Nothing…
Liquid darkness flowed around her like empty molasses. Black and breathless wind.
Caderea’s eyes slowly blinked open. Confusion faded in and out of her mind. Then,
memory dawned, one piece at a time.
The Tesser Engine had collapsed inward, dragging the ship into itself. After only
a few seconds the entire drive system crumpled, sending warping arms of destruction
outward. The Peregrine’s body was thrown in all directions. Fractured metal bones,
flung aimlessly into the black vacuum. Hundreds of souls, gone in seconds.
Caderea would have been killed with everyone else, had she not been working
on one of the Peregrine’s Outrigger satellites. She had been the ship’s chief engineer
and liked to keep a close eye on every part of it. Unfortunately, not close enough to
save it and those on board. She was far enough away to protect her from assured
death, but not to protect her from the wave of destructive debris cast out by the
explosion. She had been working on an outer panel of the Outrigger and was only
attached by a thin safety line. As giant hunks of twisted shrapnel flew by, one sliced
through the safety line. The side of the metallic rope attached to her was caught in this
piece of debris. As the ship-bone continued its descent into space, it took her with it.
She had managed to release her harness, but by then it was too late. So now she
floated in the void.
Thinking back to those first awful minutes, the unwilling explorer of the dark
almost wished that she had been on the ship. At least there her death would have been
quick. Not like this dark empty torture she now felt. She did not know how long ago it
was that this had happened. An hour… A day… Ten minutes… She couldn’t tell which.
They all seemed meaningless now. Time is not easy when you have nothing to tie it
down to. It is like keeping track of one cloud. When the rest of the sky is blue, this is an
easy task. When the cloud is one of many, however, all it takes is one distracted glance
away, and the cloud is lost to a host of doppelgängers. That was how time now
seemed to Caderea. No reference, just a horrible event that had happened at a point
beyond recognition.
She knew she must be moving at great speeds because of the velocity at which
she had been yanked from the satellite, but she did not feel it. She wondered if she
really did know it. To know is to experience, and yet, she experienced no movement.
She was not going anywhere. She was now in, and remained in, nowhere. There was
no connection to measure herself to. No standard. No ground on which to stand. Even
when she moved her own hand, it did not seem meaningful when displayed on that
black abyss.
Stars were there, but at the same time they were not. They were too small, too
far to be anything real. They did not change, they did not move. The were like the
image of light burned on your retina from looking at something too bright. Only a
memory of the real thing. Not real itself. A glowing footprint of the real. Caderea
thought it all, perhaps, an illusion. A trick of her mind, trying to offer help. But it did not
help, for who can offer help to herself. You cannot catch yourself if you are falling. And
that was what she was doing, all she was doing. Falling, but not getting anywhere.
Falling in place.
Suddenly, there was a faint crackle in her helmet. Odd because she was sure the
transmitter on the side of her helmet had been knocked loose by a small shard that had
narrowly missed her face. A dim light seemed to be coming from behind her. Caderea
writhed about, frantically, trying to turn around. Eventually she turned enough to see
the source of light. Salvation. A ship, a distance away, but it was coming towards her.
The radio in her helmet crackled again.
“Hello…” said a voice, full of static and strangeness. “Hello…Do you read…”
Caderea’s eyes grew tearful, like the ocean at spring tide, about to overflow. The
sound of a human voice. So wonderful. It felt like all of time had past since she had
heard that beautiful noise.
“Hello?” Said the voice again, this time a bit less bound up by static crackling. In
her surge of emotion, Caderea had forgotten to respond.
“I’m here.” As she said these words, she was shocked by the sound of her own
voice as well. It somehow did not feel like her own. Almost as if there was someone
else in the helmet with her, answering on her behalf. After a few moments, Caderea
realized that the voice sounded familiar, almost… No she wouldn’t let herself hope any
more. She could not stand against any more destruction. Even if it was simply that of a
little hope.
“This is Terron Thellom, assistant chief engineer.” The hope was not destroyed.
Instead it was resurrected. “Please identify yourself…Who are you?”
The spring tides in Caderea’s eyes flooded on land. She could not help but
weep at such joy. A miracle.
“It’s me Terron! It’s Caderea! It’s me!”
“Cad? Is it really you?” Terron’s voice was much clearer in the speaker, almost
fully real sounding now. It was also full of an obvious joy.
