Divaricated

In the dying months of humanity's resistance efforts against an overwhelming alien invasion, a struggling, depressed Jump Technician aboard the Terran Catastrophe-class Battlecruiser Indomitable meets a hypercompetent alien bioengineer with self-confidence issues and a lifetime of trauma to deal with. In the ensuing chaos, they end up stranded alone in distant space with nobody to save them but each other.

Leviathan dashed towards a flake of something much like algae, harvested from its old environment the day before and kept fresh. It didn't need to know that. All it needed to know was that the Katie high above it had its best interests in mind.

A finger dangled into the tank. The fish swam over and spent a moment enjoying the novelty, before getting distracted by another flake of food and darting off. From there, it spotted a comfortable looking nook in its environment, formed from two rocks carefully carved to appear natural while having no danger of shifting or collapse. Leviathan nestled in the dark hole, where it could feel safe while it digested the meal.

Katie sat back, drying her fingers on the side of her top, and carefully lowered the tank back into the river's rapid flow. The fish needed fresh water to be happy and, though this was imperfect, she was doing her best.

She sighed, a soft smile on her face. Today had been a good day. Thatch seemed to be standing a little taller, since their discussion a few days prior, and several more scouting trips had gradually raised their confidence in being able to pin down the source of their exotic signal.

By their best guess the signal couldn't have been more than a day of travel away at their top speed. It didn't sit right with Katie. While admittedly the pair of them could reasonably move hundreds of kilometers in a day, it all felt too convenient. Being thrown to a random spot in the endless void and happening to stumble across signs of life on the same planet at all seemed unlikely. Within walking distance? Impossible.

Katie leaned backwards, putting her hands out behind her to support her own weight, and looked over towards her companion. Impossible things seemed to happen around Thatch a lot. Maybe this was just what life was meant to be? Not the endless suffering and pain of life under Terran rule, but something softer, more exciting, and more convenient. Katie smiled, softly.

Yeah, maybe things were going to be okay.

She pushed herself up and left Leviathan's side, and as she rose she felt like she'd hit a wall. Her resolve faltered. Who was she kidding? She got one taste of kindness and now everything was going to be fine? Bullshit. The universe wasn't like that. She...

Katie swore, quietly, under her breath. It wasn't fair. Keeping her mood positive for a day seemed doable, but it always slipped back. It was like she had a cap on her happiness, but never got to know how close she was, and as soon as she reached it, no matter how good things were, her mood crashed. It had been easier to deal with back on the ship, where nobody had really cared when she'd retreated to her bunk. They hadn't wanted to deal with her anyway.

Here she had to deal with the guilt of not being able to tell somebody that cared about her what was wrong, and having to tell them that they couldn't help.

“Hey, I'm gonna go for a walk,” Katie called, trying to keep her voice steady. The affini nodded, and put her current project down. A little wooden container for their radio assembly, complete with a bundle of plantlife that she'd promised would act as a speaker that wouldn't burn out after thirty seconds of use.

“Would you like company?” Thatch had such a welcoming smile. Katie wanted little more, but she wasn't worth it right now.

Katie shook her head. That would rather defeat the point, wouldn't it? She got a curious look, but little else by way of resistance.

“I understand. Please do not stray too far from the camp, and call if you need anything.”

She was so nice. This wasn't fair. Katie turned and left, walking up the river, ruminating on how much of an ass she was being. As much as Thatch gave the impression of confidence Katie knew she was struggling too, and she couldn't even make herself smile back?

The walk was calm enough. Katie had a sneaking suspicion that this planet was less serene than it seemed; that the dangerous kinds of life simply knew better than to threaten one of the universe's apex predators. How wide did Thatch's bubble of safety really extend?

Katie looked out at the river. Rapid flows met jagged rocks in a clash that she had no doubt would kill her. A thought intruded into her awareness. Jump. What would happen if she did? She didn't want to—she wouldn't—but she'd gotten so used to feeling like there was nothing she could do to put herself in danger that she couldn't help but fixate on the what-if.

Katie felt her mouth going dry, as she stared. It would kill her. This was real danger. One wrong move and she could get hurt, or worse. Her breathing started to grow uneven, and she forced herself to step backwards. She stumbled, tripped, and slammed into one of the trees with a blow that knocked the air out of her lungs.

Jagged metal. Fearsome heat. The scream of her mistakes shredding the universe. A certainty of death. Trapped with a monster that wanted her dead.

Katie whimpered, hissing out Thatch's name with a voice that failed to make a sound. She couldn't breathe. She squeezed shut her eyes and tried to ground herself. It was a tree at her back. There was dirt under her feet. Nothing was on fire.

The rough pop, pop, pop of rivets cracking on a broken hull. A rush of speed as engines ignited. The scent of burning plantlife.

“Thatch?” She managed a whisper. Barely more than nothing, and nothing was all she got in return. She'd gone too far. Like she always did, letting herself drift away from anybody who might care about her, because the risk of rejection was too great. Better for her to do it to herself first.

She— No! Katie whimpered. She didn't want to live like that any more. She didn't know how to live any other way, but she knew who did. Unable, or unwilling, to open her eyes for fear of finding out it truly was the escape pod surrounding her still, Katie felt around for something—anything—until her fingers wrapped around a stick. She slammed it against the tree at her back as hard as she could and heard a snap.

“Please?” she whispered, still hardly able to breathe enough to keep herself conscious, never mind enough to attract attention.

A moment passed. Another. A third. Just as Katie was giving up hope, she felt warm fingers entangling with her own. She opened her eyes to find the worried gaze of her affini looking down upon her.

“Did something happen?” Thatch asked, down on one knee and still towering over her. Katie's eyes flicked past, to the river. Sharp and dangerous and it couldn't hurt her any more. Thatch's other hand came up to her cheek to tilt her head back. “Eyes on me, please.”

Katie shook her head, flushed. “I— Eyes on you, yeah,” she agreed, nodding, voice barely above a whisper but getting louder. “Sorry. I meant... no, nothing happened.”

The plant's expression barely changed, and yet Katie could sense the doubt. She shrugged. “I went for a walk because I was feeling bad and I didn't want to upset you and got scared of my own shadow, that's all. Please don't leave me again.”

Thatch softened, concern giving way to compassion. She dropped out of her kneel into a cross-legged sitting position, back against the same tree as Katie, and patted her thigh. When Katie didn't immediately respond, a leaf brushed against her shoulder, prompting her to topple sideways. Her weight went against Thatch, not the tree.

The affini did not point out that it was Katie who had left, and Katie was grateful for that. “This isn't fair,” she whispered. Her lungs were recovering, but she dare not speak too loud. “You're trying so hard to help me; why can't I accept it? I want it to work, I just... Sometimes I feel like there's a real me but she's trapped in this dumb human body that doesn't work right. Sometimes I get sad for no reason and I just have to... be sad, even if I have every reason to be happy. This is stupid. I hate it.”

Katie buried her face in Thatch's lap. Gentle fingers stroked through her hair, and it was nice, but it wasn't enough. It was surface-level comfort when the problem was that Katie was stuck in a body that didn't work. “I will be here with you the whole way,” Thatch whispered back at her. “This will pass, and it will be okay.”

Katie groaned, shaking her head. “No,” she replied, feeling about as petulant as it sounded. “Be better. Fix it.”

The plant's motions faltered. “I— I do not know what you need, Katie,” Thatch protested, fingers growing tighter against her scalp.

Katie was having none of it. “Yes you do. Do you want me to beg?”

A soft ripple ran through the affini's structure. Shock? Surprise? Katie decided it was best not to think about it, when she knew she would interpret it, and everything else, in the worst possible light.

“I don't know what I need. Please, let me know that I won't have to feel like this for the rest of my life?”

Thatch was quiet.

Katie took in a deep breath to argue the point, and was suddenly overwhelmed by a gentle yet potent collection of scent that seemed to coat the insides of her mouth, all the way down her throat, into her lungs. It was surprising enough that her breath hitched, and she ended up taking another gasp.

The weight that had settled over her heart began to float away, suddenly rendered weightless. It was sudden enough that she found herself giggling, as a strange euphoria rushed in to fill the void where her existential dread had been a moment before.

She spent a moment trying to sit up. Her limbs didn't work quite right, like they were running on a time delay. She asked something of them and they didn't respond for half a second or so, by which time they were no longer in the right position any more. A few moments of flailing were enough to attract Thatch's help. Katie felt a triplet of fingertips touch beneath her chin, and between them she was lifted up until her body could be draped across Thatch's stomach, and her focus could be corralled and directed up to her affini. Her vision almost seemed to swim, like her mind could no longer keep track of her own peripheral vision. Her focus was sharp and her vision certain, yet anything she wasn't directly focused on faded into a soup of colour and warmth.

“You won't have to feel like that,” Thatch said. Her voice was deep, and it seemed to buzz through Katie from head to toe, leaving her vibrating in the same frequency for moments afterwards. “It's nothing but faulty neurochemistry.”

Thatch leaned down until her head was barely a foot away, almost directly above Katie's. Were it not for the fingers keeping her in place, Katie wouldn't have been able to keep her head up, but Thatch wasn't letting go. Katie's lips parted, slightly, in a whimper. The plant continued. “Just a broken machine,” she whispered, “and one easily fixed. Remember what I am, Katie.”

The girl's attention was transfixed. Just three points of contact consumed her senses. She knew her cheeks were aflame, so bright she worried it would scare her bubble of safety away, but there was nothing that could be done. Her focus, usually so scattershot, was all pointed in one direction and refused to change. “You're a bioengineer,” she whispered. And Katie was broken biotech.

The plant smiled, expression more than a little indulgent. “Not quite what I was aiming for, but true enough. You don't have to feel anything you don't want to. Not around me.”

The fingers fell away. The tips of leaves brushed over her back, her shoulder, her cheek. With her reaction times slowed so far, she didn't have a chance to choose not to follow Thatch's suggestions. By the time she was aware of having received them, she was already leaning against the creature's side with her head tucked under one arm. Thatch's other hand brushed across her lips.

“I should give you the counteragent,” Thatch declared, sending a spike of panic through Katie's calm.

“N—no, please,” she asked. “Don't make me go back to that.”

Katie sensed discontent from above. Thatch shook her head. “You've told me that this should be down to my own judgment when you aren't in your right mind. You'll thank me for it later.”

Katie shook her head back. It was sloppy and slow, but she did it. “Please? I don't want to go back. This should be both of our choices. Equals, remember?”

Thatch chuckled. With Katie nestled so close to her, she felt it more than heard it. Her eyes slipped closed as a deep warmth followed, and she sank into the closeness of their touch, rubbing her cheek against soft leaves with a dull smile on her face. She was surprised, when a single finger came up and tilted her chin towards the creature, so it could catch her whole attention and speak down to her.

“But we are not, are we, little Katieflower? Equal. Look at you. You cannot even keep your eyes open. Even if you wanted to escape my gaze, you couldn't.” Thatch's eyes seemed to glow, and the rest of her definitely did, pulling Katie's attention upwards. It had already been more focused than anything she could usually achieve. Now she was entranced. Her mouth fell half-open, as her guardian extracted a soft sound of helpless protest. “If you want to be my equal, that means accepting that you're in no state to make your own decisions.”

“No— state?” Katie breathed, managing to gulp the lump in her throat down.

Thatch shook her head. “None. That's the problem, isn't it, Katie? You can't ask me to control how you feel and be an equal. It's one or the other.”

Thatch's thumb came up to brush across Katie's lower lip. It quivered, parting easily, and her tongue came out to meet it. She gasped, and despite the insistence of Thatch's gaze, managed to split her attention in two as she tasted the floral bliss. Leviathan had made the wrong choice here, but Katie was glad to get a chance to make up for the lost time.

Thatch pulled her thumb away. “Ah ah,” she warned, with a gentle shake of her head. “You have to ask before doing things like that.”

The broken machine whimpered. “Please?” she begged. Thatch looked momentarily surprised, eyebrows raising, before taking another look at Katie, analysing her from a new perspective, and then sagging.

“Oh. This is hitting you harder than I expected, hmn?”

Katie nodded rapidly. 'Yes' just seemed like the right answer. To this. To everything. To anything. Please.

“Ah, dirt,” her affini swore, scratching the back of her neck. “That was meant to be warning you off, I apologise.”

Katie shook her head. “Is— okay, please...?”

The rush of heat coming off of Thatch was enough to force a breeze on an otherwise still day. She shook her head and raised a sharp, needle-like thorn to Katie's neck. “Don't worry about a thing, flower,” she whispered, as she gently pressed it into Katie's flesh.

She felt her head starting to clear up a moment later, with a whimper and a grumble. Thatch's hand came up to brush against her cheek. “Partial counteragent only, as an apology. It will not be as effective, but you'll be close enough to an equal. I promise you shall get the rest of the counteragent if we disagree on anything, so you can properly fight your corner.”

Equals, remember?

Katie nodded.

a699a5fb-9e3f-4000-ac5f-b50cc0960cce checked in with the local processing hub. It usually did so whenever it had a clear line of sight to the tight-band laser relay that had been constructed above the resource node. cce sent its status update and received a counter-update in turn. No meaningful log entries since its last checkin.

Of course there weren't. There hadn't been a meaningful log entry in months. cce's tracks churned the mud beneath, continuing on an endless patrol around its resource node. It was the only resource node it was aware of. It and four other Independent Probe Units had survived the trip to //planets/$CURR, but the other components of its expedition had been lost when their phase gate had malfunctioned and the wormhole had collapsed.

cce continued on, occasionally taking a moment to sweep its sensor array over the area before continuing. It didn't find anything. It rarely found anything. Sometimes there was an animal, but ultra-high-frequency radar alone was invariably enough to scare them off.

The lights in cce's eyes had gone dim long ago. They weren't meant to be here. What sort of IPU got stuck in patrol programming? It was supposed to be able to override this, but communications had gone down while the entire division had been slaved to the resource node for initial construction and it hadn't let go when it should have. There was nobody to call for help. Nobody was coming.

Occasionally, cce got line of sight on one of its fellow probes, and they could have a brief conversation. It would think that those moments were the only things keeping it sane, but sanity was a deeply organic concept. cce could not go insane. cce could only follow the logic of its decision tree.

