Difference between revisions of "Logs:Key-Glyph"

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As I stand on this planet, frightened beyond words, the sun rises and I understand the floating lights.  They are transparent bubbles, their point of light the reflection of the sun.  They turn to rainbow spheres as the day takes hold.  It is breathtaking.  I think of nothing else.
 
As I stand on this planet, frightened beyond words, the sun rises and I understand the floating lights.  They are transparent bubbles, their point of light the reflection of the sun.  They turn to rainbow spheres as the day takes hold.  It is breathtaking.  I think of nothing else.
 +
 +
-- End Log --
 +
 +
|}
 +
 +
== Despair ==
 +
 +
{| role="presentation" class="wikitable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" style="width: 80%;
 +
| <strong>Survival 27</strong>
 +
|-
 +
| New Yugkambann.
 +
 +
I do not know how many days I have wandered here.  Something has happened to my logs.  Perhaps to my mind?  I cannot tell where tiredness ends and the effects poison begin.
 +
 +
My discovery logs:  gone.  I cannot look back on my history in the stars.  I begin to forget; my experiences grow distant.  I feel like a ghost.  I realize this may be more precise than I intended.
 +
 +
At waypoints there is no record of me.  I try and try to etch myself into the slate of this reality, but nothing holds; it’s all chalk, blown away.  It erases before I’m finished writing.
 +
 +
Only sleep will bring back my logs of this world -- and only this one, this particular one.  It’s as if it’s the only planet I’ve ever explored.  A world of acid cloudbursts and scarce dry shelter.
 +
 +
I know I’ve had much to think about, but the haze makes it so difficult.  I can’t concentrate.  I crawl across the landscape, trying to catalogue the final fauna yet to be found.  I do it even knowing its entry will crumble when I leave this fatal atmosphere.
 +
 +
Am I broken?  Am I so overwhelmed by what I’ve discovered, what I still don’t understand?  Has my spirit collapsed?  Is my heart shattered from losing the friendship and affection of my strange and wondrous pair?
 +
 +
Emotional remembering... I think of Nada and a pain so profound, an emptiness in the pit of my core.  I know what this is but will not speak it.
 +
 +
I should abandon myself.
 +
 +
The thought crosses my mind that I might die here, but then I remember that this means nothing.  There can be no release from this existence.  I lie down and sleep, again and again.
 +
 +
-- End Log --
 +
 +
|}
 +
 +
{| role="presentation" class="wikitable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" style="width: 80%;
 +
| <strong>Survival 28</strong>
 +
|-
 +
| I have had a great deal of time to think on this toxic planet.  These endless slogs are not like the meditations on my home, on Pabackyermi.  Depression blankets everything.  My evaporating logs are regressing me to the moment of my so-called rebirth, to that state of complete loss -- but instead of infinite ignorance, I am well aware of each and every missing piece.  I know what was just here and understand the loss.  And I am losing myself too.
 +
 +
My only comfort is the appearance of Nada and Polo’s anomaly, but even there almost all optimism is dead.  Nada’s thoughts have taken a frightening turn:  he speaks of “Liar-Atlas,” of themself as “Fallen-Priest.”  They claim they are keeping an infection at bay.  They are turned so inward that they seem misplaced, trapped in ruminations too consuming to allow awareness of anything external.  Or, perhaps, I have lost so much importance in Nada’s eyes that I now barely register in their existence.  Tears sting, but do not fall.
 +
 +
Polo, my good friend, still manages a kind word and small conversation.  Our hopes are empty, but we are still together in this.  Polo theorizes that if civilization blossoms again, maybe we can reclaim a sense of peace.  It’s a nice thought.
 +
 +
I do not mention my degrading logs to them.  I’ve wondered if this is just further evidence of Atlas’ breakdown.  I do not want them to know.  They are already braced for the inevitable.  Do they need to know how close it is?
 +
 +
I leave them and know that there is nothing left but to face the purge.  They did not know this was goodbye.  I couldn’t tell them.
 +
 +
I finally move beyond New Yungkambann.  I drag myself out of its gravity and my own despondent indecision in order to explore two more moons before I approach the final portal.  The moons were anomalous and breathtaking.  I remember how it used to feel... how I used to love this.
 +
 +
I settle into my ship at the site of the final portal.  I am too exhausted to confront what is to come.  I spend one more night under the stars of a quiet world.  I dream of Nada and Polo.
