Jacques
November 2331
New Pav
The planet hung below, all blues and greens and twinkling lights of nascent cities. New Pav, we called it. The Pav’s na for their new ho planet was slightly more poetic, but would still sound like a bunch of spitting and hissing to a human ear.
The population had bood in the seventy years or so since they’d been resettled here, and they now boasted cities on several continents. It looked like the species would survive.
Whether they’d still be talking to us or not was another matter.
I received a signal from the cargo drone containing my manny, informing that it had landed. With a ntal sigh, I prepared to leave VR for what would probably be an uncomfortable eting with the Pav representative.
I connected to the manny—a remotely operated android—over the SCUT channel and transferred my personal POV into it. As internal systems powered up, I took a mil to glance around the now-familiar cargo hold, then extracted myself from the support rack. The cargo doors opened automatically to reveal my usual Pav military escort, rifles at the ready, probably with safeties off. A gaggle of six-foot-tall erkats, without the cute. I hadn’t visited in a couple of decades, mostly because the last ti had been what you might call tense.
Just to see how they’d react, I smiled, careful not to show my teeth, and gave them the Vulcan salute. The squad leader showed his teeth—not a gesture of friendship from a Pav—and returned the salute with three fewer fingers.
Apparently, he had studied human culture.
I walked up to the group and gave them a proper Pav smile-equivalent. “Hey, guys, what’s shaking?”
I needn’t have bothered. The squad leader responded with a low snarl and motioned with his weapon toward the nearby tent. They’d set up a tent. It would seem I didn’t even rate an indoor eting. Maybe it was actually a good sign … nope, couldn’t make that work.
I entered the enclosure and eyed the Pav sitting at the desk. He was the second planetary administrator since Hazjiar, and he didn’t look any friendlier than his imdiate predecessor. I missed Hazjiar. She at least had understood the realities of the situation the Pav found themselves in. Sohow, since her passing, the part about the Others having rendered the original Pav ho world unlivable had been, um, de-emphasized. The prevailing attitude now seed to be that we’d done it and lied about it. For no reason that anyone could co up with.
“My na is Da Azzma Hizz,” he said, gesturing to a chair. “I represent all Pav. Do you represent the humans?”
“I am Jacques Johansson. I represent the humans, for purposes of this transaction.” It was a Pav formality, of sorts. Everyone identified themselves and their purpose. And it lowered the tension a bit, as we settled into the routine.
Azzma pushed so papers forward. “We have available the agreed-to tonnages of elents according to the schedule. This represents paynt in full for the two human-owned autofactories in our system. Do you concur?”
I glanced over the papers. Everything seed to be in order. We’d offered to just give the autofactories to the Pav, but they’d refused. I couldn’t be sure if it was an aversion to what could be seen as charity, or if they didn’t want to be in our debt, even morally. I suspected the latter. “I concur. The Bellerophon will be here within the year. They will collect the ingots and deliver the autofactories to you from orbit.”
We stared at each other across the desk. There would be no pleasantries exchanged today. Then Azzma finally spoke. “I will admit this agreent is inconsistent with the prevailing conspiracy theory about the Bobs. It would have made more sense for you to keep us planet-bound and ignorant.” ɽ𝘢Ꞑȫ𐌱Е𝘴
“Hopefully this will help to ease the tension between our peoples,” I replied.
“A little, I think.” Azzma gave a tight-lipped smile-equivalent. “I have read the diaries of Hazjiar, Jock. She did not feel that you were the enemy. But it is a minority viewpoint these days.”
I sighed and examined my hands for a mont. “Azzma, you’ll be able to build interstellar vessels with the autofactories. We’ve given you the construction programs as part of the deal. It’s just”—I looked up at him—“you’ll be going out into a galactic neighborhood that’s full of humans, and getting more so. Too much uncontrolled antagonism could be counterproductive, you know?”
He stared back at for a mont. “I understand, Jock. We are outnumbered and outgunned, if it cos to that. We are not, uh …” Azzma gazed upward for a mont, then smiled. “… Klingons, is that the right human term? We understand discretion.”
I smiled back, just as one of my honor guard muttered, “And patience.”
Azzma gave them a hard glare past my shoulder.
“We have made great strides in restoring the Pav ho world,” I said, trying to bring things back to an even keel. “About a third of the planet is actively growing things once again. Are you sure you don’t want—?”
Azzma shook his head. “In our own ti, Jock, we will visit our ancestral ho. I don’t doubt the skills of the Bobs, but this is the ho world of every living Pav. Old Pav is a monunt to what no longer is.”