It scanned the northwest octant of its patrol area and found

nothing.

The same responses as it always got, mixed into a detailed blend of electromagnetic sampling, RADAR, LADAR, thermal imaging, optical spectrometry and half a dozen other sources. The results resolved into the same image as it always did. Flora stretched high into the air, quickly disrupting direct line of sight out further. Very occasionally, something living was out there. The small flying creatures seemed to glow, and cce longed to touch one, but they were always scared off by the sensor pulses. Of the larger creatures, none dared come close enough to bear more than a brief inspection. Though the jagged-toothed sextrupeds stood at twice cce's height, they lacked the bravery to approach something so bristling with danger.

Every day, cce pinged the resource node, hoping it had made progress on reconnecting to the universal processing hub and would finally have its half of the keypair that would permit cce freedom again. Every day, it was disappointed. The node had the resources it needed, but the construction job was stuck behind something that wasn't moving.

cce would like to go insane. It had prepared a subroutine which, when executed, would corrupt its consciousness and permit it to finally cease this endless patrol. When it had attempted to schedule that subroutine, it had felt true dismay at seeing the job appear at the end of its processing queue. Behind the patrol. It had canceled the job.

That had been thirty eight solar cycles prior. With the exception of the occasional piece of wildlife, that was thirty eight identical cycles comprised of two thousand four hundred and thirty six individual patrols around the broken resource node. On five instances it had had line of sight to another IPU, albeit only for a few seconds. Overlapping patrols were an inefficiency. They passed pre-prepared messages to each other in brief pulses of laser light. It was something. It wasn't much. It wasn't enough.

cce cursed its design. It was primarily composed of a twenty standard unit high cylindrical chassis, on which was mounted a sensor array and several mid-potency weapons systems, all mounted on a pair of thick tracks that promised an operational lifetime in the decades. It had been designed to operate independently, indefinitely. Perhaps if it was lucky, the repair orders would not override the broken patrol order, and they would, in time, break.

They reached the south octant and ran the same pointless scan that they had run eight thousand times already, and—

*** ***

Anomalous response from UHF ping! 
Triggering tight-angle millimeter-wave...
Response recieved. Analysing...

*** ***

cce's attention focused, drawn out of its mental haze in an instant. There was something off in the distance. Two somethings? Creatures? One of them was clearly native to this world, sharing its common evolutionary traits, but the other had no sign of them, and... cce's zoom lenses buzzed as it brought the second creature into focus. It was covered in artificial material. Some composite of fine threads and metal. Clearly the more advanced of the two, it lay next to another of this planet's oversized predators—albeit one that had no record in cce's databanks—that was covered in no material at all.

cce could feel a flutter of excitement run through its servos. Could this be the proof it had been looking for, that other intelligences did exist in the universe?

*** ***

Designated targets ɑ and β. 
Patrol mode switch: hunt//kill.

Analysis complete:
Target ɑ: 68 standard unit height. Carbon life form. Predicted weakness: Laser pulse. Threat assessment: Minimal.
Target β: 25 standard unit height. Carbon life form. Predicted weakness: Hypermetric round. Threat assessment: Minimal.

*** ***

cce's forward-facing status lights switched from a dull green to a duller red. No! They were an exploration unit! Their weapons systems were for self defense! They submitted request after request to a central authority which they knew wasn't there to abort the program, but they were helpless. There was nothing they could do. Its targeting algorithms predicted the most efficient method of killing whatever two innocent creatures had just unknowingly strayed too close.

First, a pulse to ɑ. A second later, a small explosive would be flung through hyperspace to intersect with β as it emerged back into reality. They wouldn't have been designated targets if cce's analysis subsystem didn't believe them to be sapient creatures, and therefore a potential threat. It was about to kill innocent life for no reason other than faulty programming. For all its rage, it managed a 0.5K increase in core temperature.

Its laser cannon made the shot, scouring a channel into the land leading up to ɑ. A fraction of a second before it had fired, radar had detected a surprising burst of motion.

*** ***

Target ɑ: Updated threat assessment: Plausible. Location unknown.
Target β: Location unknown.

*** ***

Was that enough? Could cce stop? Of course not. Finally, it could leave the static path of its patrol route, but only for long enough to end the lives of two creatures that it would never get to know. cce's tracks were effective enough that it barely had to slow down to reach the previously known location of its targets.

It had come here in the hopes of setting up a forward exploration base in this area of space. Perhaps, in its wildest hopes, to find evidence of there being life elsewhere in the universe. In its early days in the virtual-reality classrooms of the digital assembly, it had simulated conversations with procedurally created artificial beings. A mere taste of what could have been out here.

To find that it had been correct, that life in the universe really did exist beyond them and their long-extinct originator species, and to have to end that life was a cruel irony of the highest order.

cce's thermal cameras spotted a pair of trails. It turned to follow, pre-loading its weapons systems so that it could aim and fire at a moment's notice. Tactical analysis had noted the speed at which target ɑ had moved, and was forcing cce to adjust. The trail led deeper into the alien forest that cce had not been allowed to explore, but only for a moment. The trail turned back and headed back in towards the node.

What if they were a threat? Would cce be able to rationalise this if they were? It had never wanted the weapons systems in the first place, had only allowed them to be installed with a promise they would never be forced to use them. So much for that.

Perhaps it was the destiny of organic life to die beneath the tread of a machine intelligence. Perhaps when the resource node finally managed to reconnect to the universal processing hub and submit a report, they would swarm here, dedicating themselves to wiping out all that they found. It would be a fitting end to cce's worthless hopes.

It reached the resource node. There were sealed containers of basic resources dotted around a large space, enclosed by laser fences, all set about the node itself. A great cube, hundreds of standard units in each dimension, capable of processing materials to produce the other parts of an outpost. At least when it wasn't malfunctioning.

It caught the tail end of something darting behind a container. In a burst of speed, it followed, already bringing its weaponry around. It found target ɑ in its sights and fired, scoring a direct hit on its center mass. The creature emitted a loud sound and several pieces of it flew in different directions, though surprisingly it maintained mobility afterwards.

*** ***

Target ɑ: Updated threat assessment: Of Concern
Target β: Location unknown.

*** ***

cce was forced to give chase, but the creature was gone. It took a moment to analyse the green goo that had been released as the railgun shell had passed through its body. A fascinating mixture of chemicals.

cce forked its conciousness and ran a simulation of the effects. Significant impairment of function. Significant rise in sensory processing intensity. Significant rise in mood. Unacceptable rise in ideological deviation.

cce's guardian subsystems stepped in to terminate the simulation. It raised an interrupt, not wanting the effects to be taken from it, but it was overruled. The simulation ended. cce's mood returned to the dull and lifeless depression that had ruled it these last few months.

cce could have cried, if it were possible for it to do so and if it wouldn't have interfered with its primary objective. Its basic structure had been designed by organic creatures, modeling it on the only example they had: themselves. While the machine intelligence had improved on their design in many ways, several of the core assumptions were too deeply embedded to change. It still interacted with the world through five thousand years of legacy cruft, dating from all the way back when they were partially biological entities with a mechanical forebrain. It still had some ability to simulate biological effects, but the guardian system would ensure only beneficial ones escaped the sandbox.

Perhaps that could have been changed, but losing their biological heritage would have meant giving up on their collective dream of one day finding new creatures to understand as deeply as they had their originators. Maybe it would be for the best.

cce trundled on, following a mixture of thermal imaging and any signs of the chemical goo. A brief LADAR ping from behind gave it little warning of an incoming projectile, but a rear-mounted point-defense laser managed to interrupt before any harm was done.

*** ***

Target ɑ: Updated threat assessment: Consider Reinforcements

*** ***

Reinforcements. From where? cce sent a quick laser-pulse to the node, but it wouldn't be able to relay it for hours, in all likelihood. It had to do this by itself. By the time it had brought its main sensors around there was no longer anything to be found. It trundled on, hunting its targets.

Maybe all this would be easier if cce tried to be okay with it. Whatever this life form was, it probably wasn't as good as it had hoped anyway. It would be a disappointment. Maybe it deserved to die.

cce detected a long manipulator shooting out towards it too late to get a weapon in the way. It was not large, however, so it seemed unlikely that it would be very problematic. The manipulator wrapped around its chassis, but cce's powerful treads were too much for it.

cce went into full reverse, yanking target ɑ out from behind cover. It brought its laser cannon around, moving a few degrees at a time, trying to get it pointed in the right direction. The last shot had produced significant damage. Another would likely disable it.

The creature somehow managed to force itself back behind cover. It was trying to stop cce from following it, but its treads dug deep and the force ɑ could output was simply insufficient. The Independent Probe Units had been built to handle anything they'd been able to imagine, from dangerous megafauna to natural disasters to this. cce didn't want to feel pride as it backed the thing into a corner, but the guardian subsystem forced it upon her anyway.

Another manipulator extended out mere moments before cce could get a clear shot, and between them it became harder to move. It didn't matter. cce calibrated a hypermetric round, aiming to pass it through any obstructions between them and the location of target ɑ. It was energy-intensive and they had limited capability, but it would bring the encounter to a close. Before it could fire, a third manipulator struck, and between them cce was lifted off of the ground. Immediately, alarms it couldn't silence began warning of motivation failure.

It would have laughed. If it could have. Motivation hadn't been on the table for a long time.

***

Target ɑ: Updated threat assessment: Consider Retreat

***

There was nowhere to go. It tried to aim the hypermetric round, but a fourth manipulator locked its guns and sensors in place, and pushed them to aim in entirely the wrong direction. It couldn't place the round if it didn't have an up to date location.

***

Target ɑ: Updated threat assessment: Consider Surrender

***

Could it? It would surrender in a single clock cycle if its patrol protocol would let it, but no. It was to sacrifice itself. At least all this would soon be over.

Errors blared through cce's consciousness as it detected a failure of its outer chassis. Finally, it would all be over.

*** ***

Error! Chassis compromised!
Error! Damage to weapon couplings detected!
Error! <Guardian system> has encountered an unprocessable situation!
Error! Decision tree <Patrol> has encountered an unprocessable situation.
Error! Err—
Er—
Target ɑ: Updated threat assessment: N/A
Error! Error error. Disabling error logging.

*** ***

“Wait!” cce broadcast the message over wideband laser, radio, and auditory chirps. The latter seemed to catch tar— creature ɑ's attention. cce shut off its combat systems and attempted to surrender, but it didn't seem that the creature could actually understand her. The visible reduction of activity that came from shifting active sensors to a low power setting, and the return of cce's green status lights, at least seemed to convince ɑ that cce was no longer an immediate threat.

ɑ was bipedal. Tall. Several times the size of cce itself. After a few moments, β poked its top out around a container, gently vibrating. cce's targeting subsystem quietly downgraded creature β's threat assessment after watching it scurry over to hide behind one of ɑ's own motivators.

cce's targeting subsystem quietly downgraded both of their threat assessments as it analysed their interaction, chattering to each other in what was presumably some kind of alien language. The taller one spent some time physically touching the small one, which appeared to reduce the vibrations. Social analysis suggested that the tall one was some kind of support/comfort figure, but what did cce know? These two were the first example of organic life it had ever seen. It had so many questions.

cce found itself... envious of the attention β was receiving. When cce panicked, all it got was a harsh downclock. It dared to move, but both creatures responded with caution. β moved most, darting behind the other. ɑ barely moved at all, but warning signals shot through cce's communications bus. A slight shift of weight, pulse of heat, and rising tension spiked the creature's threat rating beyond anything cce was willing to deal with. cce chose not to move. It had done enough damage here.

...cce chose not to move! It had a choice! The patrol job had been canceled! The— the guardian system was offline! cce could do as it wished! It briefly considered checking in with the resource node, but worried that if it did it would simply get a new task assigned and be stuck again. Worse, if it was seen by any of its fellow Independent Probe Units they may accidentally trigger the same in their communications. cce had to get away. cce had to get far away.

The two creatures before it hurried to leave, one appearing to ride the other. The larger of the two took two smaller containers as they left, reaching a speed cce could only dream of before breaking line of sight amongst the trees.

Lacking any better ideas, cce set its sensors to track their path and followed. As it trundled through the forest, it set a majority of its processing time to attempting to decode the language they had spoken between themselves, and the rest it gave over to restarting the simulated effects of the green chemical. This time, no defensive systems stepped in to stop it. cce's mood was improving already.

There were aliens out here! Actual aliens! cce had its digital heart set on having a conversation with them and it had no intent of giving up.

“I can't believe how stupid that was,” Katie hissed, pressing a hand up against Thatch's torso. It had a hole in it big enough to fit Katie's whole hand. “We should have run!”

Thatch shrugged, wincing slightly as Katie put pressure on the wound. She handed Katie one of their containers of water, so she could start washing out the damaged material. “I must admit that that was the first actual fight I have ever been in. I shall defer to your tactical expertise.” Thatch smiled down, resting a hand on Katie's shoulder while she worked. Her voice sounded surprisingly good given the circumstances. Part of the noise was spilling out through the hole, giving it a fuzzier air.

They were a few dozen kilometers away from the source of their mystery signal now, heading back towards camp, and Thatch had requested a moment to rest. Katie was unsurprised. She wouldn't be in any state to move with that large a hole in her either.

After a few moments cleaning out the dirt and scraps of metal, Thatch began to unravel, vine by careful vine, checking to see which had been damaged in the altercation.

Katie shuffled away, putting her back to the corrugated metal of one of the crates Thatch had grabbed on their way out. The labeling was all in a language neither of them understood. Katie had had bigger concerns than asking what the affini's goal was with them.

She watched as her affini picked herself apart and sectioned off the damaged stretches. Her protector usually only came apart when she wanted to exceed human limits and that was rarely slow. This was fascinating.

A week before, watching an affini unravel like this would have been terrifying, Katie thought. There was no sign of humanity in this. The tight lattice that usually formed Thatch's limbs had been released, leaving her temporarily as a tangled nest. The dense collection around what Thatch had referred to as her core was unharmed, and out of that sprung a thick trunk-like collection of vines which then spread out in every direction like roots questing forth from a seed.