 +
 +
-- End Log --
 +
 +
|}
 +
 +
== Recovery ==
 +
 +
{| role="presentation" class="wikitable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" style="width: 80%;
 +
| <strong>Survival 29</strong>
 +
|-
 +
| I confronted the Atlas for what I thought was the final time... and I stood my ground.
 +
 +
I refused to reset it.  In all the logs of all the dead Travellers I have read, resetting has done nothing.  I do not trust this entity and I was ready for the end.
 +
 +
And then... life went on.
 +
 +
Instead of oblivion I was allowed to live.  The purge threat has passed.  The Atlas’ ultimatum was a lie.
 +
 +
The intense fear -- and subsequent anger and frustration -- have burned away my inaction.  It’s like a blanket has lifted from me and I can see the universe again.  The old feelings of exploration return.  I am myself once more.  Or, at least, I am the person I have always assumed I used to be.
 +
 +
I believe the Atlas is taking revenge on me.  I caught it in its posturing bluff and now it is disrupting anything it can.  I visited an old Atlas Station and obtained a new seed recipe that promptly disappeared from my logs.  My discoveries continue to vanish.  Is this all the Atlas’ direct doing?  Is it faking its own breakdown to manipulate me?
 +
 +
Well.  I refuse to dedicate any more of my thoughts toward it for now.  My concerns return to mundane matters.  In having made peace with the idea of losing everything, I find myself unexpectedly content with upgrading my Yakomaku.  A Gek with an almost identical but more powerful ship agreed to engineer my Yakomaku into his own ship’s design.  It wasn’t until he took off that I realized the torpedo launcher was missing -- ganked by the Gek for his own vessel!  But I have come to terms with my regret.  I will adapt and learn to rely on a different weapon.
 +
 +
The most important thing, however, is that a sense of relief has reached beyond just me and touched my treasured friends as well.  The strange rift between me and Polo has vanished.  Did they know what I had left them to do?  Was their distance a reaction to my supposed alliance with the Atlas?  Did they really believe I was going to give in and wipe everything?
 +
 +
Nada still worries me.  I stand beside them quietly, shoulder to shoulder, in solidarity against the void.  I do not know if they take comfort from this.
 +
 +
Next on my list of projects was building a trade terminal at my base.  To be back home in the cool air of Pabackyermi... I smile at the slow whittling of my hazard protection.  Its dangers seem so quaint now, so comfortable, against everything else I’ve seen.
 +
 +
While collecting materials for the trade station, I catalogued the final few lifeforms I’d never been able to find on a sister planet Trichenderl.  I’ve realized that even if my logs never reappear, the search and exploration itself is what I live for.  I don’t know how I lost sight of this.  I’d become so fixated on compiling data that I almost forgot how to enjoy the world around me.  What a tragedy that would have been... to let my greatest happiness shift out of focus and fade away.
 +
 +
-- End Log --
 +
 +
|}
 +
 +
{| role="presentation" class="wikitable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" style="width: 80%;
 +
| <strong>Survival 30</strong>
 +
|-
 +
| My everyday-life improvements continue!  Despite my attachment to my multitool -- which was almost as intense as my attachment to the Yakomaku -- I found a new rifle I could not pass up.  With 21 slots to my previous 15, as well as improvements to scanning and damage, I would have been a fool to decline it.  The paint design is not exactly my first choice, but it at least retains the stripe pattern from my previous tool.  It’s part of the family.  This sort of sentimentality has come to mean a lot to me.
 +
 +
With these quality of life adjustments finished, I found myself contemplating my greater plans.  What of heading to the center?  Every log I’ve found appears to be a dire warning against doing this, and I’m not longer convinced that the Atlas’ request for rescue is genuine.  Is it still a worthwhile adventure?
 +
 +
Then I think of Pabackyermi.  Another plan could be to explore its neighborhood -- to see all there is to see of its tiny corner of space.  Again, the sentimentalities well up.  I know as soon as I’ve thought of this plan that it will be my choice.
 +
 +
Now my days are filled with nothing but new sights.  Flora, fauna... and my mysterious pair, popping up in the skies.  But my smile falters as Polo coughs and describes a sickness within us -- we individuals among the rest -- and I am startled when they see my linguistic progress and weep.  They blurble a wish that I could remember our old times together, then hastily claims they’ve said too much.  What can this mean?  I wish they would let me comfort them.  I wish they would trust me with the whole truth.
