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Discovery (standard:science fiction, 1515 words) [6/8] show all parts | |||
Author: Goreripper | Added: Dec 02 2000 | Views/Reads: 3108/1885 | Part vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
The narrator arrives on Daktar to follow-up his colleague's amazing discoveries there... and finds even more amazing things. | |||
Guillamo had established her base at the foot of a monstrously high cliff, crowned by a single gigantic volcanic cone that rose more than twenty spans into the sky. Standing alone on the planet's ageless desert of red dust, this lonely, unaccountably huge mountain was the most massive and imposing single geological feature I had ever witnessed. Even the Professor was awed by the sight. The stellar explorer sped low over the surface of sand and scattered rock and landed beside the resident team's own craft. Guillamo herself met us and ushered us quickly inside the base with a rapid warning that a dust storm was on the way and we would have to remain where we were for at least two of the planet's days. During that time, Guillamo and I found ourselves in each other's company a great deal, and by the time we went aboard her stellar explorer for the flight to the location where her team had uncovered what appeared to be a settlement, I found myself feeling something much stronger than just friendship for this tall, intelligent and amusing woman. It appeared that I was beginning to discover something of myself on this expedition, as much as I had so far found about the lost culture of Arcana. After several hours, the ground streaking along under the explorer suddenly dropped away into one of the most spectacular and vast canyons in the galaxy. The rift was so deep we were unable to see the bottom at all and the other side seemed incredibly distant. Even at the speed we were traveling it took several minutes to cross this enormous valley that stretched left and right beyond the horizon without becoming noticeably narrower or shallower. >From space this would look like an enormous rent made by the talon of a monster. What a remarkable world Guillamo had found! A planetary ring made of iron ore, a mammoth volcano that dwarfed any other we had ever seen and a canyon of immense proportions that seemed to split the planet in two. This world held as much wonder as the one we had originally come to study. A short flight from the stupendous valley a very large hill rose high out of the plain. It was at the base of this hill, Guillamo explained, that one of her scouting parties had seen the remnants of buildings poking through the sand. Three days later a powerful localised dust storm had completely uncovered them, but as yet no one had explored there further. We were now about to experience yet another portentous moment: the first visitors to the site for 100,000 years. Even after all the remarkable things we had seen so far on Daktar, nothing could have prepared us for what we found on that barren, desolate plain. Shrieking winds carried storms of harsh red dust and sand which tore at us as we made our way to the semi-buried buildings ahead. Beneath the shifting sands of this vast red desert lay the remains of a dead city so old it had been founded, waxed and died even before our own species had peeked a fearful eye out of the sheltering branches of some primordial jungle tree. The buildings were low and dome-like in structure, leading us to believe that the greater part of their construction lay underground. Windows like the cold black sockets of a skull peered through the swirling storm and we saw at last that one of these was in fact a tall, narrow door, choked with debris and bitter red sand. Guillamo and I earnestly but carefully worked to clear the entrance, and in a short time our team was inside the first of these ancient buildings, sheltered from the extreme weather of this harsh and unforgiving planet. Exposed as this room was to the environment, we found nothing there but for the ubiquitous dust. Whatever this room had once contained, the incredible wind erosion evident here had long since destroyed it. In the gloom however we perceived two obvious exits, both heavily sealed by strong doors, closed and locked so long ago they had become fused shut. If we were to go on from here, we would have to burn these doors open. After a brief consultation, we decided to open the southern door first. From all indications, the complex extended in that direction from our immediate location and therefore we were more likely to find artifacts or evidence of habitation, however ancient it may be. It took only a short time to burn the door enough so it could be removed from its frame to allow us access. We put aside the cutting torches and eagerly took up the lever bars to jemmy the door open. Doing this required seven of us using all our strength on the bars. The seal, Click here to read the rest of this story (69 more lines)
This is part 6 of a total of 8 parts. | ||
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