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Dsicovery Pt VIII (standard:science fiction, 1132 words) [8/8] show all parts | |||
Author: Goreripper | Added: Dec 11 2001 | Views/Reads: 2468/1858 | Part vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
Mission accomplished, and the narrator returns home, but not without one final revelation. | |||
VIII Shortly after the 'Far Traveler' left us, with replacements for those who had chosen to return home aboard her, Guillamo and I married. It was a romance often hindered by interplanetary distance as we led our separate teams on Arcana and Daktar, but rekindled with ever-increasing intimacy at our every encounter. Those who knew us felt that we were both too similar in nature to maintain a relationship with one another, and there were even crueler analysts who would claim that I was too dedicated to looking at bones and she too interested in planets for us to form a bond with another person. Yet love bloomed between us and, as he did with many of the marriages which were to ensue, Professor Neffergi presided at our wedding. Afterwards he even insisted in his charming, gentlemanly way that we put aside our research and spend time together in the Discovery's relaxation facility, going so far as to actually forbid us from returning to duty for two weeks. It was the first extended break either of us had taken during the expedition, and in spite of our initial misgivings at being separated from our work we found ourselves enjoying the holiday immensely and at the end we found that we were reluctant to be apart. So, though we returned to our separate teams on our separate planets and took up our research with the renewed vigour a vacation can inspire, my wife and I also found more time to be together, and it was only with slight reluctance that we eventually decided to leave the expedition when the next relief ship arrived another two years later. As Guillamo and I nestled into our berths aboard the 'Solar Mariner' when it finally arrived, we both reflected on the incredible discoveries we had made, many of which had forced an entire paradigm shift in several important areas of scientific research. Holding hands, we took our final look at the magical blue and green orb below us with the same wonder that the planet's former inhabitants must have felt when they had eventually been able to do the same thing. Then it gradually fell away behind us until it was lost from sight, and we looked at each other and smiled sad but thoughtful smiles. The last glimpse we had of the Arcana system before we entered our cryonic beds for the eight year journey home was of Millaris, a majestic orange gas giant, sixth from its sun, with its magnificent broad, bright ring system. Few more beautiful planets exist. Then the 'Solar Mariner' opened its travel singularity and we saw it no more. Of all the memories I have of the years my wife and I spent studying the long dead people of Arcana and its neighbouring worlds, my mind is constantly drawn to the starkest image I saw during my time there, and it is the report of the new breakthrough in research on the region which has inspired me to set down this tale. Shortly after we had explored the long-sealed network of domes and passages on the red planet of Daktar, I travelled with Guillamo to the lone, silent satellite companion of Arcana. Previous teams had located incredibly ancient examples of machinery scattered over the surface of the moon, and close to the northern pole an extensive complex similar to the one on Daktar, and she and I were on our way to examine some of the geological findings. These appeared to suggest that the make up of the moon and the planet it orbited were virtually identical, which in turn suggested that the two worlds had once been one and perhaps separated by an immense cataclysm sometime very, very early in the solar system’s life. While we were there, Dr. Isuldir Fortunatix, who was leading the expedition, took us on a flight over the satellite, and pointed out various places of considerable interest, including a cluster of what appeared to be cinder cones and extensive flat lowland areas. In one of these, the doctor informed us, they had found a singularly significant discovery, and he steered the shuttle in the direction of this object. There, near the edge of the vast dead sea of timeless grey dust there arose from the plain a small squarish structure of manufactured metal, silent and lonely, a platform of some kind which rested on four squat, sharply bent legs ending in circular feet. The platform and the surface around it had been encased in a dome of some kind of glass, although the nature of its manufacture and the secret of its longevity even in an airless environment has yet to be discovered. Whatever miracle had preserved this small area of this world for us to find we could not Click here to read the rest of this story (32 more lines)
This is part 8 of a total of 8 parts. | ||
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