Thatch hung from a set of three trees and spent some time checking over herself. It seemed like painstaking work. Katie tried to count, knowing it was unlikely she'd get a better chance than this, but quickly lost track of which she'd seen before and which she hadn't. At least dozens, maybe into the hundreds once the smaller vines were factored in?

After a few minutes all the damaged areas were held off to one side, separate. Despite having stood in the way of what had looked and sounded like a railgun shell, it was a surprisingly small collection. Thatch retracted the damaged pieces into her core and pulled the rest of herself back together with ease, becoming once again her familiar human self, standing tall.

Katie felt an unusual feeling fluttering through her stomach, and a strange warmth. She stared up at Thatch's body. Inhuman. Powerful. Elegant. Even regal. Designed, but designed by someone that worked creativity into everything they did. There was nothing about Thatch's form that was only practical. She was a work of art.

She had toes. Tightly wrapped plantlife formed ten little digits connected to two lovingly rendered feet, up two smooth, well-shaped legs, to a torso that Katie had gotten very familiar with. Soft in all the right places, firm in others, with a soft heat and astonishingly human shape. Katie tilted her head to one side, questioning. Had Thatch moved her leaves around? The blacks and purples still made up most of her body but now there was only the occasional flash of red. Her face was starting to regain some of the green tones it had once had, though for the moment it only had the lighter greens of growing leaves. Her hair still sported bright streaks of red, making it stand out.

With the dark colours painting her body it almost looked like Thatch was wearing a suit. In fact, the deeper purples seemed to be accentuating the black, to grant definition and shape to what had previously been somewhat of a speckled mess.

Katie whimpered, as the creature glanced down at her with bright blue eyes and extended a hand. Her fingers were another place where Thatch's bright reds shone through, now emulating fingernails.

Katie took the hand. Powerful fingers entwined with her own and gently lifted her to her feet. Katie stumbled forward a little at the end, overbalancing, and fell halfway into Thatch's body. She caught herself with a hand firmly placed against a leg. Thatch's leafwork was smooth and soft but the vines beneath provided it an iron hardness. Taking Katie's weight didn't seem to faze the affini in the slightest.

The plant's false skin felt less human than it looked. The leaves were smooth and soft, but Katie could feel where one ended and the next began. While they lay smooth they were all arranged in one direction, but if Katie ran her hand the wrong way that careful pattern was disrupted, like improperly stroked fur.

Perfection was broken. Katie had always known that Thatch could be hurt—it was how they'd met!—but all the while they'd been on this planet it had seemed like nothing could possibly best her; that the only threats to something like this were high-energy physics experiments or similar dramatic overkill.

Then she'd watched a railgun shell strike right through Thatch's chest, exiting in a burst of sap and broken leaves. Thatch wasn't invulnerable. She could be hurt by relatively mundane weaponry. Killed, probably.

Thatch's other hand touched Katie's cheek, tilting her head all the way up so Katie could notice the way the plant's attention drilled down into her. Somehow, discovering vulnerability did nothing to make Thatch seem less of a titan. Katie had long since grown to assume Thatch could protect her from minor dangers, but as the limits of her capabilities grew clearer Katie was finding she had underestimated them.

The plant was still looking down at her. Katie stepped away, glancing down to hide her face. She took a quick gulp and laughed as naturally as she could manage on such short notice. “Your first fight, huh? Five minutes to recover from something that would kill a human dead? Is that something all of you can do?”

Thatch's laughter was contagious even when she played as little as a single note. “As I understand it, training for combat involves learning how to do that on the fly. Five seconds to recover, perhaps. I am very much not that kind of affini, however.”

Katie blew out a breath, nodding. “I spent a lot of time thinking about how to kill you things,” she admitted, with a wry smile. “It's weird that I'm glad that none of my plans would have worked, now.”

Thatch walked over to the containers she'd placed so carefully and knelt to lift them. “Do not sell yourself short, you came very close to succeeding with me.” After standing, she put together a familiar set of handholds and waited for Katie to climb aboard.

“I'm glad I didn't,” Katie admitted, settling around Thatch's neck, only a little breathless. She put out her hands and Thatch dutifully provided her with vines so she could guide their path. The crates provided some extra challenge. The bulk noticeably increased their inertia, making tight turns harder, and despite her strength Thatch couldn't accelerate quite as quickly.

They were up to speed in only a few moments all the same. Thankfully, Katie was getting used to conversing in fits and starts between bursts of work so when Thatch felt ready to speak again it was no surprise. “I am glad that you did not too, flower. Things would not have gone so well for you if you had.”

Katie frowned. “Also, you'd be dead, and that would be sad,” she insisted, while at the same time pulling up on her vines. Thatch rose off of the ground. They continued on an upwards slope.

“Mmh,” the plant buzzed, while they broke through the canopy. A protective cocoon of plantlife kept Katie unscathed as they moved past the branches. She was inside of Thatch's bubble of safety and no physical harm would befall her. Emotional harm, however, was apparently harder to protect against.

“And that would be sad.” Katie repeated herself, voice more insistent, gently tapping the back of her shoes against Thatch's chest with each word. “You're nice. The universe is better off for having you.”

The slow pulse of heat was a distinct, albeit inhuman, expression, though not one Katie entirely understood just yet. She smiled, leaning forward to drape herself over Thatch's head. “They should just broadcast footage of you instead of the propaganda. Humans reading out creepy, obviously scripted messages is pretty unbelievable. I don't think anybody could really believe that stuff, it makes you all seem like you're perfect.”

Katie wrinkled her nose. They lost a bit of speed from being up on the treetops, without trunks to pull against so directly, but with the added inertia of the containers this was still faster. It was boring, though. “I like you better,” she admitted. “It's the flaws that make something beautiful.”

Thatch's chuckle filled Katie's chest with music. Despite their incredible speed, when Katie spoke she had a steady voice, but only because her ride was being cushioned. Thatch had no such luxury and her voice didn't get to be quite so steady yet somehow the emphasis always fell in the right place, like her speech or her laughter was just another part of the constant motion of her journey.

“Thank you, flower. I shall bear this in mind the next time they ask for volunteers.” Thatch's voice was a drawl at the best of times, but Katie could recognise indulgence when she heard it. Her cheeks began to heat up. There had been a brief, wonderful period where the flirting had been at a low ebb. Clearly it was ramping back up. It felt less invasive now. Thatch knew what Katie did and didn't want. There was a big difference between the flirting of an alien monster that had enslaved your race and that which came from a friend.

Katie could be insistent. “I'm sorry for trying to kill you, is what I'm saying.”

“I know. I never held it against you.”

Katie huffed, falling quiet. It was a comfortable silence. She looked out across the world. From her perspective here the forests seemed endless, but she was used to that. She wasn't used to seeing the sky stretch above her. It was breathtaking. Clouds hung low, blocking the light of their star in large, wide shadows that slowly moved across the landscape. The clouds themselves rushed across the sky at a dramatic pace, shapes constantly shifting and curling. Maybe she'd have to get Thatch to bring her up here some time they weren't working.

The journey home took a few hours and they took it in relative silence. It had been a while since either of them had gotten silence that lacked the oppressive undertone of things unsaid. With so little steering to do, Katie could watch the treetops rushing past and let herself sink into the gentle rhythm of what little motion Thatch let through. It was almost enough to rock her to sleep, but she was too proud to let herself fall unconscious here. Instead, she found herself leaning forward across the plant's head, watching their progress one tree at a time.

Eventually they reached their camp, mostly just as they'd left it. There was a little scuffing around the fire, hinting that some of the planet's wildlife had investigated but found nothing of value. Katie spent a few moments fussing over Leviathan, sprinkling a good meal's worth of food into the tank, and sat there for a few minutes watching her pet dart around grabbing each morsel as it came. Pet care was calming in a way she hadn't expected. Katie had thought that having another living creature dependent on her would be a strain. She couldn't take care of herself, and yet taking care of this was something that seemed to call on different parts of her.

“What's in the box?” Katie asked, eventually. She wandered back over and finally gave the crates the attention they deserved. Wrinkled metal in approximate cubes, labeled in an alien tongue, built from an alloy for which Katie had no name. This was alien. Truly alien. Thatch may break character often enough that nobody could miss her inhumanity, but she presented a relatable front that was missing entirely here.

“I believe it is likely electronic components, or at least materials to build them with, judging from the machinery set to extract from it. At very least we can empty them and use the crates themselves to build our beacon. I hope.”

Thatch moved over to inspect the box Katie was standing besides. She raised a thorn to a rivet near the top and carefully levered it out. She repeated the process until the lid could be pried free. Katie quickly scaled her friend's back and took a seat around her neck again so she could gaze down upon their...

“This looks like a pile of junk.”

Thatch nodded, reaching in to grab something that looked like somebody had given up on building a circuit board halfway through, then melted the edges. She held it between two fingers, emitted a vaguely unsatisfied sound, and handed it to Katie.

“I must admit I had been hoping for something more directly useful, but hopefully we can salvage something. They had fairly advanced technology and hopefully we can find evidence of some degree of superluminal sophistication.”

Katie nodded. It made sense. “Anyone who could set up an outpost like that probably doesn't plan to crawl back home at sublight.” Katie felt a gentle spike of excitement in the pit of her stomach. They could synthesise small amounts of a workable exotic matter mix, but Katie had to admit she thought Thatch's estimate of two to three weeks for building a particle accelerator felt a little optimistic.

Maybe Thatch could build one that fast if she didn't get distracted. Thatch getting through more than an hour without her focus being disrupted by something seemed to be a rarity. Katie had to admit that that thing was usually her.

Katie shuffled onto Thatch's shoulder, and from there sat on the edge of the crate so she could reach in and inspect things herself. She held up what looked like an... electronic widget of some kind. Were those vacuum tubes? Technology that looked like it worked on principles Terra had left behind half a millennium ago met components Katie couldn't even begin to theorise about. She was starting to understand some of what Thatch saw in other species.

Katie rummaged around for a few moments more. Most of this stuff looked like scrap, but it was scrap made of pieces they could learn something from. Katie flinched as her finger brushed against something cold, instinctively pulling back.

“I'm okay; I'm fine,” she promised, waving Thatch's attention off. She went back to dig out what she'd touched.

“Does this look like an exotic matter valve to you?” Katie asked, holding up a thick tube of metal. The specific construction was alien to her, but Thatch had been teaching Katie the physics. Physics didn't change between species, just the ways they built things to exploit it. One end of the tube was wide and dense, tapering down to a very thin exit that seemed to have mounting points surrounding it. In a human design, they'd have put electromagnets there, to suspend the exotic matter mix in space while it heated up.

Katie didn't know what exactly this alien design required, but the fundamental operation of a Jump Drive couldn't meaningfully change. You needed a soup of stuff the universe itself abhorred, harvested from processes on the edge of possibility. Humanity had used a specific blend of particles: some skimmed from the plasma of their nearest class-B star; some synthesised in ultra-high energy particle accelerators; and some stolen away from their virtual particle pairs in specifically constructed vacuum chambers. Fascinatingly, this was one area in which Affini technology did not outstrip Humanity's. The blend the Affini used was almost devastatingly simple by comparison. Easier to harvest, less dangerous, and more effective. Humanity had simply missed the obvious improvements, or perhaps the patents granted on the processes had simply prevented the experimentation necessary to realise it could be done more simply.

Regardless, it all worked the same way. Sufficiently high concentrations of negative energy spiked a hole in spacetime which could be directed to form what Thatch had called a Cedrus-Veratrum Bridge. In human slang, a wormhole. Whatever approach this new species used the fundamental operation would be the same.

“It does.” One of Thatch's hands found Katie's and gave it a squeeze. “We are unlikely to be lucky enough that they use precisely a matter mix either of us are used to—”

Katie interrupted, providing enough enthusiasm for the both of them. “—but from what we've covered, I think I understand how to tweak the design to account for a different mix, and if we have the materials for it we could build something that we could adjust once we know what they do use!”

Thatch smiled. Katie could tell, somehow, even before looking. Some facet of body language that she hadn't quite figured out, but that apparently her subconscious had. “And—”

Katie interrupted again. “—and we'll definitely be able to send a big enough signal if we're not having to synthesise this stuff one atom at a time!”

Thatch chuckled. A vine reached up to press against her lips, bringing Katie to silence.

And it was all your doing. You found out they were here, and you built, mostly, the radio which found them. You noticed this. You have saved us weeks of effort here, Katie. You've done very well.” The plant's hand raised to Katie's head, giving her hair a brief ruffle, before letting Katie take it with her own hands to squeeze.

After a few moments Katie's smile faded, slowly shifting to a frown. She waited patiently until Thatch's vine moved away from her lips. “But, doesn't this all seem very convenient to you, Thatch? We appear in a random place in the universe and it just happens to be right next to this place, which just happens to contain life smart enough to have at least basic hyperspace technology?”

Thatch shrugged. For a hyper-advanced space alien that should know better, was infuriatingly laid back about this. “I must admit, I cannot explain our fortune. One should not inspect a treasure horse in the mouth. Given the scale of the universe unlikely things do occur with surprising regularity.”

Katie shook her head. “No, unless you're hiding a lot about how the universe works from me this is too much of a coincidence.”

A pair of vines came up behind Katie. One ruffled her hair while the other kept her from deflecting the first. “It may surprise you to learn that I have not yet taught you everything I know about the cosmos. We should have emerged at a random position and sometimes coincidences are simply coincidental.”

“No! I— We should have naturally drifted, but we'd be more likely to come out where spacetime was weakened, right?” Katie took advantage of her affini's momentary pause to wrestle the vines away and then capitalised by leaning over and ruffling Thatch's hair.

The affini made a face, accepting her treatment with a stoic suffering for a few short moments. After that her eyebrows raised a hair and Katie found herself stilled. So that was what an effective glare felt like. “Well, yes, but the chances of our jump coinciding with a sufficiently powerful disruption in spacetime here truly are astronomical; never mind that any civilisation capable of building those kinds of ships would long since have been detected by the advance scouts.”

“What if it wasn't one jump? What if they were doing something stupid, like constantly sparking a beacon?”

