collar on her plain gray blouse. She had never had a daughter, never had a man, or a family, or a small house anywhere where there was nothing more to think about than what she was going to cook for supper, or whether or not she would have time to water the garden. Or walk to the market in heavy farmer’s boots and feel the sunshine on her face and the dusty wind and the far off sound of birds that she could not see. Or crickets in the grass close by, but hidden, the smell of dirt after a rain and wild flowers that lined the dirt road into town. “It will be all right,” She told the girl child, “She is the Mother, of course,” she gave a weak smile as if not intimidated by the title, “But she is after all, only a woman, like you and me.” She straightened the girl’s collar and then gave a stronger smile, even if she didn’t understand why she had said what she just had said. But understanding didn’t seem to matter anymore. “Now go now, and see what all this means.” The girl child turned then and knocked on the dark paneled door. * * * “Come.” Came the voice beyond. Teir pushed the door open slowly and walked inside. She closed the door behind her. “Come child, sit.” The Mother said. “My name is Teir.” The girl child said slowly. Her voice was soft. The Mother turned from the window slowly and came around her desk. From the window the courtyard fell below. The wide window wrapped around the office and from the other side, the garden fell, the pond, the great tree, gnarled and old stood. The Mother pursed her lips a moment, then stopped. Why was she? “Please sit Teir.” The Mother sat as well, slowly, the expanse of the desk before her. “You…” she began. Then stopped again. How? “It has come to our atten-“ she stopped again. Her hands began to shake for a moment. She gripped one hand in the other and set them in her lap, below the desk. “We are the first fragment. Our Convent is founded on the original premises of our faith. We are true to what we all once were.” Why was she explaining? “You wanted to see me Mother?” the girl child said. “Yes, we wished to ask-“ She stopped again. How was she-? “It is in the tradition of our oldest precepts that the Unity is all… That –“ “Is it not the people of the Unity that are more important than precepts?” The girl child asked. “Well, it is…” The Mother Superior faltered, suddenly there were no words in her mind, suddenly there was no remembrance of what she had just been about to say. “The names?” Teir asked, her voice was soft, she looked at the Mother Superior and was no longer afraid. What was there to be afraid of? This woman, great and gray, older perhaps than even Teir’s entire village on T’Lan, was just a woman. Just flesh and blood, kin to the same desires and heartbreaks, the same doubts, the same fears like any other. Where was the magic she had seen aboard the frigate that had brought her here? Where was the certainty? The benevolence? It was all, just as her father had once said, when she was young and afraid of the darkness, of growing up, of the boys in school that would tease her, of the Teacher’s stare when her grades were lower than she knew they should be… “Look unafraid… and you will feel unafraid. It is a trick you see. That our minds believe what we tell it. If you tell yourself you are afraid, then you will be. But if you pretend, that you are not…” He had smiled then. “Then you won’t be.” He had kissed her forehead then and tucked her into bed, and left the light on, even though he said it was not because she had said she was afraid of the dark. He had left it on, just in case, she needed a glass of water in the night, so that she could see. Here now, was this woman, a good woman, a great woman by all accounts who had called her. But she was only a woman, as prone to self-doubt and self-aggrandizement as any other. Why had she called her? “The names?” The Mother said. “People should have names.” Teir said slowly. For a moment the anger swelled in her, though she was grateful for the kindness of the Mistress of the Kitchens, for the friendships of some of the novices. As time had gone by more of them had come to her, smiled and told her their names. As if she was the repository of their true self. As if she would remember for them, when they could not. The anger fell away in her. Here was a woman, who had a name once. Still had a name in fact, even though she never used it. She wanted to be kind. But she was kind in the way that followed rules without understanding them. You didn’t leave your sleds, full of snow in the hallway in the house, simply because you must. You left them in the hallway, because to leave them outside meant they would break from the cold. You brought them in to protect them. Because you knew that if you did not, that you would lose them. You knew. It wasn't simply following something blindly that you didn't know why you followed. It was certainly the same with names. She wasn’t Advent, had never even set eyes on an Advent before T’Lan was under siege. And Teir knew none of their beliefs, other than what she knew from hearsay, most of it false. And only from what she had seen in those here after she had come to Galan. But she knew, knew with a certainty she could not explain. If she were Advent, she would have a name. It would remind her of what she was. And where she came from. What her heritage had been, and all the line of women and men that stood in a line back as far as memory could recall, both the good and the not good, the selfish and the not selfish, the flawed and those who struggled to be more than the sum of their faults. If she were Advent she knew it would be important, no matter the technology, or the faith. That they stand as they had been made, flawed but standing, and with names given in love from the fathers