Ardra was humid. The ground was moist, grasping at my feet
as I walked. There were places I had to avoid because my suit made me too heavy.
At least it was enviro-controlled. Without that, I might have roasted inside
the shiny silver metal.
Dual suns. I’d never been in a system lit by twin stars, but
of course I’d studied them. The plants here grew large. There was an excess of
moisture, both on the ground and in the air. The leaves were large, broad,
soaking up the sun. Vines ran everywhere. In more open spaces, thick stalks
with multi-hued feathery fronds swayed in the breeze.
It took some time before animal sounds began to infiltrate
the quiet. I moved slowly, quietly, tracking my path and using a tiny drone
above me to record my journey. I was an intruder into the ecosystem, but even
an unknown couldn’t hold back life forever.
Animals began to move.
“Whoa.” That thing was… huge. At first I’d thought it was a
vine. There were some with divots in them, little wells that looked like they
collected fluid that reflected a deeper color. This… squamata species mimicked
the colors, but appeared to be scaled. I could only see the top and side from
the drone’s view, so I wasn’t sure if it has legs or was limbless. If it did
have them, they were very well camouflaged as it wrapped around a branch nearly
as thick as my leg at the base near the tree before it narrowed to wispy finger-like
fronds nearly three arm-lengths later. The head, a bulbous protrusion, swayed
gently on the narrow end, tiny flares of its nostrils the only clue to its
living status.
I hurried away from that tree, hoping there weren’t more
nearby. Maybe they were solitary creatures and territorial.
Worst case would be if it was a species that liked to swarm.
Or hunted prey in a pack.
At least half a klick later, I finally slowed. My rush had
scared the wildlife again, and I cursed myself. At this rate, I was going to be
a laughingstock. I carefully scanned the trees around the small clearing I’d
found.
Nothing showed up on the drone’s sensors.
Sighing, I dropped onto a thick root bubbling out of the
soft ground. It was spongy, just like everything else here, so it was actually
somewhat comfortable. “Give yourself a break,” I said. “It’s not your fault the
first thing you spotted just happened to be the one thing that gives you the
biggest creep out.” I shuddered, imagining the tree writhing with limbs covered
in those long, scaled bodies. How they might move, slithering around, up and
down.
Ugh. My stomach churned. “Gross.” There was just something terribly
disturbing about legless creatures’ locomotion patterns.
I shifted and leaned back against the tree, trying to get
comfortable with my pack still attached. The gravity was doing me in. I’d only
gone about half the distance I’d wanted to, but the struggle to lift my feet was
getting the better of me. Excitement and fright could only move my body so far
so fast.
Cocking my head, I listened closely. Scratching.
Inside the tree?
I dampened my external oxygen valves, holding my breath so
my suit’s mechanics were muted.
Yes, there it was. But… it was barely audible. Was it in the
tree? I shifted and touched the bark with one hand. Heat and motion sensors
probed under the surface.
No. That wasn’t where I sensed it.
Farther away. Still from the tree… but not this tree. Huh. I
glanced around. Were they all connected? The roots did sort of writhe over each
other, which made walking hard and tripping too damn easy.
Scooting forward, I pushed back to my feet, holding in a
groan by sheer will. I had to find that sound. Couldn’t rest there on the
ground in the open anyway.
I shuffled forward, following the knots of roots that poked
above the ground before plunging back under, splitting and diverging and coming
together in different paths. Stooping, I touched the wood. I felt my way along,
sensing the scratching getting louder, more distinct.
Scritch. Scritch. Pause several seconds. Scritch, scritch,
scritch, scritch. Pause again. Repeat. Exactly that same pattern, over and
over. What if it was some sort of message? What if it was a being the survey
had missed?
My stomach dropped out at the idea, and I nearly stopped.
But I was so close, and, as always, my curiosity got the better of me. I was so
close I could hear the scrape on the wood, not just feel the vibrations and
sense some strange echo.
Swallowing hard, I disengaged the shock stick sheathed along
my thigh, then silently extended it. The tip would emit a deadly glow when
active. That wasn’t my plan, but it could also cause memory loss on a lower voltage.
Creeping close to the widest tree I’d seen yet, I peered
around it.
Sitting in a perfect half-circle were four small quadrupeds.
They had multiple eyes, a narrow snout, and dark, glittering eyes. Eyes focused
on the much larger, much darker, red-striped adult using wickedly curved and
pointed claws to tear out the center of the rotting tree.
Even when it dug out a grub—clearly its goal—the younger
ones were silent as they fought over the wriggling grubs. Two got on either
side of one and pulled it apart in a ooze of pink slime as its shiny shell
cracked and the flesh was exposed.
Oh yeah, these things were not something I wanted to tangle
with. Still, retreating would be too noisy. I crouched there, regretting my need
to follow anything that piqued my interest, for what seemed like forever.
When I dared peek again, long moments after the scratching stopped,
they were gone.
Melted away. No sign of them in the bushes or through the
big fronds between the smaller trees, and the drone would have picked up if
they’d passed me.
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