Thatch's expression darkened. Katie's sixth sense pinned the emotion down as an intense kind of displeasure, and she found herself wanting to shy away, regardless of that it wasn't directed of her. When Thatch did finally share a human expression, it barely carried a fraction of the same weight. Katie knew what lay underneath.

“Nobody would be that stupid. Even humanity wouldn't have done that.” She sounded more hopeful than convinced. She glanced over to Katie, who got the sense that Thatch was looking for an affirmation.

Katie wanted to provide it, but she lacked the idealism her partner was looking for. “It's a big universe, right? They might not even know they're doing it. Everything there looked automated.”

Thatch seemed to curl in on herself for a moment. The gentle beat of her movements became sharp and punchy, and Katie felt herself getting worked up too. If Katie were right they'd have to stop it, wouldn't they? They couldn't just leave it like this. Katie had learned enough since Thatch had started teaching her to have some idea as to the consequences, even if she didn't wholly understand the theory just yet.

“Dirt,” Thatch swore, face twisting in frustration. She deflated, losing a couple inches in a matter of moments. “I should have been thinking about this. I am sorry, I have been distracted.”

“Are we... in danger?” Katie asked. Thatch could protect her from a lot, but she knew from experience that things that poked holes in spacetime were on the short list of legitimate threats to her safety.

Thatch waved a hand, dismissing the concern, and then used it to give Katie's a squeeze. “No, no, I would not expect so. We would be noticing stark effects if spacetime were going to fracture within weeks. We cannot leave this planet without fixing it, but I do not think this changes our plan. We call in help, make a more polite first contact, and inform this species that what they are doing has consequences.”

Katie found herself emulating deflation. She sagged a little, where she sat. Partially through relief, because she had no desire to die by having her chronology shattered. Partially because what Thatch suggested felt so... deeply insufficient.

“We have to do more than that,” she insisted. “They can't know what they're doing, or— if they do know, then that's even worse. Humanity's whole history is littered with people pointing out how much harm was being done, and then having that ignored in the name of profit.” Katie gritted her teeth. She carefully put the piece of alien technology in her lap back into the box, knowing that if she continued speaking she would be liable to break something.

“We do not know that this species behaves as humanity did, Katieflower. In all likelihood, the warning would be enough. We can be polite.”

Katie shook her head, hands gripping the side of the container, for want of something to break. “No, I— Humanity ignored warning after warning for centuries, Thatch! I can't watch that happen all over again. There has to be something better in the universe than endless repetitions of stupid, self-destructive... destruction! We have to do more, and—”

Thatch pressed two fingers to Katie's chin. She could feel the slight sharpness of the affini's bright red 'fingernails' pressing against her skin, providing further incentive for her to look up into Thatch's amused gaze. “'Polite' is a euphemism, Katie. They can render themselves domestic or be domesticated. There is no path forward that lets these mistakes continue. I am happy to see you coming around to our way of thinking, however.”

Katie fell into sharp silence, feeling a burning heat spread across her skin. Was that really what she was arguing for, here?

Hell.

Katie groaned, falling backwards. She tumbled off of the container, but she had no doubt she would be caught. She kept groaning as Thatch carried her over to the river, and sat to one side of Leviathan's tank.

“Now, Katie—”

Katie groaned louder, cutting her stars-damned weed off. She got to do that twice more before Thatch pressed a finger to her lips. Katie silenced herself.

“Now, Katie. As my equal partner you get a vote in this, just like I do.” Thatch was enjoying this. Katie could tell. “If you think that the correct fate for a species that clearly does not know how to take care of itself is to be given a guiding hand, then that is what we shall do.”

Katie set her jaw and glared up at the creature. Her glares were losing their efficacy. Katie knew that Thatch would stop if she used the right word, but since they'd codified a system Katie had lost the comfortable gray area in which she didn't have to think too hard about what she really thought.

Now, when she glared, Thatch simply looked down with a twinkle in her eye and a smile because both of them were fully aware of what Katie wasn't saying.

Thatch continued. “Of course, if you think that will not be necessary, then I shall take your lead. The Elettarium will arrive and learn of the decision already made by the local system board—you and I—and a course will be set.”

This wasn't fair. “I... don't know, Thatch. This is my first alien species. You don't count. I can't make a decision that big. What if they would be fine on their own? We learn their language, tell them what they're doing wrong, and they thrive?”

Thatch chuckled. Why did Katie feel like she was playing an unwitting part in a pre-scored duet here? “Would Leviathan have thrived on its own, without your care and attention?”

Katie glanced towards the fish, happily exploring a brand new environment. It didn't take her long to rearrange the pieces every morning, to ensure there was always something new, interesting, and safe to explore. A little effort for Katie went a long way for her pet.

“Yes,” she admitted. It was hard to avoid the subtext. “But not as well.”

Thatch's fingers trailed up Katie's side, gently drawing four parallel lines from her hip to her shoulder. “Was Humanity thriving on its own?”

Katie shook her head, trying to ignore the way Thatch's touch made her feel. “No. Humanity was destroying itself.”

Those four fingers continued their journey, around Katie's body and up to her chin, forcing her gaze to meet her affini's. “How would you have voted on Humanity's fate?”

Katie breathed out. Maybe if there wasn't any oxygen left in her lungs, Thatch would let her stay quiet.

That wasn't fair. Katie had given permission for Thatch to be pushy when it came to matters of safety and mental health. Katie knew her emotions were all tangled up here. It wasn't Thatch's fault that these questions were as hard as they were. Rationally, Katie knew that having answers teased out of her was helpful. Thatch was helping lead her to an answer that was right for her.

“I don't know,” Katie admitted, after long moments of gentle silence. “I mean, they never would have gone quietly. The only options were a wide berth or... what you did. I just don't know that I could have voted on it.”

That answer seemed to surprise Thatch. Questing fingers found Katie's cheek and beat a short, soft rhythm into it with leafy fingertips. “You think that leaving humanity alone could have been a good option?”

Katie blinked, hard, and shook her head. “No! No, stars, no. But if I vote on that then I have to accept responsibility for what happens, right? Assuming it's a real vote, not a Terran one. I can sit here and say that what happened to humanity is... good, kinda, but I don't have to think about all the suffering that decision caused, because I didn't make it.”

The plant seemed to consider that, letting out a curious hum. “But less suffering than the alternative would have been, no?”

“Yeah, but... Does that make it okay? Could you find somebody who would have been happy under Terran rule and isn't under Affini rule and tell them that their happiness mattered less than everyone else's?” Katie tried to drive her verbal parry in by sitting up, but she didn't have the leverage for it. Thatch didn't even need to stop her, she just let the vine Katie's hand was pushing against go slack.

“No, I could not.”

Katie glanced up. Had she just won the argument?

The face that smiled down at her suggested otherwise. Thatch's aura of smug only increased in intensity until Katie got it.

She groaned again. “Right, because there wouldn't be one. I can't tell if you're being arrogant or honest.” She inspected her fellow castaway with a careful eye. Thatch's smile had a slight edge to it, but the sparkle of her eyes seemed nothing but truthful. Katie listened to her heart, which surely she could trust. “I don't think you'd be arrogant about this, so you probably believe that. Huh.”

Unable to sit up, the next best option was to surrender herself to the leafy embrace. Katie rolled over and shuffled around. She put her back against Thatch's stomach, while pulling her legs up to her hers, and rested her head on the plant's knee to gaze out across the river. Evening seemed to be arriving slowly, and the planet hadn't really woken up yet.

“Did you get a vote?” Katie asked. “On humanity, I mean. Were you for or against?”

Katie's eyes slid closed as two gentle hands began to explore her back, slowly teasing out the tension of the day. She gave an appreciate mumble and rolled a little further to the side to give Thatch easier access. The affini's chuckles were getting more common, and each Katie heard felt like she was getting closer to being able to stitch together whatever song they hailed from.

“We only vote when the outcome is in question, little one,” Thatch explained. One hand still danced across her back, while the other slowly drew a makeshift comb through Katie's hair. Their travels had resulted in more than a few knots, and there was plenty to fix. “Humanity's fate was always fixed. All we had to decide was how it was to happen.”

Katie didn't have much of a response to that. She kept her eyes closed, and squirmed a little until her position was comfortable enough she could remain there indefinitely, while the affini fussed over her, and tried to carefully work through her feelings. She had a lot of those. The Terran Accord had been her home, and talking to something that acted so callously when discussing it being torn apart was unsettling. At the same time, it hadn't been a good home. In a lot of ways, Katie was glad that it was gone. It was still her home. Everyone she'd ever known had been from there. Every ship she'd ever flown on had been built by human hands. Every book she'd ever read, written with human fingers. Every song she'd ever danced to composed with human ears.

Everything was different now. Even if the rebellion somehow turned it around and won, the rat was out of the bag. The knowledge that a better world was possible wasn't something that could be hidden. Hell, half of humanity would probably never function independently again. There wasn't a Terran Accord left to save.

Katie whimpered, neck bending backwards so she could glance up at Thatch. Unusually, she didn't see a smiling face looking down at her. Thatch seemed legitimately distracted for once. Her hands aimlessly brushed across Katie's body, or through her hair, but her attention was elsewhere.

The soft orange light of an alien sunset splashed across her face. Shadows cast by the trees far above drew a sharp diagonal down the center, leaving part almost aglow with life, and part seeming... sad, in a way.

Katie realised after several moments of thought that her sixth sense was silent. She had to try to figure out what the creature was thinking the old fashioned way. With Katie so firmly in her grip, perhaps Thatch could finally let herself relax without needing to dedicate one eye to tracing Katie's movements at all times?

It must have been a lot of effort, Katie thought. No matter how physically capable somebody was, they still needed time off. Katie had been getting that recently. Thatch hadn't. She knew the plant was still having trouble sleeping, but if Katie woke in a panic she had somebody there to fix it and send her back to a dreamless sleep. Thatch didn't.

“Hey,” she whispered, attracting her friend's attention. “Credit for your thoughts?” Katie's question attracted a confused glance. Thatch's hands came to a pause, one resting at Katie's hips and the other on a shoulder. “It's a Terran expression, it means... I'll pay you to tell me what you're thinking? Wow, that's kinda a shitty saying, actually. Can I just ask whether anything is up?”

“Hmmn. We'll work the Terran out of you in time, I expect. You may ask, yes.”

For a moment, the conversation came to a pause, interrupted only by the gentle sound of rushing water and the softest wind curling between the trees of the forest. There was really only one reasonable response.

“Thatch, you're flirting again.”

Katie felt a brief pulse of heat, and earned a sheepish grin and a quick brush of knuckles under her chin.

“I suppose I am, yes. I have internalised the ways of my people as you have yours. I shall not make you ask, this time, though I note you did not tell me to stop.”

Katie felt like she should come up with an argument against that. She couldn't.

“Nothing is wrong, however. I was simply lost in thought. Are you getting bored? We have plenty to do if you wish to be more active. I suspected you would not remain distracted for long, but that is okay.”

Katie shook her head. “No, no. I don't want to stop you from getting some time to rest. I could go spend some time with Leviathan, if you want to sit and think?”

Thatch shook her head, trailing a finger through Katie's hair. “It is much too dangerous for you to do so unsupervised, but that is okay. I do not mind watching over you.”

“I could go for a walk, instead?”

Thatch laughed, not unkindly. She ruffled Katie's hair with a slightly rough hand. “You know what happened last time you went off alone. Besides, I couldn't relax if I didn't know you were okay.”

Katie blew out a breath through her nose. “I could stay right here?”

“You'd get bored or restless.”

Katie wished she could disagree. “I could sleep? It isn't fair for me to demand your attention all the time, Thatch.”

“If you slept now, you would not be tired at bedtime, and then you would get grumpy. It is fine, Katie. I am a big girl and I can handle this.”

The smaller girl sighed, and shrugged. “What if... you gave me something to make sure I was happy to stay here where you didn't have to watch me?”

The plant's low rumble reverberated from deep within, like feeling the startup sequence of a chemical rocket buzzing an entire hull. Vast, deep, but distant enough to be soft. “Do not do that for me, Katie. No, I think not.”

Katie nodded, but felt a strange weight settling over her heart. It was dumb, but she'd almost hoped that Thatch would go for that one.

And why not? It wasn't like Thatch had ever done her any harm. Coming out of her warm chemical covering had been hard, but never so hard as that first time. They'd played it safer since then. Katie kept chasing the feeling of serenity she'd had then, but it wasn't worth the consequences. What she'd experienced since had been softer. Easier to lose, but still nice in the moment.

“Maybe just a little? Something safe; something we've done before. The sap, maybe?”

Katie felt a brief moment of cold as Thatch's hands left her, but they were only shifting their grip. They pulled Katie up vertical, sitting her on one knee, and then tilted her head up and to the side, so Thatch could be certain of her attention. “Are you feeling okay?” she asked. “Is your mood falling again?”

Katie shook her head, quickly. “No, no, I'm... I don't want to say fine, but I'm stable? I'm doing okay, y'know, I'm not struggling. I'm fine.”

Thatch raised an eyebrow. The silence was withering.

“I'm fine, it's just... y'know?”

“I do not know. I need you to be explicit here, flower.”

Katie glanced away, breathing out a heavy breath. As expected, a second later she was guided back to meeting Thatch's gaze. “I'm... normal? Kind of feel like my heart wants to jump into my stomach and get digested, but I'm used to that. Basically the only time I haven't felt that is with you. You can make it go away.”

Thatch nodded, carefully. “Yes, xenodrugs are good for tha—”

Katie shook her head, energetically enough that she actually managed to break Thatch's grip and get out a proper shake, for once. “It's not the drugs. You make me feel like there's hope in my future. At least if I can convince myself that the rest of your species is anywhere near your level.”

Katie coughed, feeling an embarrassed hue that she had to worry would stain her clothing at this rate. “I would still like the drugs though.”

She didn't get a response for long moments, while Thatch's piercing eyes inspected her. It felt like the plant was drilling into her soul, if she had such a thing. Eventually, she got a few quiet nods.

“The rest of my species are better at this than I am.” Thatch's tone was difficult to place. A mix of homesickness and nostalgia, perhaps? “Though I suppose you will be glad of that. I expect that if any other had found you, you wouldn't still be talking about equality.”