and mothers that had borne them. “Yes, the names.” She said, her voice still soft, the anger gone now. How was it possible to be angry with a woman who only wanted to do her best? “You wanted to do your best.” Teir said. “Yes… I- we-“ “It is all right to have a name Mother. It is all right. It is proper and it is God’s gift of our individuality when we were first made.” “I-“ The Mother twisted her hands in her lap in a panic. She made to stand, but half way out of her chair she stopped, halted by her doubt. What was she? “It is all right Mother, everything is all right.” Teir said and rose to stand and walk around the desk to help the woman. She herself had struggled with all the doubts of what the world meant, still did. But there were times, when all that uncertainty fell away, and there was only clarity. And calmness. Even though not understood, there was a calmness. As Teir stepped around the desk, The Mother pulled away and cried out. The door burst open and the Mother fell to her knees on the floor. The black and white tiles of the floor. Black and white. Black and white. The Elder Sister stood in the doorway staring, then crossed over quickly the small distance and moved around Teir. “What-?” The Elder Sister began. The Mother Superior sat on the floor in her black robe, the hood pulled forward, the white collar at her neck, her head bowed. She was crying, sobbing. “I was Dellana… I was dellana… once. So long ago I thought I had forgotten, but you never do, none of us ever do…” She whispered. The Elder Sister stopped, and turned her face to Teir slowly, “Please…” her voice begged, “please… leave.” Teir turned away. But the Mother raised her head, her eyes wet, tears still streaming. “Don’t go…” she said. “please stay.” Teir settled into the chair across from the desk slowly. She wanted to cry as well. She didn’t understand. Even in the clarity, she didn’t understand. But it was all right, not to understand right now. What mattered was that people had names. They needed names. It reminded them of who they were. And what they were. And where they came from. And what they hoped to be. That is what mattered. The Mother Superior cried and the Elder Sister helped her up and she sat at her desk and held the Sister’s hands as if she was her own dear sister. “I was once Dellana,” she said to the Elder Sister, who looked shocked to see her Mother Superior still crying, though her voice grew firmer. “What was your name?” she asked the Elder Sister, who almost fell back with shock, though was steadied by the Mother Superior’s hands linked in hers. “I-“ The Elder Sister began. “I …was… Elleen” She said slowly. And then she smiled. And the Mother Superior smiled as well. Teir wanted to cry and laugh and jump up for joy. But she sat in her chair and smiled and was happy. ***
Part Seven of Teir -
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What is in a Name? –
“Come.” The Mother said.
The dark paneled door opened slowly.
<Rewind>
The Hallways were dark, still dark.
Dawn’s first light came up, slowly, the edge of the waking world falling into darkness, falling asleep.
The light of first light comes up, slowly, the edge of the sleeping world waking from darkness, into day.
The Elder Sister glided down the white tiled hallways, clutching the note from the Mother Superior in her hand. She moved it to a pocket in her cloak, afraid she would dampen it with her nervousness. A child, the girl was still a child, how could she…? It was true she was an immigrant, newly arrived only some few months past, but still. All who came here, the thousands, the hundreds of thousands from ruined Tec worlds; from this “Thing” that now appeared at the edge of the galaxy, the rim worlds falling under some new and brutal heel. Of all those thousands on thousands, the Mother never interfered. Never called.
It was of course her privilege. She was the Mother.
But in all the years the Unity had been here, found a place, a haven to raise and nurture and provide, as was the original intent, never had the Mother called an outsider. The girl was not even an initiate. Why?
The Elder Sister’s steps echoed on the floor tiles. Black and white, black and white, the choices we all make every single day of our lives. Black and white, choices…
Why now?
Why this outsider girl?
She recalled speaking with her in the garden, and remembered the anger in the girl, her tone. How could she? And yet…
She hadn’t responded as she had intended. The words fell from her mind as she was about to speak them. How could that be?
She remembered the dining hall and the girl speaking with one of the novices and the mention of names. NAMES! And she had looked at the girl, AND SAID NOTHING! How could that be, that she said nothing?
And yet…
The girl…
She stepped across the floor tiles, black and white… choices…
Until she came to the door of the girl child, first light was coming up. The girl had already risen, was already standing at the washbasin washing her face. Already she had wakened her mother and was dressing her. The Elder Sister stood before the dark paneled door and tried to regain her breathing, her calm. How could this be?
She knocked once, and it took the girl child a moment before the door opened and she stood there, dark haired, her hair pulled back and tied with a single white ribbon. Her eyes were bright, and there was no anger in her. Her mouth soft, not hard with her cheeks pulled tight, her jaws clenched. Her voice was soft.
“Yes?”
“The Mother Superior wishes to see you child.” The Elder Sister said. Her voice was soft as well. It surprised her. She hadn’t wanted to be angry, or even disturbed. She hadn’t wanted it to be flat. But with a certain firmness to it, of course, but it hadn’t been any of those things at all. Instead it had been soft. Why?
