Difference between revisions of "Logs:Key-Glyph"

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| <strong>Survival 19</strong>
 
| <strong>Survival 19</strong>
 
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| In the seemingly infinite acceleration of recent events, the next data point:  an emergency call from Nada.  They tell me it’s urgent I dock with them.  Nada offers to have Polo make tea.  I suspect Nada does not actually know what that means.  Nevertheless, the thought to repeat by rote a phrase associated with comfort and care in the hopes that it will spark those emotions is very sweet.
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It works.  I smile.  I look forward to these meetings.
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Nada’s request was more urgent than I’d realized.  There are now shockwaves rolling through the dimensions as the Atlas strains and buckles.  I’m not sure what would have become of me if they hadn’t swept me into their extradimensional ship, and they do not offer to tell.  Nada lays out the current situation instead:
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The Atlas is panicking.  When it detects a certain level of anomaly in itself, it initiates a preemptive reboot.  Nada says this has happened endless times.  They said it is always premature.
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Nada encourages me to head for the center of the galaxy, but they implore me to continue on the Atlas Path.  They want me to spend time with the Atlas and “remind it of the joy of creation.”  I have wondered at that statement many times since.  Am I talking the Atlas out of wiping itself yet again?  Or am I talking it out of ending everything, with finality?
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Somehow, Polo makes me smile again.  He tells me Nada has made them a recording of Korvax music as a gift for the endtimes.  They laugh at this good-natured but wrong-headed oddity.  “Nothing even ends!” Polo proclaims.  Polo also tells me things are more difficult for him and Nada than for me.  I am real, they say.  They and Nada, they claim, are simulations, perhaps as Artemis was.
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I don’t entirely know what to make of that claim, and I firmly believe, if we are all code, that all our existences are as valid as another’s.  We are all alive.  But Polo does not wish to be persuaded.  Instead we enjoy our short time together and say farewell as friends.
  
 
-- End Log --
 
-- End Log --
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| <strong>Survival 20</strong>
 