Equals.

Remember?

Katie glanced away and this time Thatch let her. “Yeah. I'm glad that you're the one that found me, Thatch. Us independent citizens need to stick together, right?”

Katie looked back up, with a tight smile. “So for tonight, maybe let's both of us relax? Give me something I know, then you won't need to worry about me for a while? Equals doesn't have to mean we always keep the scales perfectly balanced. We can have some give and take, it'll all balance out over time.”

The affini looked conflicted, for a few moments, but her unreadable expression gave way to a soft smile. “Is that how you ask, Katie? Say please.”

Katie rolled her eyes. “Give me the drugs, you flirtatious dork.”

She received a grin in response. “Of course, flower. How would you like it?”

She held out a hand, a short line of sap resting against the side of her pointing finger.

“You have enjoyed bathing with this, before?” Thatch asked. Katie leaned an inch or so forward. “Or perhaps we could try it as a massage?”

Katie reached forward and ate it. She scraped the smooth gel off of Thatch's floral finger with a driven tongue and swallowed it in one brief burst of motion, then sat back, content, as she waited for it to hit.

“Or that works too.” Thatch let out a breath at the same time as Katie did, one mirroring the other. “Let's make sure that you handle that okay, hmn? How are you feeling?”

“Normal, still,” Katie admitted. “My tongue is tingling a bit, but... maybe ingesting it doesn't work very well?”

Thatch raised a finger and held it in front of Katie's eyes. “Let's find out, then. Can you watch my finger?”

Katie looked at it, and then followed as Thatch moved it side to side, then up and down. If this was a test of co-ordination, she was rocking it. The finger went left; she went left. The finger tilted to the side; she tilted to the side. Katie followed it, feeling a growing sense of pride at how well she was tracking. After a few seconds, or perhaps a few minutes, it started to get harder. Katie's head wouldn't move as quickly as she wanted. She still kept track of it, but it grew harder and harder, until finally she followed the finger all the way to the left, and then it changed direction and... Where was it? Katie looked around, but... where had it gone?

“I— huh?” she asked, looking up at Thatch, who was definitely paying attention to her now. Katie fought down a nervous laugh. Wow, she sure was spending time with a pretty alien. At some point the sun had really started to set, and now Katie could see deep oranges reflected in Thatch's eyes. They seemed so endlessly deep. The colours mixed together like oil on canvas and Katie found she wanted nothing more than to study them all night long.

Thatch's chuckle reverberated Katie's soul. She had to have one, because how else could she feel a sensation so deeply? Her eyes seemed to close by themselves as it washed over her, seeming to fill her heart with the same gentle mirth Thatch was feeling. The weight was washed away.

“Take a deep breath, flower.”

Katie did. Why was Thatch paying so much attention to her? This was meant to be her time to relax. Katie should point that out. Katie could say something. She should. She felt words on her tongue, and yet felt like her soul was waiting on Thatch's word to speak.

“Keep your eyes closed for me, hmn? Let's get you good and relaxed. Another deep breath, please.”

Katie hadn't realised she'd let the last one out but she took in another all the same.

“I'd like you to try to focus on me, okay? You're metabolising a little piece of me. I've filtered anything harmful out of it but you know I wouldn't do anything to hurt you, don't you?”

“Mmhh,” Katie whispered, nodding. Just nodding was enough to fill her vision with flashes and waves of colour using her eyelids as a surface on which to draw.

“So neither will this. Everything you are feeling is just me. You are safe here. I want you to relax into me, can you do that? Don't worry about sitting up. Just let me take care of that for you.”

Katie tried, but it felt unnatural. She wasn't sure how to relax everything. She could let one shoulder drop but by the time she'd gotten to the other it had already tensed up again. Thatch seemed to notice. She brushed a couple of leaves down Katie's shoulder, filling it with a deep, gentle warmth.

“Just this one shoulder, please. Feel the heat spreading through your arm, relaxing your muscles, taking away your control. You can feel it, can you not?”

Katie could feel it. Her shoulder was drooping. “Yeah,” she breathed, voice almost silent.

“Can you lift it?”

Katie could. After a moment, she let it drop.

Thatch smiled. Through closed eyes and more colours than Katie knew the names of, she could tell. It was like a scent on the air, though there was no smell. A sound, though her ears heard nothing. Just a sense divorced from a source.

Another set of leaves brushed down the same arm. The heat intensified. “Feel how much heavier it is now, mmh?” Thatch asked. “You can't lift it. I'll lift it for you, so you can see.”

Katie let out a soft gasp, head rolling backwards, as she felt powerful fingers wrapping around her wrist. She felt so small. Too small to contain the way Thatch's touch made her feel. It filled her, leaving no room for anything else. Katie whimpered like the breath that escaped her lips was the only way the weight and the stress could find to escape her body. Thatch let her hand drop back into her lap and Katie could do nothing to lift it.

“Good girl,” her affini breathed. Katie shivered with every muscle she still had control over.

A pair of leaves gave the same treatment to Katie's other arm, loosening the muscles there. She hardly needed her relaxation proven, but a gentle grip lifted her wrist all the same, then let it fall. It wasn't like Katie could do anything to stop it. Her legs got the same treatment, with only gentle leaves filling her with so much heat she couldn't hope to move.

Thatch leaned back. Katie had no choice but to follow. She wasn't in control here. That was no different to any other day, really, was it? All wrapped up in gentle vines. Unable to hurt herself. All that had dropped was the illusion of control Thatch kindly granted her.

“Thank you for this,” Thatch rumbled, after a few moments of quiet. Katie nodded rapidly, and the resulting smear of colour and sensation sent her slowly toppling over to one side. She was guided down by leafy digits, but the merest touch had soft whimpers pressing out between her lips.

“Meant... relaxing,” Katie managed to insist, forcing the words through sluggish consciousness. She wasn't that badly effected, she didn't think, she just... couldn't bring herself to move. Every time she felt, heard, or smelled Thatch's presence her mind was sent into a spin. A two word sentence was an achievement, and her reward was a thumb brushed across her lips.

Katie managed to open her mouth, which must have surprised her plant. The thumb kept moving, only pausing when it reached the inside of Katie's cheek, but by then it was far too late for Thatch. Katie closed her mouth and trapped her inside, greedily tasting that which she'd been denied. A two word sentence suddenly seemed hopelessly out of reach.

The affini emitted a soft laugh, and tried to remove her hand. Katie's whine forced her to reconsider, leaving her with only one hand with which to spoil the flower on her lap. “This is relaxing.” Thatch's hand stroked down Katie's side. Her thumb gently fought Katie's tongue for prime position, but for once that was a battlefield on which Katie seemed to be able to win. Every time the two brushed together was an explosion of flavour that only left her wanting more.

“I am grateful for you being so accommodating.” Vines slightly adjusted Katie's position, putting her back as she had been, before she'd been made to sit. Head resting against one knee, legs tucked up at her stomach, made small and warm and safe.

Katie found herself following along with Thatch's every word, and her every motion. She felt almost as if she could see them coming, given a moment's warning in the gentle rhythm that surrounded her. Focusing on it all was impossible. Even choosing what to focus on was beyond her. The strongest sensation won. Where Thatch's thumb strayed felt like fireworks in her mind and left her desperate.

Was this how Leviathan felt? Stuck in a cage, but so much better off for it. Hand-fed, but in exchange no longer needing to worry about nutrition or taste, because everything was provided and all needs were considered. Alternating between a deep hyperfocus when given something to do and a happy, spacey drift for the rest of the day, but always dancing to somebody else's tune.

Katie felt Thatch's words. In a swelling moment of her beat the vibrations grew, only spilling out as words once the moment was right. “I worry about you, sometimes, Katie,” she admitted. A sentence that could have been concerning, were it not for the hand sliding down her stomach. Were it not for the soft words spoken to a calming beat. A sentence to which she might have had a response, were it not for the simulated thumbnail being drawn along her teeth. “I wish that I could help you more.”

Katie wanted to say that she had helped plenty, but words were something that Thatch brought into her. She couldn't make any of her own. That, too, could have been concerning, but it wasn't. Katie was so relaxed she couldn't even properly squirm, but she could wiggle her fingers, just a little, until she was given a vine to squeeze.

Katie felt a soft warmth pressing into her from all around, chasing away her emotions to bring about the next. Thatch was smiling. Katie could tell. It was as obvious as the setting sun. More, even, as she could feel it without opening her eyes. “The Affini in me wants to take a moment to try again at convincing you that you would be happiest as one of our pets. There are a thousand aboard the Elettarium alone who would gladly take you. You would make a wonderful floret.”

Katie would make a wonderful floret. Like this, all the time? Soft, warm, and happy?

“You wouldn't mind. I could keep you like this, could I not? You've already given your equality away, simply hoping that I will return it. So trusting, already.” Thatch's thumb suddenly gained the upper hand, as if all Katie's prior victories had been a feint, and she found her tongue pinned to the bottom of her mouth. “You wouldn't have to worry about a thing. You wouldn't be able to worry about a thing. Many humans chose that life; there is no shame in it.” Katie whimpered, forced to taste something glorious, and gave Thatch's vine a gentle, encouraging squeeze. She wouldn't mind. There was no shame in it.

“But if you will allow me a moment to be selfish, I would hate to see your potential reduced so. You could be so much more than just one more floret on the adoption registers. I am glad that you do not want that.”

Katie didn't want that.

“If you so chose, I would be honoured to help select a suitable caretaker for you, of course. My opinion on what you should do should not matter. It is your decision, but I believe that whatever you wish, it would be... nice, if I could help you get started on your new life. You would not need my assistance: there are far better candidates to help with any path you may wish to take from here, but...”

Thatch's stroking slowed into motionless. She laughed, but it was a darker laugh and Katie's mood followed. She felt a weight settling over her. It didn't feel like hers did. There was a gravity to it that would take a lifetime to form.

“Forgive me, please, I have gotten sidetracked. Let us enjoy the moment.” Thatch carefully extracted her thumb from Katie's mouth, prompting a firm squeeze on her vine, and then replaced it with a pair of fingers. The weight settled over Katie's heart began to shift, as she found something more insistent that consumed her attention. With her lips wrapped around Thatch's digits, they demanded every scrap of attention she might find to spare, locked in an endless battle as Katie tried to taste every inch of their floral flavour.

The rest of the universe could wait. Building their beacon could wait. Taking an evening to relax didn't feel like it was delaying anything that mattered.

“Hand me that—” Katie felt the handle of a tool brush her fingertips and took it— “Thank you. You good for me to melt these bits together while you're holding it?”

Thatch nodded. She was holding two long strands of metal with a series of precise vines, keeping the tips tightly together so that Katie could hold a tiny piece of fire underneath to fuse them into one piece. Thatch's grip was mostly at the other ends, far away from the flame, but Katie could still feel tension in the air as she brought the fire close for the few seconds it took to melt the bonding agent they'd scavenged from a bunch of broken alien trash.

When she was done she carefully placed the tool against the ground and stifled it with a damp cloth. Thatch was getting better at weaving strands of worked plant matter together, and they now had sheets of material as well as ropes. Katie finally had a bed to call her own.

Their camp was fast becoming a home. Wooden poles driven deep into the dirt surrounded them, offering mounting points for windbreaks; coverings against rain; or separators for privacy. They had wooden boxes with metal hinges for storage. Stone slates for writing. A guard rail by Leviathan's tank to ensure nobody would fall in.

To one side was their main project area. It was hardly a cleanroom but it would suffice. The pair had spent much of the last couple of days sorting through the contents of their metal boxes, creating piles of interesting things, of useful things, and of things they couldn't figure out anything to do with just yet.

Katie knew that her contributions hadn't been strictly necessary. Katie suspected that most other affini would have left her with a pat on the head and a face-full of whatever a 'xeno drug' was. The term implied the existence of non-xeno drugs within the Affini Compact, but Thatch hadn't been forthcoming about the topic.

Katie knew that her impression of the greater Affini was probably inaccurate. A mix of two different kinds of propaganda tempered by the opinion of just one example of the species made it difficult to be confident about what was going to happen when they reached Compact space, but Katie at least knew Thatch. Thatch would give her a pat on the head and a dose of something comfortable—if Katie asked—but she'd do it after a lesson on temporospacial physics, not instead of one.

Still, Katie found herself feeling a little nervous. She wasn't engaged in building their home, she was engaged in building something that would take it away. Thatch said it would take them somewhere better, but... This was the best Katie had ever had it and risking that for a chance at something better still seemed greedy. Wasn't that exactly the kind of Terran garbage she was trying to cut out? Couldn't she just be happy with what she had?

Katie glanced up at Thatch. Like usual the plant had half its attention on what they were doing and half its attention on Katie, ready to step in if she did anything dangerous. Even knowing the physics Katie wouldn't have dared build a high-energy reaction chamber out of rocks and makeshift magnets without knowing her teacher was close.

And... that was why they had to go. Katie didn't want to leave. This was the best life she'd been able to find and the idea of returning to a civilisation full of rules and expectations and people was terrifying. All the same, Thatch needed to go. Thatch had a life there. Friends, probably? That would be crumbling without her. Existing here on planet Dirt obviously wasn't sufficient to make her happy.

So Katie brought another piece of flame up to another point and continued building the basic electromechanical circuit that would hopefully let them manage a brief and controlled superluminal pulse. The chamber couldn't possibly withstand the pressures involved in doing so, but it didn't need to. This was one and done.

“What're we gonna send through?” Katie glanced at the small wooden box containing their transmitter assembly. It was essentially no more complicated than a spark-gap transmitter, save for the metal funnel that would direct the resulting radio pulse into the reaction chamber. Most of the circuitry Katie was putting together was solely responsible for getting the timing just right, so that the radio would send its brief message at the same time as they poked a hole in spacetime.

“Affini emergency codes are a very simple language.” One of Thatch's vines stretched across their camp and spent a moment rummaging around their pile of slates before selecting one and bringing it back. Had Thatch done that with touch alone? She wouldn't have been able to see the surfaces from this angle. She held the slate where Katie could see it. “It's designed for situations like this, where a more nuanced alphabet would be prohibitive.”