“Yes!” It was all she could manage between shaky breaths.
“Dear God! It really is you. I thought you were gone like the others. I thought I’d
never see you again.”
“How…How did you get out?” Caderea had assumed that she had been the
only one far enough from the blast to survive.
“Too much to explain now. I’ll catch you up once you’re on board. Just hang
tight for a few more minutes.”
And she did hang tight. Tight to the miracle dream of reality. She could hardly
wrap her head around it. The odds of this happening were so small they were
nonexistent. The thought of anyone surviving then finding her was hard enough to
believe, but the fact of that someone being her closest friend was truly impossible.
Terron had been like the younger brother she never had. Caderea and he had found
companionship from the start. Neither had known anything more than the name of the
person they would be working with for the foreseeable future. The relief they had both
felt when realizing that they shared a hardworking, intelligent, trustworthy and
occasionally goofish spirit was palpable. In fact, at the end of their first conversation,
Terron had rather straightforwardly said, “You have no idea what a relief you are.” And
Caderea couldn’t help agreeing. Since then they had grown into a truly impressive
team, getting the Peregrine out of many close scrapes.
Then the reality settled in her mind…They had failed to protect the ship and her
crew from the last scrape. A wound that had eviscerated her home of the past five
years. All without being seen. She had double checked everything in the engineering
before heading to the outrigger satellites. Everything looked…seemed…was… fine.
Even if she hadn’t, Terron knew the system just as well as she did. There could not
have been better hands to leave the ship in. And yet, neither one of them had seen the
impending waterfall in the dark river they floated on. A dark surprise, from which there
was no escape.
Caderea snapped from her tempest of regret as she realized Terron’s ship was
much closer now. She could now see that the ship was the Peregrin’s Stellar Raft, a life
boat of sorts. Since the Peregrin had been highly automated, the large ship had a
relatively small crew in comparison. The Raft was not a very large craft, but it was
designed to hold the entire crew if need be, albeit in a rather cramped manner. Most of
the ship was full of hyper-sleep pods, neatly situated in a grid, to ensure the crew
would use up a minimum of space and supplies. Caderea wondered how Terron had
managed to get to the Raft before the explosion and if anyone else had made it out in
time.
Terron’s voice filled her helmet. “You’re almost safe Cad! I’ll send one of the
Tether Drones to pull you in.”
A segment in the front of the ship, just below the Nav-Center opened up like a
gaping mouth. A small drone was launched out, drifting gently until it cleared the door,
then jetting towards Caderea. Little halos of blue emanated from its many nano
thrusters. As it reached its target, the six metal arms flexed, wrapping themselves
around Caderea. The thrusters engaged again, gently tugging her towards the Raft.
Towards salvation and safety.
As the outer door to the airlock closed, she heard the hissing of air rushing into
the room. The Mag-Grav kicked in, increasing to full strength over the span of a few
second. Mag-Grav tech was created with the help of thousands of tiny electromagnets
throughout her suit. As she moved, the magnets did too, flowing with increasing and
decreasing strength to accurately simulate gravity. It was somewhat new technology,
only invented in the last 50 years or so and still had some wrinkles to be ironed out.
Caderea was somewhat shocked at how well it was working, considering what she had
just been through. Was it really just? It felt like an eternity ago and also current
simultaneously. Like trying to remember when in the night a specific dream had
occurred. She felt as if her perception of time had been blended up and poured out. A
temporal smoothie.
The inner door began to open with several loud clinks. Mechanical clinks.
Rhythmic metal. Reminding her of the engine complex she had called home. Once that
hard shiny sound would have felt warm and comforting to her. Now, it was only the
dripping blood of a happy memory, killed by perspective.
As it opened, Caderea saw a face, unreal, almost ghostlike coming towards her
through the central corridor. Horrible memories. No, not memories. This was now, not
then. This was her best friend, no ghost.
Terron ran to her and hugged her without a word. Tears fell on each others
shoulders. The warmth of human touch, that most concrete, palatable companionship
imaginable. This was the feeling of laying on a rock, in the middle of a stream, and
letting the sun bathe you, wrap you in its golden airy blanket. They stood like this with
no concern for time. What importance is time when you are comforted by a true friend.
Ragged breaths escaped Caderea as the loneliness fell to the ground, held in tears.
She held onto her hope and could not let it go.
Finally she broke that holy silence.