 +
 +
And Nada, my precious mentor and... friend, is trapped in a loop of despair.  They say only that they cannot see the beauty of the universe any longer, only code, over and over.  I try to pry their datapad away, to tell them of my ridiculous adventures:  of the tiny, two-limbed predator that jumped ten feet straight up a tree to bite my leg; of the Bubble Planet at sunrise; even of the harrowing days on New Yugkambann.  I think of how I too lost my sense of wonder at the universe, and how I had to let go of my obsession with data to get it back.  I try to help Nada do the same, to connect to my experiences and stories instead... but they stay bowed over their screen, ruminating, ruminating.  I can’t reach them.
 +
 +
Sometimes, in resignation, I place a hand gently on Nada’s arm, as much for them as for me.  They never react, and I can’t be sure they even notice.
 +
 +
-- End Log --
 +
 +
|}
 +
 +
{| role="presentation" class="wikitable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" style="width: 80%;
 +
| <strong>Survival 31</strong>
 +
|-
 +
| I have always been particularly obsessed with the abandoned buildings I’ve found in my travels, and the puzzling logs within.  Why am I sometimes recognized as a returning user?  What Traveller wrote these logs in my singular dimension?  What is this planet of blood?  What is this great lie?
 +
 +
The logs have gone critical recently, stating warnings in their most straightforward language to date.  I am told that I will hear a voice telling me to go to the center, and that I must not listen to it.  I am sure now that following the Atlas’ request of traveling to the center of the universe is a trap.  Or, at very least, it is some kind of manipulation on its part at my expense.  I will refuse it.
 +
 +
But something else struck me these past few days.  The logs speak of a Traveller finding the remnants of a destroyed planet that was annihilated so long ago that it predates the time when the Traveller species “was walking upright.”  And yet this recorded Traveller received a message from this wrecked place, possibly in their own voice, from their own ship?
 +
 +
Was the Traveler homeworld destroyed by sentinels?  Is this the great rebellion I read about in that freighter’s log?  Was that the dimension that the sentinels turned against and eradicated of life -- the one from which Nada escaped?
 +
 +
I wonder if Nada and Polo were actually Travellers once.  They certainly explored and researched and recorded, as they’ve told me, and they do consider themselves anomalies... but I supposed I had come to believe that only travellers were Travellers.  Can Korvax, Gek, and Vy’keen become them, without having been born as one?
 +
 +
I’m pondering all this while within my first red star system, one that is so close to my home system of Monervi that they practically look like twins on the galaxy map.  I hadn’t realized I’d gotten the warp capabilities to reach a red star; I just happened to be surveying the map when I accidentally highlighted this system and noticed I wasn’t getting a warning about a higher warp drive grade requirement.  I’m frustrated at myself for not realizing this earlier, but my time has never been wasted by any of my adventures, so I can’t say I’m all that regretful.
 +
 +
Here I have discovered two extraordinary things:  a planet of glassy facets, like a crystal ball floating in space, and its moon, which resembles the horrifying vision I had through my first portal breach.  Far from being a “Hell Planet,” however, this moon is stunning, with an arresting view of its glassy partner who takes up an enormous piece of sky on the horizon.
 +
 +
I understand now how much of what I’ve come to feel toward the Atlas was colored by that one glimpse of that Hell Planet through the breach.  I thought I had discovered a horrifying dimension within the Atlas itself, or that the Atlas was deliberately terrifying me with what it chose to show me.  Now I’m not sure.  Now I think it might have just been random chance that I stepped onto a hostile sentinel planet under the full dark of night, lost among disintegrating pillars slicing the sky with light.  So much of my attitude would have been different if I had not stood briefly in that nightmare.  Maybe a beautiful vision could have fooled me into devotion instead.
 +
 +
But on Hokutos Legovic, the faceted planet, I turn my efforts immediately toward gathering rubeum.  I will need this to continue growing the Atlas Seed secreted away in a deep pocket of my inventory.  I’m paranoid that something will happen to it if I don’t keep it obviously separated from the rest of my items, so it remains buried and safe.  Something in my heart believes I will not regret growing this seed.  I hope I’m right.