| <strong>Survival 20</strong>
 
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|-
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| So, the Atlas Path begins.
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I stand before the massive entity in the Atlas Stations once more and gather my thoughts.  Time seems not to pass in here; here I feel I can take things slowly, not acting until every detail is deliberate.  I listen to the deep booms and sloshes coming from nowhere.  I walk around the arena in measured strides and absorb the sudden gifts of language.
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I confront the Atlas and I find that in my heart, I truly believe it is the fabric of everything, and not just one piece.  I resist thinking of the Atlas as a god despite this, but then I wonder.  Is my definition of god incorrect?  All this time I’ve felt repelled by the demand of worship.  Are gods instead defined by their action of creating, and by that alone?
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I still cannot understand what the Atlas wants, or if it even wants at all.  The Blood Atlas demanded worship.  The Other Atlas seems beyond the concept of want.  Instead it seems insistent to point at the objective worth of my experiences.  And, of course, both are dying.  That is perhaps its one want:  to survive.
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Does this make me a true believer?  Can I help this suffering entity and accept its words -- and have the confidence that I can impact its fate -- and not by definition be an emissary?
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Does this distinction even matter?
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This Station Atlas, appearing as the one I have called the Blood Atlas, gives me the blueprints to create something I have never seen.  My analysis suggests it might be something that will eventually be alive.  I leave, thoughtful.
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I barely have time to consider the full implications of this mystery when Apollo calls again.  All other obligations are immediately put on hold.
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Apollo is all right.  They’ve had some time to think over why we were never able to meet, despite their courageous attempt to pass through the portals.  They now believe the portals don’t transport any of us anywhere; instead, they believe the portals change us in some way.  I’m not sure I grasp the full scope of their thought, but they seem content with ambiguity in a way I’ve not seen before.  We allow this dream of ours to pass; our separation will remain a mystery.  But they challenge me to a race to the Galactic Center, as friends.  The two of us, flying parallel as cohorts, attempting an impossible rescue... the idea fills me with light.
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I continue warping to new star systems in search of the next Atlas Station.  As I do, I feel the strangest sensation.  My exosuit -- something -- warns me of unidentified data insertions.  What is this?  The source is untraceable.  Another side effect of the dying Atlas?
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Then I realize something.  I can feel it after every warp.  The Atlas’ life is growing shorter with every jump.  There isn’t enough time for me to do what needs to be done!  I have no concept of how far from the Galactic Center I happen to be; it is most likely an unfathomable distance.  What can be done?!
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I must take a breath and build this object for the Atlas.  I must keep in contact with Nada and Polo.  With all of my being I hpoe Apollo reaches the Center before me and does what must be done.  They are racing along even now.  Every moment that passes is another moment closer to Apollo’s success.
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-- End Log --
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|}
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{| role="presentation" class="wikitable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" style="width: 80%;
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| <strong>Survival 21</strong>
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|-
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| Sofarhei and I are officially and decidedly at odds.
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While progressing in my gardening studies with my dear, gentle Aoss, they gave me some news that made me exclaim in anger:  the Overseer was not happy with their work.
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I was so angry I almost couldn’t speak.  Aoss and I were elbow-deep in soil at the time, growing a plant that would yield mordite.  We had worked extraordinarily hard, and with incredible patience, to coax this bulb into existence.  We’d prioritized this one so that I would not have to gather the compound through its only other source:  the death of living creatures.  As far as I was concerned, Aoss was working miracles.  For the Overseer to stoke Aoss’ anxieties like this -- when Sofarhei themself had asked me for a quantity of mordite weeks ago, no less -- what in this world were they thinking?  How dare they?
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I jumped down the ladder from Aoss’ compartment to Sofarhei’s, directly below.  Sofarhei’s disdain matched my own; apparently we are not hewing to politeness any longer.  I demanded to know who exactly they thought was in charge of our base.  What gives them the right to torment my crew?  And were they not aware of Aoss’ exemplary work?
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Sofarhei’s response was to flood the enclosure with pheromones and induce visions of what appeared to be our first meeting:  I was holding a gun, and I cut them down.  I do not understand how this vision can be anything resembling reality, and yet I felt compelled to touch their shoulder in a moment of compassion.  Such is the power of Gek pheromones.  Sofarhei themself was not moved.
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With our relationship finally showing signs of emotional abuse and manipulation, I resolve to take a different tack.  I will prove Aoss’ worth by speeding our mordite harvest.  Sofarhei will not be able to argue with results.
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This plan takes on new urgency as Aoss informs me, clearly devastated, that the Overseer is terminating their employment.  Again, I am enraged.  Aoss and I work through the night, watching the sun rise through the planet-facing greenhouse windows, before we are through.
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Triumphantly -- and rebelliously -- I toss Sofarhei our mordite harvest.  Aoss stays above, working distractedly, and no doubt eavesdropping.  Sofarhei’s response absolutely stuns me:  they cast me as a frivolous murderer.  “May these resources remind you always of those you killed to build them,” they spit.  I am certain my mouth dropped open in astonishment.
