“Rise and shine,” said Bara with a loud voice the next morning. “Wake up and let’s
get ready for our return."
Helen curiously looked at Anais who was petting a lizardlike animal. “What is
this?” she said.
“This is Draco. He is my new pet.”
“How did you come to befriend a lizard?”
“I can hardly sleep more than eight hours per night. When I came out, this guy
was in the bag of food.”
“And he just let you hold him?” asked Gakuto with the excitement of a child.
“Can I touch him?”
“Ask him, not me,” said Anais.
When Gakuto’s hand had almost reached Draco, the animal hissed and took
an aggressive stance.
“He does not seem to like you,” said Konoya, laughing.
“Actually, I think he is scared of all of you, being so close to him,” said Anais,
waving her hand to make space. “It took a little bit of food for him to let me touch him.
Now he does not let me put him down.”
“That’s strange for an animal,” said Gakuto while packing his backpack.
With Draco happily on her shoulder, Anais moved to the front of the party and
began working to find a path toward Argos. The team crossed many more interesting
areas, where they registered structures, most of which were deeply buried under the
soil. On arriving back at the camp, the materials gathered were given to Jabir, who
was the chemist of the group, to begin analyzing them. In the meantime, the
exploration team tried to befriend Draco, who became an instant sensation.
The following days, small excursions took place but at limited range. Another
excursion to the city was made by Jabir and Steve, who needed data about the
materials used to build it. The analysis of samples and the observations made by the
Hera provided enough data to begin forming a hypothesis about the history of that
world.
“On top of today’s progress reports, we will be discussing the results of the
research on the history of this place,” said Jain as he kicked off the meeting.
“We are beginning to form a hypothesis,” continued Helen, “about the age
and partial history of this world. It does not, however, feel complete by any standard.
The Hera provided tectonic information, and contrary to our initial suspicions, this
planet has very little tectonic movement, which is mainly located away from the area
of the city. We will be referring to the city we partially explored as Alpha City or just
Alpha, to distinguish it from the other places we will surely visit.”
“So, how did it get buried?” asked Juuda.
“Actually, that is the correct term, Juuda. The city did not sink; it was buried.
The soil we see there has been deposited over large periods of time by the wind.”
“How much time are we talking about?” continued Juuda.
“It’s better if we let Jabir answer that.”
“I am shocked by this material’s properties,” started Jabir. “It is pretty easy to
date it from the moment it was split off from the rest of the building, and as long as it
remains away from direct light. We know that the part I have was split by some kind
of explosion about twenty-five to thirty thousand years or six to seven thousand Earth
years ago. It is, however, impossible to date how long ago it was actually made,
since it does not age.”
“How can it not age?” asked Steve.
“It is stronger than any concrete and harder than carbide. On top of that, it
heals itself and can even close visible cracks.”
“Does it not need energy to do that?” asked Steve.
“This is the crazy part,” said Jabir excitedly. “It is solar powered. It can absorb
various frequencies of light and turn them into current. Then it transfers that current
throughout its structure, providing replenishment to the basements and areas away
from the light. Additionally, it stores current in itself. This is a material we worked very
hard to make on Earth but never completed. The original piece you brought here
could not show me its age because it was exposed to sun. This was one of the
reasons I went back there to get new samples.”
“Can we replicate it?” asked Alex.
“It will be hard. Figuring out its abilities is the easy part. Analyzing something
so resistant to anything is another challenge.”
The tale has been stolen; if detected on Amazon, report the violation.
“Make it your first priority.”
After a short pause, Jain continued. “We also have a hypothesis about the
events that caused the civilization to collapse.”
“So, we are sure they have collapsed?” said Gakuto.
“It surely seems that way,” continued Dimitri. “They are holding spears, and
their city is deserted for twenty-five thousand years. I don’t think there is a doubt
about that.”
“So, what took them out?” asked Gakuto.
“War. It seems war was the reason here. The buildings that have damage on
them have the characteristics of ballistic weapons.”
“Ballistic weapons and bullets of unimaginable power,” added Steve. “There
are holes that go through seven walls. I haven’t tested it yet, but I think our plasma
rifles would not go through a single wall. There are also buildings that look like they
have been cut in half. Their war must have been terrifying.”
“What is the chance that weapons like that are still in circulation out there?”
asked Alex.
“It’s not easy to know,” said Steve. “If they could last that long, then they
could still be around, but it surely does not seem to be so.”