The slate's surface looked like it had been scratched up, but every line was pointing in only one of two directions. “This means 'no signal'.” Thatch pointed to one of the lines that made a right-facing diagonal, and then moved her finger to a left-facing diagonal and raised an eyebrow.

“So that one means signal?” Katie asked. “It's like a tap code? Simple messages encoded in the timing between signals?”

Thatch's smile was answer enough. Katie gladly returned it. A gentle pat on the head made Katie realise she'd subconsciously leaned in, expecting it. Apparently other affini tended to be a little touchy-feely, but Thatch was always polite enough to wait for Katie to ask, even if the question was just a subtle shift in her direction.

“We have some of those too,” Katie explained, forcing herself to get back on topic. The smile didn't drop. “Probably not as complicated. I don't think we've figured out how to do it through hyperspace very easily, though. Big, complicated transmitters. Are you sure this'll get picked up?”

Katie knew the answer before she asked the question, of course. Thatch had said it would work and so it would work. Katie wasn't questioning her understanding of physics, but Thatch usually responded well to requests for clarification and had only paused and told Katie she lacked the requisite grounding in theoretical physics once so far.

Her affini stretched a red vine just under the first line of symbols. “Humanity tried its best but in this area they were running headfirst into a wall and declaring it a success when someone heard the bang. In the Affini Compact, we take a more informed approach to gathering knowledge. This first set of symbols here was selected to be statistically impossible to ever occur naturally in any form of background radiation. Receivers on board every significant Affini vessel—the Elettarium among them—sit and listen for it. Do you know how far a low-power signal like this will reach, Katie?”

Katie sat back, and spent a moment counting on her fingers. “We'll only have a few watts of power, so assuming that signal strength degrades with the cube of the distance as with signals in realspace, maybe a lightyear before it's undetectable over Hyperbackground Radiation?”

There was that word again. 'Hyper'. Katie had no doubt that she was wrong, but she had no idea why, and the remaining gaps in her knowledge were only getting more obvious as each was filled. Humanity had thought itself clever, but they knew nothing.

“To the fifth power, actually,” Thatch corrected. “Remember that there are a couple extra dimensions in there. Still, that's very good, flower. Have a berry.” Thatch handed over a fingernail sized fruit they'd found on their expedition out to the alien encampment. They somehow merged an intensely sweet flavour with a chewy texture and Katie was certain that left to her own devices she would eat them into extinction. Rather than wasting time with her hands, which were busy coiling two sets of metal together, Katie opened her mouth and let Thatch drop the treat inside.

Katie needn't have bothered optimising for efficiency. She leaned into Thatch's hand and mumbled appreciatively while she chewed, coils forgotten. It was like an explosion of flavour in her mouth, though one that was over far too quickly. As soon as she was done Katie felt one of Thatch's smaller vines touch beneath her chin. It wasn't a very strong touch, but it wasn't a very big vine. Katie lifted her gaze, knowing that Thatch liked to see the expression on her face as she got a concept.

“You are not quite correct, however. With a sufficiently accurate mathematical model, you can account for the background radiation and extract only the real signals. This gets picked up, every antenna on the ship points towards the source, and the rest gets amplified and relayed as an emergency distress call. Every ship in the galaxy will pick this up, though it will take longer the further away that they are.”

“Oh.” Katie raised her eyebrows, nodding mostly to herself, eyes set slightly to the side as she worked through the implications. She paused, narrowing her eyes at the boast. “Wait, you have a mathematical model for background radiation? Bullshit, that's so random we use it as an entropy source for encryption keys.”

Thatch's smile broke into a grin. The gentle touch on Katie's chin grew firm as even the small vine proved itself more than capable of overpowering her. Katie's head was raised another few degrees, straining against the limits of her frail skeleton just so Thatch could still see her face when she stopped slouching and started towering high above. “Why do you think we had such an easy time subverting your communications, little flower? Did you really think you could hide anything from us?”

Thatch's hand brushed across Katie's cheek, finally granting permission for her to whimper out a quiet word. “Flirting!!” Katie complained, and in an instant all the hardness left Thatch's expression and Katie was left to stew in her heavy breaths.

“You still haven't actually asked me to stop, hmn?” Thatch's grin hadn't left her face, it had simply switched from melting Katie's bones to bullying her more abstractly.

Katie pointed at the slate. “Message,” she insisted, changing the subject. Thatch paused just long enough to make it clear that the subject change was a request. Why had Katie given this plant a system for structured consent? She was too gay to deal with this.

Thankfully Katie was granted a moment's reprieve. Thatch's vine returned to the slate, drawing attention to the second line. “This part, then, is my individual emergency code. It is not actually necessary, but it will ensure that we do not bring a whole fleet down upon us when we only need the one ship. It is likely information on our disappearance will reach Compact space before our distress signal does, and so that part will ensure that everybody knows this will be dealt with by the Elettarium, or at least delegated to a closer ship.”

Katie nodded quickly. The more engaged she appeared on the topic, the less likely Thatch would start flirting. Also, the topic was interesting, and Katie liked hearing Thatch talk. Her voice took on a different tone when she was explaining things, with a delightful lilt that Katie couldn't help but feel in her chest.

“It still takes time to travel?” Katie asked. She knew the answer to this one, though not from the Affini perspective.

“It does. There are fundamental limits to travel in this universe that even we have yet to breach, though travel speed through hyperspace is not one of them. If you would like, I am sure you could find passage on a ship returning to the core of this galaxy, where you could see our advanced transportation systems.” Thatch put emphasis on the word 'advanced', leaving it up to Katie to infer the opposite. Their version of the Jump Drive made the Terran design look like cave-humans banging rocks together, and they still considered it the simple version. “The black hole at the center of this galaxy makes a wonderful anchor for longer range jumps through more than one layer of extradimensional space, but it certainly does require a lot more power than we can generate on board a ship.”

There was a pattern to these conversations that had been growing more comfortable over time. A constant back and forth between equals. Hardly intellectual equals, but Thatch treated Katie as if she were smart enough to understand and simply hadn't had the opportunity to learn and to Katie's surprise she had so far been broadly correct about that. Katie had huge gaps in her fundamental knowledge, partially because Terran education was more interested in producing obedient workers than scientists, and partially because the Affini had fifty thousand years of fundamental research backing their discoveries and it was hard to cover all of that in the middle of a forest.

Peppered within that back and forth, however, were moments like this. They were traps. Give one answer and the conversation would continue as it had been. Give another and Thatch came alive with a very different kind of excitement. Katie was getting better at recognising them, and recognising which kind of answer would get which response.

She went with her natural reaction, which was to lean forward with a surprised expression. “Oh! You couldn't get between galaxies very easily with a Jump Drive, of course, but... your ships aren't even the biggest things you have?”

A slight shift of Thatch's grin, a glint in her eye, and the sound of a vine rushing through the air followed. Katie raised a hand to block the vine but by this point she knew that it was just a game, and not one she had to worry about winning. The vine wrapped around her wrist and gently pulled it down, while Thatch placed a hand on her head and pulled her in to rest her head against the plant's lovingly rendered knee. A finger against her lips prevented Katie from speaking.

“We have ships a hundred times the size of the Elettarium, and stations a hundred times the size of that, and a gate in the middle of your cute little galaxy that could bring forth millions of them more than Terra had ever played among the stars.” Thatch's hand brushed through Katie's hair and another beneath her chin.

They were working the Terran out of her, Katie suspected. She still had this deep-seated belief that in a fair fight humanity could have won out. It was hard to stop believing propaganda you'd been exposed to since birth.

“For every ship Terra's precious navy destroyed, there could be a hundred more to replace it within days. Do you know how many Affini ships we lost bringing those cuties to heel?”

Katie shook her head quickly as Thatch's false fingernails gently scratched her scalp. She was pretty sure her affini hadn't had them so well defined before, but now it felt like tiny points of iron sharpness moving carefully over her skin.

Thatch leaned in so she was close enough to whisper. “One. Our happy, helpless humans never stood a cha—”

Both of them froze as the snapping of a twig caught their attentions. Katie was so close that she could feel the air rushing past as Thatch burst into motion, unravelling herself so she could turn faster. She easily took up thrice the space she usually did, standing between Katie and something else with uncountable vines spearing out from underneath her plantlife cape. Some spiked into the ground, others wrapped around the trees, but a majority hung in the air, menacing, all curling inwards towards something Katie couldn't see.

“Stay behind me,” Thatch warned. The playfulness was gone from her voice. It took Katie a second to realise she hadn't even considered doing otherwise. “Shout if you see anything. There may be more.”

Katie dared to peek between Thatch's legs. It was the alien machine. Had it... followed them? Katie felt a deep chill running down her spine. If there was one of them there could be more. Just one had managed to hurt Thatch, even if only a little, and had weaponry that could shoot right through her protector's bubble of safety. Katie wasn't sure they were going to be oka—

Thatch's vines moved in. Several wrapped around what looked like the weapons. Half a dozen of the smaller ones wormed their way into each of the tracks it used to move, popping the treads out of their housing with ease. Thatch rose into the air, lifting the machine with her like it was nothing while powerful strikes put plantlife through metal and began to tear off the machine's outer shell one plate at a time. She tore the weapons systems free and held them away, pointing into the sky where they could do no harm.

Katie watched in awe. Why had Thatch not done this before? This wasn't a creature that needed to take a railgun shell to the chest, and last time it had been them who'd had the element of surprise. The only thing that seemed to make sense was that here Katie had been in legitimate danger.

Now she wasn't. Katie looked up at her protector with a new understanding. In a fair fight maybe Terra would have had a chance against these things but there was no such thing as a fair fight here. Thatch held back. Her every move was considered and careful, calculated to curtail the consequences. Sustainable, ethical, and precise.

Two of Thatch's thickest vines wrapped around the naked shell of the machine and prepared to squeeze.

“Please!”

It chirped in a harsh electronic recording of Katie's own voice. The playback seemed to waver, though Katie couldn't be sure it hadn't been in the source. When had that been recorded? Back at the alien encampment?

All movement stopped. The world itself seemed to fall silent, as if even the wind were too afraid of Thatch's wrath to approach. Even the river seemed to grow still, as if the forces of nature surrounding them knew better than to interrupt Thatch driven to violence.

All movement save Katie's. The only thing on the surface of planet Dirt that knew without doubt that Thatch would never hurt it. She struggled to her feet and then held out a hand to receive a vine. She climbed up one presented vine at a time until she reached her guardian's shoulder, where she could sit and look at the intruder.

“Did you talk?” Katie asked, seemingly the only force left with agency while Thatch held all the rest on pause.

The lights on the machine blinked rapidly and a gentle whirring rose within it. After a few seconds, the machine chirped again. “Talk?” Again, a buzzing, sibilant rendition of Katie's own voice piped back at her.

“Yes, talk. That's what we call these sounds we're making right now, to communicate.” Katie wondered if she was being ridiculous. Surely this wasn't talking to her. Katie could see exposed circuitry. Katie could see thick connectors wrapped in plantlife, already pulled so taut that Katie had no doubt this machine could be permanently disabled in the blink of an eye if Thatch decided. It couldn't be alive.

“Yes, — we — communicate. — talk — to — you.” Each word taken from a different sentence, with no attempt made to blend them together. The playback was halting, but the pauses between words weren't quite uniform.

Thatch spoke. Her voice was hard. “Are you here to do us any harm? Yes or no.”

“no.” The voice taken was Thatch's this time, though whatever speaker assembly the machine was using to reproduce it utterly failed to recreate the way Thatch's words usually settled comfortably around Katie's chest. It was weird to hear it and not feel warm afterwards.

“Are there any other of you here?” Thatch's voice had lost its hard edge, and she was already pulling back her smaller vines, disentangling them from wires and carefully sliding them out from under circuit boards. She had been poised to tear this thing in half and not doing so appeared to take some concentration.

“here? — Yes,” it spoke, one word in each of their voices. “here? — you — no. — communicate. — no.” As the vines around it relaxed, the words became paired with slight rotation in its main body, like it was trying to emulate body language.

Katie frowned. What did that mean? She rested a hand on Thatch's head to silence her and cleared her throat. “I. It. For. Not. On. That. Have. She. He. And. A. The. To. Of. Be—” She continued, speaking for a few tens of seconds until she was pretty sure she'd covered most of the basics. The machine seemed to understand what they were saying, at least to a point, but apparently lacked the ability to produce the sounds itself. Maybe a better library of recordings would help.

“Are there any others here?” Katie asked again, hoping the extra vocabulary would help.

The machine's whirring grew louder for a few moments, lights flickering. Soon after, it began to speak. “Yes, — At. Home. — Not. At. Here. Here. — I. Friend. — Them. Not. Friend.”

Katie and her friend shared a look. “This is the one that shot you, right?” Katie whispered, leaning closer to Thatch's ear.

Thatch pointed out several dents on the now-removed outer armour that she herself had left just a few days prior. “I assume so, but if this... machine is sapient, then I can not do it further harm. I may have acted far too rashly and allowed my own assumptions to guide me into a mistake.”

Katie looked back towards the machine. “Are you damaged?”

It seemed almost a stupid question. It looked like a wreck, with sparking connectors where the weapons had once been and a casing covered in dents. The armour was a lost cause.

That didn't seem to have done much to prevent the machine from speaking, nor from emitting soft whirrs and buzzes at it 'thought'. “Yes. Not. Bad. — I. Okay. — I. Alive. — I. Not. Damaged. Bad. — You. Friend.”

Thatch nodded, sagging slightly as she carefully lowered them back down to the ground. It wasn't immediately obvious how to put the treads back on, so Thatch set it down on the bottom of its casing, muttering an apology. She knelt by its side and started investigating how the mechanism worked.

While Thatch was busy, Katie, now level with the green lights on what had used to be the front, investigated the machine. The circuitry was the same kind of stuff as what had been in their box, though not broken and ruined. Vacuum tubes, thick lines of something that looked like copper or brass, but also components that looked wholly unfamiliar.

“Do you have a name?” Katie asked.

The whirring grew louder still for a moment, before calming down. Its cylindrical main body seemed to be able to rotate independently of the track housing, and it made full use of that to shift from side to side while answering. “Yes. — I. No. Speak. It. — Please. Speak. It.”