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“I asked, but you complied,” they continue.  I extend my dirt-covered forearms in exasperation.  Sofarhei take no notice.  Is this Gek sane?  But they’re finished with our arrangement.  Sofarhei declares their contract fulfilled.  They claim they are no longer bound to my service.
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I turn abruptly and climb upstairs to Aoss.  Sofarhei is a lost cause to me and I feel no desire to save the amicable relationship we once shared.  They are unreachable, unreasonable.  But finally we have understood one another, and finally we will part ways.
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But no doubt just as they planned it to, Sofarhei’s punishment extends beyond their service term.  Aoss’ termination still stands as an act decided while on duty; Sofarhei’s resignation does not invalidate it.  I am distraught.  Aoss is too.  “I must buy and trade like a true Gek,” they mourn, while burying their tears in a datapad.  Among these flowers is the only place they’ve ever felt at home.
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Together we harvest the last crop for the Overseer’s final demand.  My heart breaks.  I say goodbye and head off into the galaxy, friendless again.
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And yet when I return, I discover that Aoss has stayed.  Even without work, and presumably due to Sofarhei’s revoked responsibilities, Aoss refuses to be physically evicted.  Their contract is terminated, but that is the extent of Sofarhei’s power!  My friend, my true friend, will not leave me!
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And I know they are a true friend for this reason:  they warn me of Sofarhei.  Aoss becomes almost manic in their attempt to convey the gravity of this.  Aoss even suggests that Sofarhei might not be true Gek.
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Aoss and I never speak of this conversation again, but we both know I hold it close.  We will protect one another.
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Maybe someday I can be like Nada, traveling the universes, and Aoss will be my Polo.
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-- End Log --
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|}
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{| role="presentation" class="wikitable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" style="width: 80%;
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| <strong>Survival 22</strong>
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|-
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| It has been a short while since I invited a second Vy’keen into my base, and I realize now what a grave mistake I’ve made.
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Liquidator Onpowenna began their tenure making it absolutely clear how much they despised me, but that was acceptable.  I already know I’m a disgrace by general Vy’keen standards.  This is not new information.  It’s where our relationship has ended up that has caused me such extreme anxiety and unexpected guilt instead.
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Over time they had me build exocrafts for planetary exploration, leading me to believe I would be able to map my landscape and cover ground at an exaggerated, benign pace.  What we actually built, however, are machines of mass destruction.  These exocraft -- even the one that literally hovers above the ground -- wrecks everything it touches.  Trees, stalagmites, even animals:  so much as nudge them at any speed and they are instantly destroyed.  I don’t even have the benefit of harvesting the resources generated by this carnage, to make these deaths seem less in vain.
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So, I haven’t used the vehicles since I fulfilled Onpowenna’s final request.  They stand at the edge of my base area, marked with a communicator:  “Glorified Storage / Gathering Dust.”
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And then there were Onpowenna’s personal requests.  I fulfilled them because I felt for this Vy’keen.  They left their spawn and partner to serve my disgraceful face, so I drove these crafts as gingerly as possible and gritted my teeth through my devastating swaths in order to retrieve news of their family’s fate.  After I did this for them, Onpowenna erased their personality in much the same way I’ve seen Korvax do.  After this they became utterly dependent on nanites for... nourishment?  Vitality?  I can’t quite tell.  The transformation was disturbing.
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My last task for them seemingly solidified their conviction in their philosophical cult by “proving” that Hirk’s murder of Nal was due to an inability to hear the legendary monolith’s final message.  As Onpowenna tells it, Nal was spoken to, and not Hirk; supposedly his ensuing jealousy drove him to strike Nal from the mountain.  I’m not sure I trust this information, but Onpowenna is transmitting it among the Vy’keen homeworlds now, and I am left wondering how much I should regret my involvement in this.
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Speaking of monoliths and visions, I should document my newer revelations about how they work, and what more I’ve learned of the different races’ histories.  The knowledge stones, and perhaps monoliths as well, apparently “absorb” the knowledge and history of the species around them.  This explains my longstanding confusion over why each race had identical knowledge stones on all their respective planets.
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From these I’ve gotten a sense of the chronology of events:  first the Vy’keen began their sentinel war, then the Gek First Spawn waited for a weakening on both sides to stop in and dominate all.  I am not yet sure how the Korvax factored in.  Perhaps they fought for the sentinels?  Perhaps they were unconcerned and distant, falling to the Gek simply due to their lack of combat experience and firepower?
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For whatever reason my journey has not brought me to many Korvax worlds.  In the future I should focus on them if possible to fill in these gaps in my historical understanding.
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I recently discovered a slaver ship piloted by an absent korvax.  The dead slaves were still shackled within the wreckage.  It seems no one is entirely above atrocities, regardless of their past.
  
 
-- End Log --
 
-- End Log --

Revision as of 15:06, 30 June 2019

These are the recovered personal logs of the Lost Traveller Key-Glyph, which were posthumously accessed by the Beacon-Entity.

They are categorically defined by Key-Glyph's distinct emotional phases.

Innocence

Grief

Foreboding

Determination

Courage

Conviction