“Does no one see the weird connection here?” said Juuda. “Their civilization
ended when ours was beginning. We also see creatures here that existed in our
legends. Even Anais’s lizard looks more like a miniature dragon than anything else.”
“We are aware of the similarities,” said Dimitri. “Taking the statue we found
and everything else into consideration, we are starting to form the hypothesis that
they indeed visited our world before their end. It is, however, a bit far-fetched. At
least with the data we currently have..”
“On our second visit to Alpha, we came across a large predatory animal,” said
Bara. “We monitored it for a while, and we came to the conclusion that an attack from
that thing would probably result in death. Our nanos will not be enough to protect us
against it.”
“I need to add to this,” said Konoya. “Our entire population has never
experienced disease or physical threat at all. This has made us fearless. But it has
also made us high risk takers. I gather information on the daily lives of everyone, and
I notice a high inclination to risk taking. Stories of big animals and Anais’s dragon
only drive people to want to venture out more.”
Alex seemed worried. “Based on everything we heard, we will be making
some changes. For starters, Steve, I want you to fabricate weapons for everyone.”
“What kind of weapons?” asked Steve.
“Bara, do you have a say in it?”
“Well, I don’t like the idea of everyone walking around with a plasma weapon.
It is very dangerous. There is a technology that was developed before the Osiris
impact which would be great for here.”
“Which is?” asked Steve.
“Electric weapons. It uses electrical charge to shoot a tiny projectile out with
supersonic speeds.”
“How is that less dangerous?”
“It is, greatly. The projectile has the size of a pinhead. Despite its
extraordinary speed, it has an effective range of about six meters. It is particularly
devastating at anything under a meter. Shoots one projectile per second, and most
importantly, it makes a very loud crackling sound. Perfect for scaring away anything.”
“Sounds ideal. I suppose the schematics are in the database?” asked Alex.
“Of course,” replied Bara.
“Then give access to the file to Steve. Begin producing one for each citizen.
Since we can’t stay within Argos any longer, we will allow excursions, but they will be
accompanied by at least one soldier. Bara, you’ll be in charge of the schedules.”
“Should I place the weapon production before the sewage treatment?” asked
Steve.
“Yes. Make sure everyone has a weapon. It will be included in the necessary
equipment for all excursions.”
“I also have an announcement,” said Steve, while sending an image to the
display. “This is a new drone. It can’t hover, so it’s actually a plane, but it can fly at
very high altitudes, and it looks like some of the birds here. We can mount a small
amount of weight, so for starters I am placing a visual camera on it, and I will be
sending it to slowly map out the continent. I will make more of them after finishing the
production of the weapons.”
“There is one more thing,” said Jain. “Every city must have a library of some
kind. A place to hold important information and manage it. I want to organize the next
excursion there in search of such a building. The information found inside would be
invaluable. We have explored a tiny fraction of this continent, which is but a small
fraction of this planet, and we are surrounded by mysteries. We need to speed up our
information gathering, and I think the fastest way is through the discovery of a
library.”
“I have to agree with that,” said Konoya. “Everyone wants to venture out and
see this world, but mainly for their own recreation. We are working toward answers
and progress extremely slowly. A library with ready answers sounds ideal.”
In the days that followed, new data kept coming in. More preindustrial species
were observed, which raised new questions. They also noted a pattern of scouting
parties from various species coming to see Argos from a distance. Steve added a
dozen more scouting planes, and soon a rough map of the terrain of the continent
was made. It revealed a landscape rich in cities, with countless settlements of the
indigenous species, which were marked and avoided when venturing for excursions
until an approach plan was devised.
“Tomorrow the team will be leaving to go search for the library,” said Jain to
Alex while getting ready to sleep.
“Jain, does it not seem surreal to you?”
“You mean the whole situation here or something in particular?”
“Well, everything really. We have clear images of a few species living here,
and they all resemble mythological creatures from back home. Dimitri, who had quite
the fascination with old legends, is shocked. When I speak with him, he makes a
compelling argument that we were visited by them a long time ago.”
“It could be so. We will soon have more data to test this hypothesis. It should
not trouble you so much.”
“I can’t help thinking that some of those ancient technologies will resurface
somewhere and pose a threat to us. I delayed contacting the Goblins and every other
species because I worry that this will start a series of events that might lead us to
conflict.”
“I understand. We do not have a good history of meeting new people in our
own world.”
“Yes, and here we see species which differ greatly, all living together. How
did they manage it?”
“The answers will come slowly. Stressing about them will not help you make
the right choices.”
“You’re right, as always. I am happy I can go through all this with you by my
side.”