“I understand.” I nodded and stood up. “It will be kept aside for you, for whenever you decide.” I turned to my escort. “Well, boys, shall we?”
The squad leader showed his teeth—again—and stepped aside to make room for my departure. I turned back to Azzma for a mont and we exchanged Pav head bobs. I found myself missing Hazjiar and her version of the Vulcan salute.
Epherals. It was so hard not to think it.
There was a clunk as my cargo drone docked with the comms station. In keeping with the increased use of mannies for local physical presence, stations were now being constructed with a living area of sorts, and docking facilities. I stepped out of the drone’s hold and walked over to the manny pod. For humanoid androids, the pods had pretty much replaced the older and bulkier storage racks. As the pod cover closed over , umbilicals and feeder tubes attached to the manny. I powered down and transferred my POV to my personal VR.
My latest VR environnt, a ski chalet, was already boring . It seed I couldn’t stay interested for long in any one the, and I couldn’t get up the energy to work on sothing grand. I sighed and reset the VR to the default library the.
On a whim, I sent a text to Ferb. He replied imdiately, and I popped over to the Pav Reclamation Project administration center. The center was hosted by Bill’s moot VR system, and had been the nexus for our efforts to rebuild the Pav ho world for almost a hundred years now.
I examined the empty room, a sense of nostalgia filling . We’d spent so many years working on the problem of rebooting the Pav ecology from nothing more than so plant and animal samples, taken in a huge rush as the Others’ armada bore down on the planet. It was ironic: now that we were finally making so significant progress, the Pav simply didn’t seem to care.
Ferb popped in as I stood, ruminating. “Hey, bud,” he said. “Long ti.”
“Yeah. I, uh …” I waved a hand at the room. “Ghosts. It feels like we just abandoned the Pav.”
“Aw, don’t get lodramatic, Jacques. It’s all pretty much automated these days. Takes maybe a couple of hours a month to make sure everything’s on track.”
“Uh-huh. And that’s why, right? Where’s Phineas these days, Ferb?”
He glared at . “Why’d you have to bring that up?”
“Because it’s the real reason why this place is deserted. Heard from Phineas?”
“Nothing live.” Ferb looked down. “He isn’t bothering to build interstellar relays, and he’s way the hell out of SCUT range now. I get a heavily Dopplered radio transmission every month or so, though.”
“Heading for the Large Magellanic Cloud. He’ll be a while.”
“What’s your point, Jacques?”
“You, , Phineas, Claude, we’re all haunted by what happened. Ghosts. Billions of Pav—”
“We did everything we could!”
I sighed. “I know, I know. But there’s still an emotional toll. Especially since the Pav haven’t exactly embraced us for our efforts. We’ve all, every one of us who were involved, gone on to other things as far removed from this as possible. Phineas, well …” I snorted. “He’s taken far a bit too far, maybe.”
Ferb nodded, the slightest trace of a smile showing for only an instant.
I cocked my head as I took a good look at him. “What’re you doing with yourself these days?”
“LARPing. Well, designing campaigns more than participating.” Now Ferb finally did smile. “The Gars—you know, Gandalf and his group—do live-action D&D campaigns in virt. But they kind of have a problem where they all want to play and no one wants to DM, so they’re happy enough for the help. And I, uh …”
“What?”
“I have to admit I get a little uncomfortable around them, sotis. Not that they’re dangerous; it’s just they’re like strangers, but strangers who all look like , you know? So of them are out-and-out jerks.”
“Yeah. Replicative drift. It’s a thing, as Bill says. So why do you work with them?”
He shrugged. “Sothing to do. Keeps busy.”
“You can’t find anything better to do with your ti?”
“Thanks for that, mom.” Ferb hesitated. “Actually, I’m kind of working on sothing. Not quite ready, yet. Don’t noise it around, okay?”
He had my interest now. “Okay.”
“I’m building a huge cargo vessel for myself, and I’m filling it with SCUT relays, stripped down to the essentials to keep their size down. When I’m ready, I’m going to launch straight up toward galactic north. I’ll drop off relays as I go. I want to get at least a thousand light-years above the galactic plane. Then I’ll be able to see what’s on the other side of the galaxy.”
“You know you could just put an AMI in the vessel, give it so marching orders, and stay ho.”
“Maybe. Not the sa, though. Or maybe you’re right about Phineas. And all of us. Maybe we are trying to run away.” Ferb gave a look that I would have to describe as pleading, as if he was asking for forgiveness or sothing. “Gotta go, Jacques. We’ll talk again, soti.”
For so reason, I doubted that would happen. And just like that, I was alone again in the PRP center. Alone with my ghosts.
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