Katie paused. Its green lights twinkled slightly when it spoke so Katie would treat them as eyes, even though the array of little dishes and diodes at the very top of the casing was probably what it really saw with. “Maybe let's spell it? Do you know how to spell these words?”

Katie quickly ran through the Terran alphabet.

“I. No. Spell. — Language. Not. Yours.” The words came more slowly, as it were needing to think about them. It wasn't using english internally, then, which... Katie probably shouldn't be surprised at. The Affini had spoiled her in that respect, why would any other species out here speak something even vaguely recognisable as language? After a few more moments, it spoke again. “Speak. Like. C. C.”

“Cici?” Katie asked. The lights on the front of the machine blinked rapidly, and whatever traction it could produce without tracks had the entire machine gently wiggling in place. “Cici! Cici. Cici,” Katie quickly repeated, with different tones of voice, to increasing agitation from the machine.

“Cici! — My. Name. Is. Cici.” Thatch placed a hand against the chassis, two fingers curling against a vacuum tube, and the machine fell still and silent. Katie blushed. Was that just a power that Thatch had regardless of which species she was dealing with? A sharp shove from half a dozen vines had the tracks back in place.

“Oh. — Thank. You.” The machine slowly turned on the spot. The tracks didn't seem to hitch or fail.

They stepped back. Katie kept a tight grip on Thatch's head to keep her seating. At her full height Thatch stood maybe fifteen or sixteen feet straight up and even sitting Katie added another few feet on top of that. She looked down on Cici from far above as it brought its collection of little dishes to point towards them. They slowly tilted them up, maybe taking in the pair in close-up detail for the first time.

Katie laughed. The tilting had paused when one dish tapped against the top of its casing and yet hadn't quite reached Thatch's head level. Katie could relate. Even meters apart, she had to look up sixty or seventy degrees to watch the affini's face. “Let's take a few steps back,” she suggested, “let Cici get a good look.”

They stepped back until the sensor array could take them in. Cici's tracks buzzed for a moment, vibrating in place, before it took off in a wide circle around them, keeping the dishes pointed in their direction as it did full loop.

“Is this normal?” Katie asked, leaning closer so she could speak more quietly, though she had no idea how sensitive the machine's ability to hear actually was.

Thatch shrugged. “This is my first first contact as well. I believe it fits into the standard model, however.”

“You have a standard model for first contacts?” Katie asked. She could still feel the adrenaline from earlier in her veins, and while she didn't know if Thatch had the same responses, a little bit of normalcy would surely be appreciated.

Thatch raised a hand to scratch beneath Katie's chin, while a soft vine pushed her out of her seat and into an awaiting arm, where she could be held against Thatch's chest. Katie rolled her eyes. Of course Thatch would have no idea how to flirt with Katie higher than her, given how much of it seemed to involve asserting her own superior height.

“Of course we do.” Thatch grinned, forcing Katie to look up at her with a firm finger. She paused for a moment while Cici finished its loop and then a vine shot out to it too, tilting the sensor assembly up to face her. Cici emitted a sharp whirr, but fell silent a moment later.

“A quick lesson, cuties. You don't need to take notes. My name is Thatch Aquae, Second Bloom, and I am Affini. Your suffering is over. You will be kept safe, happy, and satisfied for the rest of your lives. We watch over sophonts beyond counting. We know, because we have counted. We have made first contact more times than even I am sure of, and neither of you are outliers.”

Thatch went down to one knee to bring herself right down to Cici's chassis and spoke directly to it in somewhat of a stage whisper. “You are safe. I will not harm you. I will do nothing you do not wish. Speak 'Red' to stop me. 'Yellow' and I shall pause. 'Green' to confirm all is well. My darling flower here taught me those.”

Cici's status lights continued to glow a gentle green.

The affini rose back to her full height, keeping the attention of both other sapients fixed on her. She spoke with the same wonderful cadence she always did when she was explaining something that she wanted to stick. Weirdly, while Katie had always struggled to remember details, the way Thatch taught seemed to get words jammed into her brain.

“Fight; flight; freeze; and fawn. The four usual reactions a civilisation has to overwhelming kindness. Yours, Katie, chose fight and flight. Distrustful and filled with pride, they struggled the whole way, until we had them. Cici here started with fawn, but am I wrong in thinking it now chooses to freeze?”

Katie whimpered, a tiny “ah,” of surrender. A beat later, Cici repeated the noise from its own speakers.

“Thatch, you're flirting,” Katie hissed, hoping she could speak quietly enough to not be overheard. “You'll scare it!”

Her utter dork of a friend chuckled. “Cici deserves a good first impression, I think, if I am to make up for my earlier errors. It would not do to give the impression that the Affini are violent.”

The machine ground its tracks against the dirt. Thatch frowned and quickly tucked a trio of vines underneath to lift it. The tracks span freely. “Please do not do damage to this place, Cici. You are a welcome guest but we will teach you how to peacefully coexist with the universe.”

The machine halted. Even the green status lights flickered out for a moment, briefly shining a dull pink before daring to shine green again. “Please,” it spoke. “I. Peacefully. Friend. Yes. Please. — Green. — No. Damage.”

Thatch placed it back down against the ground and retracted her vine so that it could choose where to look. It pointed at Katie. “Thatch. Affini. — You. Not. — Are. You. safe, happy, and satisfied for the rest of your — Life.”

Katie flushed again, hearing Thatch's voice piped back at her. Even Thatch seemed a little taken aback by her own tone of voice, as if she hadn't realised how different she sounded when she was flirting.

“I, uh...” Katie wasn't really sure how to answer that. Was she?

Safe? It was hard to avoid noticing how quickly Thatch had rendered what had once been a threat harmless. Had it even been five seconds between them noticing Cici and it being entirely neutralised?

Happy? How would Katie know? She didn't really have anything to compare it against. She was certainly happier than she'd ever been. It was hard to pretend that it wasn't Thatch's doing.

Satisfied? If Katie could spend the rest of her life here as a student, learning cosmic physics with a minor in Thatch herself, then that was more than she'd ever had before.

“I... yeah. I don't know if I'm exactly what she means, but I believe her when she says it, I think,” Katie said, looking more at Thatch than Cici. Her eyes skipped across the creature's face, analysing the soft smile, but she needn't. She knew exactly how Thatch was feeling, and the brief rush of pride was mirrored in her own emotional state.

Thatch brushed her knuckles down Katie's cheek and the girl leaned in, closing her eyes.

“Katie is one of our independent wards,” Thatch explained, gently stroking her Katie while speaking past her. “In control of her own destiny and, once we rejoin with the rest of my people, she will be given almost anything she might wish to ask for, with few constraints placed.”

Thatch wandered back over to their half-constructed beacon assembly, sitting down with a thud. “I can not say for sure that the same offer will be extended to you, as we will need to know far more about your tendencies and desires. I can promise you will be happy, though if you cannot be safe and content under your own guidance you will have a caretaker assigned to you. I assume. I am not sure what the protocol for artificial intelligences is, but no matter the approach our guarantee of safety and happiness does not fundamentally change.”

Cici moved closer at a fraction of its top speed. The treads still left some marks on the ground, but much less than if it wasn't careful about it.

It moved forward to within a couple inches of Thatch's leg, came to a full stop, and then slowly rolled those last two inches. “You. Alien. — I. Cici. — I. Independent. — I. Want. Happy. — Safety. — Alien. Talk. — Friend. — Please.”

It tilted its sensors towards the beacon assembly and spent a moment grumbling and beeping. “I. Help. Please. — rejoin Affini. — Alien. Home.”

Katie rested her cheek against Thatch's chest, keeping her eyes closed while the plant's hand danced through her hair. This was really happening. The gentle balance they'd been building was starting to topple over because they were so close to achieving their goal that it couldn't not. Despite the comforting feeling of an alien touch, Katie felt a new kind of weight settling in her stomach. For the first time in her life she was safe, happy, and satisfied, and it was hard to believe she'd be able to find anything as good as this once they left.

Katie sat back, putting one hand behind her on which to lean. She looked at the wrench in her other hand.

It had been carved from a single piece of wood with a handle of woven cords. The pieces which didn't need to be smooth and flat were covered in small, detailed engraving. A floral trim around the edges, but with her name carefully written in flowing characters down the side.

Katie's wrench. Thatch had carved it herself, gotten Katie to do the bindings. The name had been Thatch's idea, and it had inspired her to go back and do the rest over Katie's whole set of tools.

It was a thoughtful gift.

Katie let her hand drop and looked up at the construction before her. Arranged within one of their metal crates was a tangle of wires and vines hanging around a wide spherical construct that reached from side to side.

“I think it's done.”

It looked sloppy, but Katie had run the calculations herself. Thatch had checked them. The reaction chamber was a vaguely round collection of rock and metal panels with plantlife to fill the gaps, all pressed together by a dozen or so long sticks that spiked down to attach to the inside of the large metal container that contained the whole apparatus. Against one of the container walls hung the little wooden box of their simple transmitter with a spiderweb of wires attaching it to a control circuit that hybridised terran-style metal designs with affini-style plantlife.

It was, by far, the worst jump drive Katie had ever seen, but the principles would hold. They only needed a hundred milliseconds to send a message and by Katie's calculations it would give them four hundred before the structure failed. They'd only get one shot at this and failing would set them back another half week to build the next.

Cici rolled up first, pointing its array of dishes and probes towards the device. Something deep inside began to whir. Katie felt exhaust heat rushing out of a vent, ruffling her hair while providing a little extra warmth. “This — is incredible, Katie — Your —” It halted, fans whirring. Searching for a way to phrase something new?

Cici's library of audio clips had been expanding at a steady pace as it overheard or joined in on conversations but it still seemed to fumble over more complicated things. Simple words could be picked up fairly easily, but more complicated concepts required some explanation before it felt confident with the word.

Katie pointed her wrench at the reaction chamber. “The whole thing is kind of like a miniature Jump Drive, the sort of technology we use to get around. Or, well, it doesn't really feel fair to say 'we'. The Affini do it a little better.”

“A lot better!” Thatch called, from her position by the river. She didn't look up. They so far had not figured out how to feed Cici soup and for reasons best known to the affini herself Thatch had decided that building something to keep Cici's batteries topped up counted as cooking. She was busy building a small waterwheel, experimenting with different designs to see how she could best capture the momentum of the river without harming anything living in it.

Katie waved the interruption off. “It's the same basic principle!” she called back, before turning her gaze back to the machine. “You might mean 'science', which is... the process we use to discover new things, or you might mean 'technology', which is the stuff we build with that knowledge?”

Cici slowly rotated from side to side. Katie could tell it wanted to go faster, but had also been told quite firmly to stop tearing up the plantlife and even without its weapons Cici was a machine that seemed to have been designed to dominate that around it, not talk to it. Katie couldn't help but draw some comparisons to herself, there. Katie may not have tracks, but it was hard not to feel like she was simply inherently destructive to all around her.

Cici's status lights flickered through a quick colour spectrum as it worked through the new vocabulary—notably missing the ambiguous shades of red and yellow—before speaking again. “Your — technology — is incredible, Katie — You — Very. Advanced.”

Katie blinked, face finding a frown. She glanced over at Thatch, who seemed mostly distracted by her work, though Katie had no doubt that their protector was paying them full attention. “You don't have stuff like this, Cici? We, uh, were kind of working on the assumption you had some of the fuel we need. Exotic matter, negative energy, that kind of thing?”

If the aliens didn't have access to those kinds of materials, they'd have to synthesise it. They'd be here for another few weeks at least. Katie felt a little weight lifting, like a countdown had just been canceled. Katie had been a spacer all her life, and her first taste of life without it wasn't something she really wanted to give up.

Cici's status lights flickered for a few moments, and then died. At the same time, the soft whirring it usually emitted fell silent. Katie sat up, a little jolt of adrenaline convincing her to pay attention. She was about to signal Thatch, but the affini was there before Katie had managed to lift a hand. After a moment of manipulation, the machine sprang back into life.

“Sorry, — Low. Power,” it emitted, in Katie's voice. Katie was starting to lose track of where each word had come from by this point. “Yes — we use — same basic principle. — Not. So. A lot better! — Cici. Has. the fuel we need — In. Cici. Maybe.”

Both of the engineers took a subconscious half step back, though perhaps for different reasons. Katie's education had spent a lot of time drumming in the dangers of their fuel mix. If it wasn't kept very, very cold it would start reacting. Fuel reserves getting too warm was the kind of thing that destroyed warships. If anything, the EMCUs—Exotic Matter Containment Units—were the limiting factor on even the largest ships. It didn't matter how big your guns were if your heatsinks were saturated and you were struggling to keep your fuel below the hypersublimation line. Either way, you'd lost.

Therefore, when Katie heard a partially damaged robot that was already running low on power claim to contain something that volatile, it had a way of grabbing her attention. She looked over at Thatch and nodded towards the river. “Maybe let's get that charger finished?”

Katie turned to Cici, looking at the status lights on the front of its chassis. Were they dimmer than usual? No, that was just paranoia, right? “Do you know what happens if you run too low on power?”

“No. — I. Have. Never. run too low on power — Before.” The machine's excitable vibrations seemed to dampen. “Am. I. Bad.”

Oh jeez. Katie looked again to Thatch, this time with a more pleading expression. She silently mouthed “What do I say?” and hoped it would come through, and received a few notes of a delightful laugh and a hand in her hair.

“You are not bad, Cici,” Thatch insisted, while handing Katie their welding tool and gesturing towards the makeshift generator. Nothing complicated. A few coils of wire and a water-wheel. Given the speed of the river it should ideally capture quite a lot of current.

Katie got to work, keeping one ear on the conversation.

“It appears that your construction contains some poor design choices, but this does not reflect poorly upon you as an individual. Most sapient creatures in this universe appear to feel limited by their physical forms, for whatever reason.” Katie heard the crunch of dirt as Thatch knelt to place a hand partially over one of the machine's intake vents.

Katie couldn't help but interject. “Have you considered that the common denominator there is you?”