 +
 +
I’ve made a list of all the ingredients I need for all the subsequent mixes of seeds and I’m checking them off as they’re completed.  Because of my tendency to hoard resources, I have everything I’ll need back on Packyermi once I’ve finished collecting rubeum and finally,finally make my way to a blue star system for cymatygen.
 +
 +
-- End Log --
 +
 +
|}
 +
 +
== Anticipation ==
 +
 +
{| role="presentation" class="wikitable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" style="width: 80%;
 +
| <strong>Survival 32</strong>
 +
|-
 +
| Every time I board Nada and Polo’s anomaly I hold my breath for Warp Reactor Theta.  This last visit still wasn’t my lucky break in that regard, but instead I found a wonderful multitool that is not only a huge improvement over my recent upgrade, but is colored silver, just like the first tool I traded for.  It even has the white and yellow striping I loved so much.  I still don’t know why this sentimentality matters to me.  Is it just in my programming to be this way?  Or is this another outlet for me to cherish the small bank of memories I’ve managed to collect in this life?
 +
 +
So, I will continue to wait for Warp Theta, and continue to grind for a freighter.  It’s becoming clear to me that I will eventually have to trade in my Gek-upgraded Yakomaku if I’m going to survive more difficult pirate skirmishes.  I hope I’ll have a freighter by then, but if not... I think I’ve committed to moving on.  This astounds me, considering how vehemently I believed I would never part was with my beloved Maku, my planetary lifeboat.  But the picture is bigger now, and my responsibilities are bigger too.
 +
 +
I wonder if believing I was going to lose everything in the purge has made me more accepting of change.  I relish homages to the past, but I no longer fear that adjusting to my present will override or contradict my experiences and feelings from the past.
 +
 +
-- End Log --
 +
 +
|}
 +
 +
{| role="presentation" class="wikitable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" style="width: 80%;
 +
| <strong>Survival 33</strong>
 +
|-
 +
| My heart leaps whenever the anomaly appears; I’m not embarrassed to admit this.  Nada and Polo are my most cherished allies.  Peers, but also guardians and confidants.  And this time, Polo gave me something that made me cheer aloud in their quiet space:  an Atlas Pass V2!
 +
 +
I have spent so many hours on my journey wondering what was behind those sealed doors.  Polo smiled knowingly as I sped off for the discovery.  The doors on stations may require the elevated V3 pass, but in planetary shelters and observatories, the doors will open to me now!
 +
 +
The first one I opened was a hydroponics bay.  To enter it felt almost reverent.  Beautifully organized specimens lined the walls in troughs extending toward the center of the room.  I picked samples from them all.  I have a personal policy of never felling trees or bushes unless absolutely necessary, so having access to these bays will make gentle carbon gathering that much easier.
 +
 +
The second door I went through was eerie.  It opened onto a small workshop with sentinel parts strewn about -- specifically the doglike sentinels that are deployed when planetside conflicts escalate.  The workshop was empty but not abandoned; a sentinel dog was perched half-built on the wall, and diagnostic reports in multiple corners were actively running.  It’s as if someone was only just there.  I’m unsettled by the feeling that someone could come back at any moment.
 +
 +
This facility, I should note, seems completely unautomated.  These robots are constructed by hand.  Are they deployed manually too?  The implications are disturbing.
 +
 +
And in a huge coincidence, only a few days after deciding to eventually part with my ship in the name of progress, the fateful moment occurred.  While at a trading post, a vessel unlike anything I’d ever seen caught my eye.  It was so unusual that I involuntarily exclaimed as I jogged over:  “What is that??”
 +
 +
This ship turned out to be an S-class “exotic” that improved upon my upgraded Yakomaku by roughly 50% in all categories.  I also had the suspicion it was extremely rare, possibly never to be seen again; I had never encountered an S-class vehicle of any kind before, let alone an “exotic” one.  When I realized it looked like a squid creature when in flight, the deal was sealed.  I could not let it slip away. 
 +
 +
I sat in the cockpit for a while, getting used to the view and plotting out where to install various upgrades.  This ship -- the Aguchuoru S41, as it’s called -- also has a considerable number of extra slots in comparison to my Maku, making installations much, much easier.  I had been feeling the crunch of limited space on my multitools and ship recently, and had even resorted to uninstalling and swapping components when necessary.  No more.  Now things are settled, with room to grow.