“Yes, of course.” The girl child replied, and even smiled, though there was a hesitation in her voice, a weakness, a small fear? That also surprised the Elder Sister. The girl child wasn’t what she expected when she expected anything at all. When she expected compliance, she was not. When she expected fear, the girl was not. When she expected anger … the girl was not.
She waited while the girl finished dressing her mother, finished smoothing her mother’s cheek’s and hair with the palm of her hand. Her gesture was soft. She smiled at the mother as if the Elder Sister did not exist at all.
“Love you mother.” The girl child said, and the Elder Sister turned and walked through the thin dark paneled door. The girl child closed it behind them.
The Elder Sister took the note from her cloak pocket and gave it to the child. The paper was still crisp, not damp at all. She breathed deep, though slowly, she didn’t want the child to know she was uncertain. In doubt, that she was nervous. She WAS NOT NERVOUS.
She breathed again.
“It’s all right.” The girl child said.
How?
Why?
“What is…?” The Elder Sister kept walking, though her voice stopped. The black and white tiles of the hallway spread out before them, the ramp to the floors below. To the dining hall – WHERE – NO! She pulled her mind back from that. Toward the office of the Mother Superior, past the garden – WHERE – NO! She pulled her mind back from that.
The Elder Sister closed her eyes for a moment… She was one with the Unity… She was one with the Unity… She was one with the Unity… How could this be? She felt adrift. Adrift. She had not felt this way in over fifty years, since she had stood as an initiate in the courtyard outside the Convent and waited the audience with a Sister, to join…
“It’s all right,” The girl child said. “ I am afraid too. I don’t know why.”
The Elder Sister opened her eyes and stopped.
Standing on the floor tiles, black and white… black and white…
Choices.
She breathed and it came normal, no fear.
She wanted to not be afraid, but why was she afraid at all? She didn’t want to be afraid. But she wasn’t. And she didn’t understand.
The girl child smiled.
She didn’t understand any more than the Sister.
And now she wasn’t afraid.
But it was all right to not understand why. Suddenly, it was all right not to understand why.
She swallowed and reached out slowly, adjusting the girl child’s collar on her plain gray blouse. She had never had a daughter, never had a man, or a family, or a small house anywhere where there was nothing more to think about than what she was going to cook for supper, or whether or not she would have time to water the garden. Or walk to the market in heavy farmer’s boots and feel the sunshine on her face and the dusty wind and the far off sound of birds that she could not see. Or crickets in the grass close by, but hidden, the smell of dirt after a rain and wild flowers that lined the dirt road into town.
“It will be all right,” She told the girl child, “She is the Mother, of course,” she gave a weak smile as if not intimidated by the title, “But she is after all, only a woman, like you and me.”
She straightened the girl’s collar and then gave a stronger smile, even if she didn’t understand why she had said what she just had said. But understanding didn’t seem to matter anymore.
“Now go now, and see what all this means.”
The girl child turned then and knocked on the dark paneled door.
*
“Come.” Came the voice beyond.
Teir pushed the door open slowly and walked inside.
She closed the door behind her.
“Come child, sit.” The Mother said.
“My name is Teir.” The girl child said slowly. Her voice was soft.
The Mother turned from the window slowly and came around her desk. From the window the courtyard fell below. The wide window wrapped around the office and from the other side, the garden fell, the pond, the great tree, gnarled and old stood.
The Mother pursed her lips a moment, then stopped. Why was she?
“Please sit Teir.” The Mother sat as well, slowly, the expanse of the desk before her. “You…” she began.
Then stopped again.
“It has come to our atten-“ she stopped again.
Her hands began to shake for a moment. She gripped one hand in the other and set them in her lap, below the desk.
“We are the first fragment. Our Convent is founded on the original premises of our faith. We are true to what we all once were.” Why was she explaining?
“You wanted to see me Mother?” the girl child said.
“Yes, we wished to ask-“ She stopped again.
How was she-?
“It is in the tradition of our oldest precepts that the Unity is all… That –“
“Is it not the people of the Unity that are more important than precepts?” The girl child asked.
“Well, it is…” The Mother Superior faltered, suddenly there were no words in her mind, suddenly there was no remembrance of what she had just been about to say.
“The names?” Teir asked, her voice was soft, she looked at the Mother Superior and was no longer afraid. What was there to be afraid of? This woman, great and gray, older perhaps than even Teir’s entire village on T’Lan, was just a woman. Just flesh and blood, kin to the same desires and heartbreaks, the same doubts, the same fears like any other. Where was the magic she had seen aboard the frigate that had brought her here?
