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A Future Fairy Tale
by
Erica Lainé
by
Erica Lainé
The capsule was definitely
not as she had ordered. Six robot hands, reacting to her scowling face, deftly
manipulated the paint colour; a faint beige became a gleaming gold as known for
ever in the architronic records, as HER colour.
‘Don’t let that happen again,' she growled, looking at the
screen set high in the glass wall, or to be precise, the phased array optics, that stretched all around her. The screen was
impassive but she was sure something responded somewhere. Her hair, shaved
short this morning, a necessary weekly task, stood on end, bristled in fact.
Dor took off her transparent shape shifting metal gloves and ran a hand through
it. She did not approve of these atavistic reminders of an earlier humanity. ‘In fact’, said a voice from the
pocket in her uniform, ‘in fact not humanity at all but an animal instinct.
There is much evidence in times of stress for an accelerated heartbeat, dilated
pupils, and piloerection — the correct scientific name for each contracting muscle
creating a shallow depression on the skin surface, which causes the surrounding
area to protrude…’
Dor clicked her fingers and the voice cut off in
mid-sentence. There was a limit to being lectured so early in the morning.
Especially the morning designed to appeal to all her senses. Beyond the glass,
the real time hologram, a forest was growing, very rapidly and with exactly the
right mix of trees. A glimpse of snow on a mountain, a body of water that she
had been told in the briefing was known as a loch.
She could see berries and pine cones forming as she watched,
thickets crowding together and brambles twining through them, and there were
already fallen logs covered in fungi on the forest floor. Soon she would be
able to touch the moss, feel the rough bark, the grey spongy lichen and soon
she could smell the earth, and taste? Taste what? Her irritation returned.
These missions were becoming absurd, but she had no say in where she was sent
or asked to do. Not since the unit had broken up when it was overwhelmed by the
shock waves that had been caused by the supernovae incinerating that dead star.
No one had predicted this, and even though the explosions had been millions of miles
away and only lasted a week, the galaxy was thrown off kilter and some planets
were sent spinning away and out of the Right Zone, the zone that everyone knew
was the best of all possible worlds. The zone where Dor and her tribe had lived
for ever.
It was fortunate that there were other units who were eager to
take anyone available, anyone left after the chaos and confusion. Dor was
assigned to the Mother. The Mother had all control but was capricious and had
strange desires. This mission was as the result of one of these desires. The
entire unit had worked hard to make the images come true and the architronic
records created everything accordingly. The glass dissolved and Dor spun the
capsule so that it was facing where she would go. It would guard the entrance,
the exit; it would guard her world and this other. She flexed her mind muscle
to become receptive not stubborn and walked through into the forest. Her
breathing quickened and she said one word. 'Once.' a difficult word to learn,
an illogical word, nothing like the precise language that was her mother tongue
where every letter made the sound assigned to it and did not deviate.
The forest sensations whirred and clicked, her mind sorted them
out, recorded, compiled, catalogued, almost too much data but she was ruthless
and sent it all back to Mother, kept nothing for herself. Her way was winding
but she did not stumble or look to left or right. The path she took led her to
a square building made of the trees. One door, three windows. She went in.
Three shimmering globes, descending in size from something about the size of
her shaved head to something about the size of her clenched fist in its glove.
She clicked on her first command and opened her mouth. The first globe bobbed
in front of her and there was dark burning sensation. The second globe lingered
near her face, a smell and a taste of the water that came from Neptune’s Triton.
Horrid and not to be drunk. She shut her mouth tight, it was difficult not to
send panic signals back to Mother, these first two were making her body ripple
with distress. The third globe seemed shy. It came near her and then backed
away. Her panic subsided. It almost seemed it was observing her. She opened her
mouth and the globe broke into smaller globes and flew in. A feeling of
comfort, of goodness, of a taste that was neither burn nor salt, but just
right. She was working at top speed to get the information stored so it could
be retrieved correctly. Exhausting. Her body began to bend, she needed to rest,
a large deep recess appeared in the air and held out promise but even as she
relaxed, a danger signal, no not here. A smaller recess formed and her tired
legs walked her closer but it spun around and would not let her any nearer. The
last, smallest recess was circling her and she allowed herself to fall back
into it. And found she was on the floor with an angry staccato message coming
from her pocket. 'Leave this alone; you will damage all the protocols.'
Dor stood and gave an equally angry response. ‘I am here to
experiment and record, what would you have me do?’
‘Explore,’ was the terse
response. Dor made her way to the rest of the small dark building; her energy
levels were very low. She sent a message to the capsule in case it needed to be
prepared for a rescue. Three more objects, similar to the cloud formations they
had been trained to observe for changes in Mother's moods. Dor decided it was
time for another word. 'Upon.' she said. Not quite as difficult as the first.
The clouds invited her closer. She lay on the biggest, so deep and soft that
she felt her breathing begin to disappear. She struggled out of it and tried
the next, not soft at all, surprisingly hard and scratchy. She left it in a
hurry and sat carefully on the third, which enveloped her immediately, but not
with menace, with kindness.
Dor closed her eyes as she said the last two words,
'A Time’.
*length may vary!
On an Amazon near you http://viewauthor.at/HelenHollick |
brilliant, Erica! Cleverly hidden phrase that we all know and love and always means a good story!!
ReplyDeleteFabulous - really enjoyed this one!
ReplyDeleteGreat story!
ReplyDeletereply from Erica: Thank you for the comments, it was fun to write. There is a Goldilocks zone in space where planets can exist in the just right atmosphere but I only found that out as I wrote, but hey! serendipity!
ReplyDelete