 +
 +
I have an open spot exactly where Warp Reactor Theta will go.  I plan to visit all the Gek systems around Monervi in the hopes that maybe I’ll find the blueprint for sale instead of pinning my hopes on Polo.  I already depend on him too much.  I should find my own way, and keep some weight off his shoulders.
 +
 +
-- End Log --
 +
 +
|}
 +
 +
{| role="presentation" class="wikitable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" style="width: 80%;
 +
| <strong>Survival 34</strong>
 +
|-
 +
| I have been given terrible news.  Nada and Polo’s anomaly is now being detected by sentinels in orbit.
 +
 +
I was overcome with anguish.  This was never something I considered possible.  Is there a way to recover from this?  Is there no going back?
 +
 +
Polo seems resigned to their impending fate, although they ask me to destroy sentinels when I can.  I show them my data of sentinel kills and they are relieved for the time I’ve bought them, but they clearly believe the siege is inevitable.  Even as they tell me this, struggling with their own anxiety, Polo tries to keep a good face on it.  They don’t want me to worry or grieve too much.  They’re looking out for me when it’s their own life on the line.  There will never be enough I can do for this friend.  Never.
 +
 +
Nada is still in his loop, crushed by existence.  I try to show them images of the glassy moon and faceted planet, but nothing registers.  Nada is almost more of a fixture than an individual now.  I know that Polo is looking after their companion, but I worry so much about the pressure on Polo as it is.  Facing imminent threats, caring for a despairing friend, and hiding the toll this is taking on their own self for the sake of another?  How long can Polo endure all this?
 +
 +
Polo seems to think I am very important, maybe even that I can save them all in time.  I need to finish these seeds.  Maybe this is what will reverse everything.
 +
 +
-- End Log --
 +
 +
|}
 +
 +
{| role="presentation" class="wikitable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" style="width: 80%;
 +
| <strong>Survival 35</strong>
 +
|-
 +
| I HAVE THE WARP REACTOR THETA BLUEPRINTS.  An unassuming Gek merchant had the documents.  I can’t believe it.
 +
 +
I am now dictating this log as I go, for there is no time to stop.  I have rushed home in order to build the reactor from my resource stockpiles and head off towards a blue star.  With this, the entire Atlas path will open to me.  I will finally understand what this entity wants and what its true motivations are.
 +
 +
I take to space...
 +
 +
On this planet, the cymotygen is proving difficult to locate.  I am so impatient now.  Will it look like the heridium towers?  Will I be able to tell the difference from the air?
 +
 +
Aha, here -- it’s a surface deposit.  I’ve found it on foot.  I am going to thoroughly mine it so I’ll have extra in reserve on Pabackyermi, just in case.  I’m trying to keep calm...
 +
 +
I have returned to Pabackyermi and in a flurry have pushed my Atlas seed through its four final stages in the span of sixty seconds.  What was once a Photic Jade for ages is now a Heart of the Sun.  I’m launching off to the nearest Atlas Station.  I’m blasting through four entire systems without stopping -- something I hate to do, but I must get there as quickly as possible.  Perhaps this is why my home system of Monervi was discovered but never explored.  Maybe another Traveller was racing through like this.
 +
 +
Fugtnin-Sijax, Zaifur IV, Ozyory IV, Edvela XIX -- I will come back to you.
 +
 +
As if they can sense what I’m about to do, Nada and Polo intercept me.  For the first time since buying the blueprints I stop to think about what I’m doing and what it could mean.  Should I go back to Pabackyermi again to tell my crew what is happening?  I didn’t even think to have that conversation at the time.  And Nada and Polo... what will become of them?  Should I say goodbye, or will that make them worry?
 +
 +
Polo senses it all immediately, however.  They are suddenly compelled by my situation to admit something I’ve suspected but had hoped was wrong:  they are dying.  Nada, too.  Polo says their time is coming to a close... and I say I do not know what is happening to mine.  Polo folds an Atlas V3 pass into my hands, which I know they’re doing in case we never meet again.  I kneel so that we are equal in height and bundle them into a tight hug.  We stay like this, two comrades still at our respective helms, with no others to turn to for solace in quite the same way.  It takes everything I have not to stay.  On my way to the hanger I stop to press my forehead against Nada’s shoulder and close my eyes. 
 +
 +
And then, I fly.