Where was the certainty?
The benevolence?
It was all, just as her father had once said, when she was young and afraid of the darkness, of growing up, of the boys in school that would tease her, of the Teacher’s stare when her grades were lower than she knew they should be… “Look unafraid… and you will feel unafraid. It is a trick you see. That our minds believe what we tell it. If you tell yourself you are afraid, then you will be. But if you pretend, that you are not…” He had smiled then. “Then you won’t be.” He had kissed her forehead then and tucked her into bed, and left the light on, even though he said it was not because she had said she was afraid of the dark. He had left it on, just in case, she needed a glass of water in the night, so that she could see.
Here now, was this woman, a good woman, a great woman by all accounts who had called her. But she was only a woman, as prone to self-doubt and self-aggrandizement as any other. Why had she called her?
“The names?” The Mother said.
“People should have names.” Teir said slowly. For a moment the anger swelled in her, though she was grateful for the kindness of the Mistress of the Kitchens, for the friendships of some of the novices. As time had gone by more of them had come to her, smiled and told her their names. As if she was the repository of their true self. As if she would remember for them, when they could not.
The anger fell away in her.
Here was a woman, who had a name once. Still had a name in fact, even though she never used it.
She wanted to be kind. But she was kind in the way that followed rules without understanding them.
You didn’t leave your sleds, full of snow in the hallway in the house, simply because you must. You left them in the hallway, because to leave them outside meant they would break from the cold. You brought them in to protect them. Because you knew that if you did not, that you would lose them. You knew. It wasn't simply following something blindly that you didn't know why you followed.
It was certainly the same with names.
She wasn’t Advent, had never even set eyes on an Advent before T’Lan was under siege. And Teir knew none of their beliefs, other than what she knew from hearsay, most of it false. And only from what she had seen in those here after she had come to Galan.
But she knew, knew with a certainty she could not explain.
If she were Advent, she would have a name.
It would remind her of what she was.
And where she came from.
What her heritage had been, and all the line of women and men that stood in a line back as far as memory could recall, both the good and the not good, the selfish and the not selfish, the flawed and those who struggled to be more than the sum of their faults.
If she were Advent she knew it would be important, no matter the technology, or the faith. That they stand as they had been made, flawed but standing, and with names given in love from the fathers and mothers that had borne them.
“Yes, the names.” She said, her voice still soft, the anger gone now. How was it possible to be angry with a woman who only wanted to do her best?
“You wanted to do your best.” Teir said.
“Yes… I- we-“
“It is all right to have a name Mother. It is all right. It is proper and it is God’s gift of our individuality when we were first made.”
“I-“ The Mother twisted her hands in her lap in a panic. She made to stand, but half way out of her chair she stopped, halted by her doubt. What was she?
“It is all right Mother, everything is all right.” Teir said and rose to stand and walk around the desk to help the woman.
She herself had struggled with all the doubts of what the world meant, still did. But there were times, when all that uncertainty fell away, and there was only clarity. And calmness. Even though not understood, there was a calmness.
As Teir stepped around the desk, The Mother pulled away and cried out. The door burst open and the Mother fell to her knees on the floor. The black and white tiles of the floor.
Black and white.
The Elder Sister stood in the doorway staring, then crossed over quickly the small distance and moved around Teir. “What-?” The Elder Sister began.
The Mother Superior sat on the floor in her black robe, the hood pulled forward, the white collar at her neck, her head bowed. She was crying, sobbing.
“I was Dellana… I was dellana… once. So long ago I thought I had forgotten, but you never do, none of us ever do…” She whispered.
The Elder Sister stopped, and turned her face to Teir slowly, “Please…” her voice begged, “please… leave.”
Teir turned away.
But the Mother raised her head, her eyes wet, tears still streaming. “Don’t go…” she said. “please stay.”
Teir settled into the chair across from the desk slowly. She wanted to cry as well. She didn’t understand.
Even in the clarity, she didn’t understand.
But it was all right, not to understand right now.
What mattered was that people had names. They needed names. It reminded them of who they were. And what they were.
And where they came from.
And what they hoped to be.
That is what mattered.
The Mother Superior cried and the Elder Sister helped her up and she sat at her desk and held the Sister’s hands as if she was her own dear sister.
“I was once Dellana,” she said to the Elder Sister, who looked shocked to see her Mother Superior still crying, though her voice grew firmer.
“What was your name?” she asked the Elder Sister, who almost fell back with shock, though was steadied by the Mother Superior’s hands linked in hers.
“I-“ The Elder Sister began.
“I …was… Elleen” She said slowly.
And then she smiled.
And the Mother Superior smiled as well.
Teir wanted to cry and laugh and jump up for joy.
But she sat in her chair and smiled and was happy.
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