The rest of the team was
ushered about their business while Dr. Vikrish, Soldier One, and two of his lackeys
ushered us into their shuttle and further through the corridors toward the
control center. We made an interesting parade for those crew who’d stayed
behind. Dr. Vikrish lead the way, a soldier behind him and in front of us.
Garjah and I were clearly newcomers on a planet reported to be unoccupied, and
a wild animal with a lethal gait and roving gaze prowled at my hip. Soldier One
and another soldier brought up the rear behind us.
That made my skin crawl,
and I’m sure it was worse for Garjah.
It got better when we
reached the control center. There weren’t enough chairs for everyone but Garjah
and I were ushered into the seats at the edges of the room for the observers.
Bouncer sat between us. I put a hand on his head and rubbed; he tilted his neck
and I scrubbed the edge of his jaw and under his chin. He yawned, as he always
did if I tickled him, exposing his sharp teeth.
He flicked his tongue out when
I stopped before closing his mouth and rumbling in his chest in displeasure
that I’d stopped. He eyed Soldier One who was nervously eyeing him.
Or maybe I hadn’t observed
Bouncer’s kind enough to gauge his intelligence. They’d avoided the scientists as
a species, and Bouncer clearly knew the biggest threat in the room. How? I
wasn’t quite sure.
“Shh.” I rubbed his jaw
again and tried to calm him in a low, quiet voice. “It’s fine. Don’t worry.”
I tried to stay calm as the
questions began. How did I get on Ardra? The skimmer they’d found us at made
that seem fairly self-explanatory, but I answered anyway. What was I doing here?
I’d uploaded the data synced with the skimmer’s computer with a spare data pad
I’d found, and showed them the notes I’d made before Garjah had found me.
How did he find me? Garjah
fielded that one, explaining they had the planet monitored but only used it for
resources. That’s why it’d taken a few days to arrive and find me. That’s when
it got interesting.
“So your kind are not part
of the Galactic?” Dr. Vikrish asked.
“No, we avoid socializing
with your races.”
“Why?” Specialist Siever
asked. He’d introduced himself, so I was no longer calling him Soldier One in
my head, but I didn’t really want to know what he was a specialist of with that
much aggression. He remained standing, feet spread, arms crossed over his
chest. He was human but his back up pair were both Corle warriors, their orange
skin with black dots and exaggerated features exposed without their suit helmets.
“A part of our culture. We
have species who reached out to us when we were new to space exploration, but
as a rule we do not trade much with others who are… new.” Based on what I knew
of Garjah’s genetic makeup, that word was nearly an insult to their kind.
“That’s—”
“Interesting,” Dr. Vikrish
interrupted Siever. He glared at him. “We need first contact specialists. I
know I am not trained to handle this situation, though it appears to be very unique.”
“So it’s time to contact my
family? My mother is a first contact specialist.”
“That she is,” Dr. Vikrish
agreed.
“I’m going to contact my superiors.”
The way Siever said that was almost a threat. Garjah and I exchanged a look,
and I knew he heard it too. He was a security expert, so maybe he had a better
grasp on where Siever was coming from though.
The Corle warriors didn’t
move. They were a quiet, stoic race and rarely showed emotion so that didn’t
surprise me.
“Here, I will bring up the call
on the main screen. I believe your parents are actually at the Institute right
now, so this call may serve a dual purpose.”
If that was his way of
warning me that my parents would be among colleagues and this call would be
more than a family message to let them know I was alive, if not the same son
they’d once known, he was a bit off. We were not that kind of family, and they
would never have an emotional bond like that with me. If anything, my dad would
want to study me. My mom would want to analyze every second my exchanges with
Garjah and his people.
Exhausting. That was the
word.
I sighed. “Thank you.”
It took a few moments for
the space relays to align for the signal to go through and then the alert hit
the Institute’s system. A tech appeared.
“Dr. Vikrish. Dr. Margo has
been waiting for your call.”
“I apologize for the extended
delay. We have an… unexpected development,” Dr. Vikrish said carefully. “I
believe Doctor Adelina and Corvi Deray are on the premises? We need them to
also attend this meeting.”
“And why is that?” An older
female Norsk appeared on the screen. Her robe was deep green and complimented
her pale skin and green tinged hair. Her gills worked furiously even through
she was out of the water and on dry land to draw in air lending her words a
whispery quality.
“Ardra is not unclaimed as
we thought; we found an institute trained biologist, Dr. Essell Deray, who had
made previous contact with an alien species who claims Ardra as part of their
territory.”
“Part of their territory?”
She raised a wispy brow.
“Yes, they are an advanced
spacegoing species previously unknown to us, but we are not unknown to them.”
“Indeed.” Her face became
impassive. “That is an unexpected development.”
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