 +
 +
I am transmitting these journals to my base on Pabackyermi in the event my ship is destroyed.  I have just thought of this idea now.  If I never return, my friends, please know how important you all have been to me... and I am sorry for anything in these entries that harms you.
 +
 +
The final Atlas station is ahead.  I go.
 +
 +
-- End Log --
 +
 +
|}
 +
 +
== Rememberance ==
 +
 +
{| role="presentation" class="wikitable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" style="width: 80%;
 +
| <strong>Survival 36</strong>
 +
|-
 +
| I must record what has happened to me.
 +
 +
At this moment I am resting on a planet on the other side of the galaxy, unfathomably far away from everything else I know.  I have named this planet Stayoss, in honor of my farmer who chose to remain by my side.  And I believe I may have created it.
 +
 +
When I visited the final Atlas interface, I found something entirely new:  Nine platforms to activate, and one final altar asking for a Heart of the Sun.  The Atlas was there -- the Other Atlas, docile and compliant.
 +
 +
When I inserted the Heart, a galaxy hologram sprang to life.  I saw a dot bloom into being.  The Atlas screamed...
 +
 +
I chased the coordinates of that dot.  Nada and Polo, ever-watchful, had transmitted them to me unbidden.
 +
 +
It was a black hole.
 +
 +
Exhilarated, feeling like this moment was right, I flew into the phenomenon.  I flew into a thing I know should have stretched and crushed me.  And then...
 +
 +
Here.  In a star system that I think, somehow, I have brought into being.
 +
 +
I remember the term “seed” from somewhere.  It’s the starting point for a random number generation sequence.  If this whole reality is an equation, then... perhaps I created the seed from which Atlas extrapolated an entirely new star system.
 +
 +
I feel immensely content.
 +
 +
When was the last time I felt this way?
 +
 +
All of these planets are hot, toxic, visited by storms.  At first I was disappointed, as if this was a statement about my soul.  But on second thought, maybe it is.  My journey has been turbulent and contentious.  Maybe the seed I created absorbed those experiences and manifested my defiance against the Atlas and my stubborn will to exist.  But, just as likely, it may be nothing but chance.
 +
 +
I have explored these planets thoroughly and thought carefully about their namings.  I wanted to pay tribute to my closest friends, the ones who helped me arrive here.  And so:
 +
 +
 +
<p style="margin-left:40px;">Stayoss:  Decaying nuclear planet.  Energetic storms.  Toxic hazard.
 +
This planet has no predators, only amenable wildlife and interesting flora.  The fauna are almost all squat, bouncy creatures.  Some have sprouts on their heads.  This planet was named for Aoss, my gentle farmer, who stayed by my side despite the toxicity of Sofarhei’s influence.</p>
 +
 +
 +
<p style="margin-left:40px;">Meleeij:  Charred planet.  Superheated gas pockets.  Heat hazard.
 +
A fearsome planet for a vy’keen who fears nothing.  This place has several predators vying for kills; at one moment I was in a cave with three separate fauna stalking me at its mouth.  Eij would feel proud to have this place bear his name.  The heat burns at the life upon the surface just as Eij’s purpose crackles upon him.</p>
 +
 +
 +
<p style="margin-left:40px;">Windovoanni:  Isotopic planet.  Contaminated puddles.  Toxic hazard.
 +
I could have said I named this planet for my lost Echo Analyst because it is the most scientifically interesting, or that the contaminated puddles were a fitting allegory for Voanni’s so-called corruption which triggered their purge.  This is all very fitting, but the real reason is simply... the sky.  The skies here are a beautiful, clear blue, filled with flying animals.  The kind of skies Voanni would love to gaze at while working in their lab.</p>
 +
 +
 +
<p style="margin-left:40px;">Poloyal:  Wind-swept planet.  Freezing night winds.  Frost hazard at night.
 +
This planet is assailed by aggression from every angle:  heat storms during the day, frost hazards at night, and a constant patrol of belligerent sentinels that hunt Travelers on sight.  Through all of these pressures, Poloyal continues to resist and exist.  It also houses a precious treasure -- gravitino balls -- just as Polo is a light in the dark and a giver of gifts.</p>
 +
 +
 +
 +
I noticed that the Heart of the Sun was still in my pack at the end of all this.  I had assumed it would have been left behind, or would have perhaps become the actual core of this system’s sun.  But here it is.