“How…How did you make it out?” Her voice was shivering, like all things trying
to recover from the cold. “When I left, you were in the corridor and…How did you get
out? What happened? What did I do wrong?”
She was overtaken by a wave in the ocean of grief that she swam in. Her legs
crumpled under her. Her vision swam and it felt like the ship was shaking beneath her.
Lights flickered, or was it her eyes. Her mind playing tricks. Terron caught her and
supported her. The shaking stopped. The flickering stopped. They moved slowly to a
cold metal bench jutting out of the wall several feet away and sat.
“Easy now,” he said, in a surprisingly calm voice. “Let’s not get into that right
now. First, I need to get you to the med cove. I’ll explain everything once I’m sure
you’re up to it.”
She was too drained to answer him and simply went along willingly as he helped
her walk shakily through a small door in the side of the corridor. The room they entered
was not very large. The simple space was all that was necessary for the medical
equipment this ship carried. A Med-pod lay on a pedestal, along one wall, at about
waste height. The pod started to life as they entered. Its transparent top half melted
into its sides. Terron helped her lower herself onto the floor of the pod. Its cushions felt
like a cloud as she eased herself onto her back. As the lid began to close its flowing
self over her, she suddenly reached up her hand to Terron, who stood beside the pod.
He grabbed her gently, but not weakly.
“Don’t go anywhere,” she whispered in a quiet, exhausted voice.
He looked down at her with a warm smile and an emphatic look in his eyes.
“I’m not going anywhere. I’ll stay right here.”
With this she released from his grip and lowered her arm to her side. The top
closed itself. From Caderea’s perspective it looked like the surface of a lake viewed
from underwater. The lights from the room refracted into the pod in a bent and warped
fashion. The surface shimmered with thousands of little blue lights. The lights came
together into a familiar face. The same avatar that had been the only doctor that she
and anyone else had known for more than 100 years. It was a subset of the vast neural
network that had helped run much of the Peregrin.
“Scan commencing. Please remain still until the sedatives take effect,” the
flowing face said, in a melodic and friendly voice. There was nothing about it that could
be specifically labelled as inhuman sounding, yet, there was still something that
differentiated it from that of a real human. Some hollow note that should be played by a
soul.
Caderea waited for the feeling of sleep to come over her as the calming drugs
entered her system. Though she had been through this hundreds of times before in her
life, this time something felt different. A feeling. A terrifying feeling crept forward from
the deep of her mind. Dread. She could not understand. Why dread? There was no
reason to be scared anymore. She was safe.
Why were those sedatives taking so long to kick in?
She had Terron back. She was simply imagining things because she was so
exhausted. That must be it. There was no reason for fear. Once she woke up, any
medical procedures would be done. Then she could finally talk to Terron and have him
explain…No! She couldn’t think about what he would be explaining.
Why were the sedatives taking so long?
But she could not help thinking. No sleep means thoughts and something in her
would not let her sleep. Her memories of the initial explosion began to surface and
sharpen in her mind. No! But she could not ignore them.
Sleep. Please sleep. But sleep would not come.
Caderea had seen the beginning of the explosion coming from the Tesser
Engine. That was right where Terron would have been. He couldn’t have gotten out…
But no. Maybe he had known somehow and managed to get to…
No! A word that tore through her consciousness like a flaming arrow.
Sleep now! Sleep! Sleep! SLEEP!
No!
She had seen more of the explosion. She had seen it move across decks. Along
the ship she knew so well. She had seen it tear…tear through the docked form of…
The Raft. It had been destroyed. Along with everything else. Along with Terron.
The lights around her slowly began fading to darkness. Like a hammer on an
anvil, reality struck her.
None of this was real.
No help. No Ship. No Med avatar. No safety. No Terron. No companionship. No
Hope.
She realized now why she could not sleep, for what is sleep in a dream?
The darkness came, flowing over her, into her, through her. Ink spilled on what
And so the dream ended, not with a bang, but with a whimper. A realization had
was real and fake.
cost her…
Nothing.
It meant everything, but it was nothing. Nothing but a dream.
Nothing left but nothing.
Empty, dark void.
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2 comments
Great sci-fi take on the theme and marvellously original writing. I really felt the protagonist's senses of hope, dread, etc. Conveyed very well.
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Thank you so much! I’m glad you enjoyed it. My main goal was to try to get the reader into the same state of mind so that good to hear.
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