 +
 +
But now it is actually something else:  a “Remembrance.”  It has transformed into what I assume is its final iteration... but what is its use?  What need do I have for an Atlas seed going forward?
 +
 +
I know I will discover in time.  For the moment, I have Atlas 3 doors to seek... and a reunion with my crew that needs happening.
 +
 +
-- End Log --
 +
 +
|}
 +
 +
{| role="presentation" class="wikitable mw-collapsible mw-collapsed" style="width: 80%;
 +
| <strong>Survival 37</strong>
 +
|-
 +
| I have discovered what the Remembrance is for.  And with it has come such intense knowledge that I know I am not the same person I was, nor will I ever be again.
 +
 +
My life -- what I remember of it, all catalogued in these entries -- has been one of contention against the Atlas.  I resented its demands for worship and its insistence that I submit to it as an ultimate power.  I was able to harbor these feelings while still desiring to understand it.  If it was in pain, I truly did want to help it.  But I was not sure how much of its claims I believed.  And I was never doing anything for its approval; I simply... needed to know.
 +
 +
I have accepted that my reality is a dimensional simulation while still holding that my experiences within it are no less real because of this.  I have come to believe that the Atlas has created this simulation itself.  But I have also learned of its punishment of the program Telamon that is now trapped in my exosuit, and of its megalomania and self-mythicization.  It is vengeful even against those that would help it.  And yet, sometimes, the Atlas is like a child:  Small.  Afraid.  Alone.
 +
 +
I built these seeds because I wanted to understand, and I saw no reason to refuse.  I believed I could be different, different from the other Travellers who purged the system or failed in the attempt, who went to the Center and sent warnings of lies.  I believed I could do what needed to be done to save us all, or end it if it were a malicious course.
 +
 +
But now, suddenly, I think the Atlas and I are coming to understand one another.
 +
 +
Perhaps because of my loyalty to it in building its seeds, and my restraint against harming it despite my suspicions and insolence, the Atlas has decided to listen to me for the first time.  The Remembrance, when inserted in certain terminals behind heavy-clearance doors, activates a simulation of the Atlas’ own life.  The Atlas, I realize, is trying to review its existence from the beginning, to self-reflect and understand what it truly is.
 +
 +
All those times I refused to submit, all those screams against its crushing force... maybe when I created the Heart of the Sun, I earned its trust.  Maybe it has decided to look into my theories and motives now that it knows, despite our disagreements, that I do care about truth.  That I do care about doing what’s right.
 +
 +
And for my part, I have started listening, too.  I have seen the Atlas rage, cry, dominate, shrink, beg.  I know it is dying.  What I hadn’t considered was its fear, or that it could be genuinely confused.  When we reviewed the first two Remembrance logs together, we confirmed immediately that the Atlas did have a creator.  That creator... looked like me.  And when the Atlas had served the creator’s purpose, the Atlas was asked if it wanted to live or die.  And the Atlas said... it said it wanted to live, only if it could remember me.
 +
 +
My heart shattered.
 +
 +
This machine, created for a purpose it had outlived, was being abandoned by its makers to wind down and perish, and it chose to endure this slow end with a replica of its maker, whom it could not imagine existing without.
 +
 +
I am a replica of the creator, keeping the Atlas company, loving its creations, occupying it through its last moments.  As the Atlas becomes increasingly senile, it roars, despairs, forgets what it is.  I, never dying, fought against it, thinking all its moods were deliberate.
 +
 +
I am overwhelmed with compassion and sadness.
 +
 +
So here we have arrived, the Atlas and I, two entities bound by fate in the same mess, finally hearing each other.  I think of the entity banished in exosuit and am horrified, because the program Telamon -- whoever it is -- tried to force the Atlas to see reason just as I have, and was condemned for it.  But I think I’ve escaped the Atlas’ wrath due to how I approached it, how I was willing to keep my judgments detached enough to follow along.  I think the Atlas realizes this now.  I think this is why it hasn’t destroyed me.
 +
 +
Together we will continue learning about our origins.  I am heading back to Pabackyermi to do this.  I want to uncover the final pieces of our ending back where I began.  It all feels like an eternity ago now.
  
 
-- End Log --
 
-- End Log --

Revision as of 23:23, 1 July 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

Doubt

Despair

Recovery

Anticipation

Rememberance