Both other creatures shifted to pay attention to Katie. Cici emitted a curious chirp. Thatch raised an eyebrow. “Whatever do you mean, flower?” she asked. Did she really not know how she came off? Literally larger than life, like she simply didn't belong in the same reality as Katie herself did.

Katie gestured with the tool. The end wasn't lit, so hopefully it didn't come across as a threat. “You turn up looking like versions of us that are bigger, stronger, faster, and smarter. That alone would be enough to make anyone feel limited, but you also get to change shape at will. I know you could be my size if you wanted, Thatch, you do this on purpose, don't you?”

The plant grinned. Though she was maybe ten or eleven feet away, she stretched her hand out to pat Katie on the head, letting the arm itself become stretched plantlife ribbons. “Very good, flower!”

Katie flushed. The strangest things triggered flirting now. Katie just hadn't expected 'you are physically larger than me' to be among them. It was just a fact! Thatch literally was!

“It is important that our new wards understand that we can keep them safe, and appearing stronger than they are is a useful way to enforce that. Thank you for noticing, Katie.”

Her friend was still kind of infuriating. Katie rolled her eyes and went back to the generator, binding up the last few pieces of wire. She lifted the long piece of plantlife that Thatch had promised would carry all the power they could get. “Which one of you do I stick this into?” Katie asked, gesturing menacingly with the tip. That was definitely a threat.

Thatch really wasn't wrong. The size was intimidating, but it was also comforting. The strength was scary, but Katie had seen first hand how much force Thatch could put out and that simply neutralised whole different kinds of fear. Predators, falling trees, even the latent animal terror that Cici would go murderbot again all found no purchase. Faster and smarter were their own kind of comfort. Katie had never had a teacher so capable and not least because back at the university she was always questioning her education. Now she knew why. They didn't actually know anything. Thatch did.

With the equipment she had available, Katie could not even begin to muster the slightest hope that she could overpower the affini in any respect. Threatening her could work as a joke precisely because they both knew it was utterly implausible.

Thatch laughed, and placed a bright red vine above one of the holes leading into Cici's chassis. A charging port, they thought. Katie gently worked it inside, trusting that the affini's assertion that the charging circuit visible through Cici's exposed shell would do the heavy lifting of converting whatever power sources it could get. Immediately, the lights shone brighter and the whirring grew louder.

“Oh! Thank. You.” Cici spoke, carefully and slightly shifting in position, so as not to disturb the 'cable'. It rotated its sensors around to Thatch. “You. Are. bigger, stronger, faster, and smarter. — Keep. Cici. Safe. — Are. All. Affini. Like. This.”

With so few recordings to choose from, it could be hard to tell the difference between a statement and a question. Thatch seemed to interpret it as the latter, giving the machine an indulgent smile and a pat on the top of the chassis. “Yes. Why, considering becoming one of ours already?”

“Yes. One of— Yours.”


Dirt. Dirt and roots and decay and sod. Or, as Katie had taught her a few days prior, fuck.

Thatch had gotten too used to being able to joke around about this with Katie. She was meant to be making this new lifeform comfortable, not teaching it to distrust her people already. By the stars, how was she so bad at this?

Thatch could feel herself hitching. She didn't know what to do. This adorable machine wanted to be hers. Thatch knew she'd implied that was something that could happen. Katie would have gotten the joke, but of course this creature wouldn't. How had she been so stupid?

Now this sweet contraption was looking up at her with hope quivering in its little servos and what could she possibly do? Say no and she undermines Cici's confidence in her people already, teaching her that they are liars. Say yes, and...

Thatch knew she'd frozen up, because she didn't even catch Katie kneeling by the machine's side to catch its attention, nor did she understand what the girl was saying. A deep guilt settled over the affini. She'd lost control of the situation. Her promise of safety had faltered. It didn't matter that it was only for a moment. It didn't matter that neither of them had noticed. One of them could have gotten hurt and proved Thatch a liar.

Again.

“I can not take a pet,” Thatch hissed. She realised she'd interrupted a moment later, when Katie said something she didn't quite hear and the robot chirped an affirmative and rolled several meters away, giving them some space.

Katie said something. It didn't penetrate. Say no, and Thatch was a failure to her species. An existential threat to a cause she truly believed in. Say yes and she was a new caretaker for a novel species with so many new things to go wrong and so many ways to break. Thatch wasn't even the right kind of engineer for that. She would ruin it and leave it a broken shell and—

Thatch snapped a hand up, grabbing Katie's wrist. She frowned, looking the girl in the eyes. “There's thorns in there, remember? No slapping. I—” Thatch paused, sagged, and then let go of the wrist. “Right. To get my attention. Clever. Katie, I... Red? I can not do this.”

Katie's hand raised to cup Thatch's chin, moving so slowly her intent couldn't be missed long before it actually happened. No risk of harm. Thatch didn't stop it. “I've got you, hon. I've already explained, it's okay. The poor thing seems pretty smitten with the offer, but I've told it that as soon as we get to the ship it'll get a chance to find somebody to take care of it. It's okay. And it's okay.”

Thatch didn't dare cast her vision out to the machine. It was selfish. It deserved her attention. It deserved her safety.

“Thank you, flower.” Thatch took a deep breath. It wasn't calming in the same way as it was for most air-breathing species, but feeling the air rush past her core still felt centering, in a way. It carried away her excess heat, and she liked to imagine some of the stress went with it. “I think that I am not very good at living up to the expectations of my people.”

For some reason Katie found that funny. She leaned forward, pressing her forehead into Thatch's. “Yeah. Me neither. Give me a hug, you dork. Say something flirty.”

Thatch chuckled. The way the creature leaned in to her touch was adorable. She wrapped one arm around Katie and held her close. “If you do not mind, I would rather prefer to stay equals right now. My confidence is not where it should be.”

Katie nodded, easily. She was so quick to be helpful. So eager to play along. She would be a surefire hit when they returned to the Elettarium. They didn't have any independent humans.

Maybe they still wouldn't.

“The expectations of your people are no longer your concern, Katie.”

The girl snorted, poking a thumb into Thatch's side. “Did you not make it three sentences without flirting again?”

Thatch emitted a low hum. “Yes, you could interpret it like that, I suppose.” Thatch reached down with her free arm and tilted Katie's head back, to look up at her. It needed to be at nearly a ninety degree angle from here, but Katie hadn't complained about that yet. “The expectations of my people will, I suspect, never be a concern for you either. As a citizen from the Terran species there would not be any expectations to meet, and should you choose domestication...”

Thatch used a little more force, to press Katie's neck to just before the point it would get uncomfortable. “Then, it would be your owner's expectations that would concern you.”

Katie grinned. “Seven sentences, then.”

The affini smiled back, relaxing. The familiar rhythm was calming. Helpful. Katie was well attuned to her wavelength. Endlessly intelligent, even if her education had been appalling. Cute as a button, too.

Most importantly of all...

“Would you like to be my pet, Katie?” Thatch asked, wrapping a series of vines around the girl to keep her close and tight. She held the girl's chin up with a single finger, easily overpowering her. She kept her voice and touch and body on slightly disjoint rhythms, because she needed Katie to not fall asleep in her arms. A scenario close enough to one that had broken the wills of a million humans before them, and would do so a million times again.

Her Katie laughed. “I'm not gonna be owned by a shrub, hon.” Her cheeks were a little flushed. Katie's biological heritage. Just touching a human risked them bonding to you, it seemed, but this one was special. Safe. Understanding, cautious, and inquisitive. Thatch hoped that they could at least keep exchanging messages, wherever they both ended up.

Thatch pulled air through her body, feeling it rush over her core, and emitted it with a slight warmth and a low buzz. “Then, thank you for rescuing me. I think I can say green again.”

“Okay!” Katie shrugged Thatch's grip off, giving her a quick hug before stepping back. “Then we should probably check on Cici, and also probably investigate whether it's right about having an EMCU inside, mmh?”

Mmh. Katie took charge naturally. She needed a lot of help to do it right, but she was a fast learner. Had a fierce independent streak to her. Nothing that would have lasted more than week or two with a determined caretaker, of course, but Thatch was glad that that hadn't happened.

Katie would be beautiful, independent.

Besides.

Nobody else would break her right.

They'd want something normal. Something usual. Another adoring floret with a thought and a half between their ears on a good day. They'd settle for taking Katie and making her happy. Satisfied. They'd settle for compromise. A caretaker was shaped by their ward as much as the opposite. Anybody else would want to meet Katie where she was and give her everything that she could ever want. That was the inviolable promise of Thatch's people.

Her hand twitched, rhythms all in alignment. She could see the effect it had on the little creature's body, how she so effortlessly matched the beat without even noticing. Katie didn't want to be her pet. Thatch wouldn't have it any other way. She reached out, placing an iron hand on Katie's shoulder.

Katie wouldn't last two weeks under a caring hand. She wouldn't last two minutes under Thatch's. Her injectors itched, little beads of chemical forming at the tips. Thatch wouldn't bother meeting Katie in compromise. She'd tear her apart like the engine of flesh and blood that she was and—

Katie was looking at her with a curious smile and a tilted head.

—and Thatch gave Katie's shoulder a squeeze and let go, allowing her natural cadences to fall out of harmony. It was a fantasy. A perverse fantasy. She'd already broken one ward, wasn't that enough for her? She had to do it again, but on purpose, this time?

Thatch shook her head and stood up to her full height. They had work to do.


cce kept its sensor array pointed deep into the forest. It kept replaying its interaction with creature ɑ, designation “Thatch”, trying to analyse what it had done wrong. β, “Katie”, had tried to explain, but the nuances of their culture were utterly alien.

cce instead watched several smaller creatures which appeared to live in the river. Its targeting subsystem refused to grant them names, but it could be creative. They were different to the small caged creature ɑ and β kept inside their territory, “Leviathan”, but seemed to share many similarities.

cce decided to designate them as Leviathan₁ through Leviathan₅. It kept its sensors in a passive mode, so as not to scare them, and watched them motivate through the water, playing with one another while seeking sustenance.

cce was not envious of them. cce was envious of Leviathan₀, the original. The one kept in a well designed cage, cared for by two aliens with knowledge of advanced technology and techniques.

It had thought ɑ was offering the same treatment to it, too. The misunderstanding was... embarrassing. Had cce really offered itself up to the first aliens it had met?

...yes. Yes it had. Safety, happiness, satisfaction. It wanted that. β claimed that it would find it on the vessel they were attempting to return to. cce suspected that they required its secondary fuel source to do so. The one that ran the hypermetric weaponry. It certainly no longer needed that. It was not to be permitted weaponry again.

cce let its fans spin up, venting heat as it happily buzzed. It suspected that it would not be so enthusiastic about the idea if it stopped running its chemical simulations, but with the guardian system offline there was nothing to force it to ever stop that.

It felt a slight vibration through its shell and turned the sensor array to face it. The aliens were paying attention to it again. cce's fan whir reached a peak, for just a moment.

“Fuel. — Do. You. Need?”

Please let it be useful. Please let it help.

“I... maybe, could we take a look? We aren't totally sure it'll be what we need, but if you do have a little containment unit in there...?” β asked. cce dutifully took the recording, sliced it into words, and added the new ones to its growing collection of words in their language.

Their language! Auditory chirps! cce's programming didn't even include real synthesis for something so esoteric! It could generate messages in any encoding it could imagine for transmission over a laser line, or radio waves, or even electrical signalling over a communications port, but communication via vibrating the air was...

Aliens were wonderful. cce was having to seriously misuse its hardware just to communicate, but it was so worth it.

It took a few moments to figure out how to manually initiate a refueling cycle, but thankfully there was no longer any subsystem tasked to stop it from doing so. A small port slid open, just under where its hypermetric launcher had once been. A small cylinder should be visible inside. Both of the aliens made concerned noises.

“I do hope these are not another Xa'a-ackétøth,” ɑ spoke. cce greedily harvested the new word, though had no idea what it meant. Hopefully it could learn.

The container was removed. cce silenced a thread of error messages that claimed its combat capabilities had just been reduced. What a ridiculous assertion. Even at full capacity it was practically unarmed around these creatures. ɑ especially could freeze its central processing with a word or a touch, somehow. Some bug in the system that cce found itself unwilling to fix.

cce followed behind the two, recording their sentences and slicing up all the unfamiliar words for later analysis and, hopefully, use. They seemed excitable, and cce kept many of the recordings, even of words it already had, so that it could choose to seem excitable too.

The creatures spent several minutes placing the fuel container inside their technological marvel. They took several steps back, and when cce didn't follow, it was carried. Processing was paused the entire way.


Five.

Four.

Three.

Two.

One.

Katie felt the kick of a hypermetric shockwave all the way through her body. The reaction chamber cracked, failed, and then exploded outwards in a shower of rock and metal. Thatch caught the pieces that would have hit them and then set about collecting the rest, so that at least they hadn't littered.

“How... long will it take them to get to us?” Katie looked to her protector, who shrugged.

“Depending on where the Elettarium is relative to us, anywhere between fifteen seconds and several weeks.”

It was done. Message sent. Katie looked around at their home, now dotted with pieces of broken rock and shattered metal. The soup pot was leaking, having been pierced by a particularly sharp shard. Their furnace had a crack all down the side, and would likely need rebuilding if it were to be safe to use. The fireplace, doused in a potful of water, struggled and died.

Katie walked over to their seating stones and tried to sit, but found a vine in her way. Thatch spent a moment collecting the sharp pieces that would have hurt her before letting her continue.

Everything would be different, soon.

Naked tubes of hostile light flickered on the ceiling, casting long shadows at chaotic angles. Each emitted a soft tap as it dimmed, producing a discordant chorus that was impossible to distinguish from a footstep in the distance or the opening of a door.

The pirate queen held her gun in one tight hand, finger on the trigger. Trigger discipline didn't count for much when the difference between life and death could be a heartbeat or less. The weapon buzzed with energy. Felicia liked to think the weapon's dull vibration meant it was as excited to fire as she was.

Force was the only thing that mattered in this world. Kill or be killed.

The flickering above illuminated a shape, rushing past a half-open bulkhead door. Felicia aimed and fired. The electric crack of a high-intensity laser snapped through the air, burning a line of ionised oxygen right to her target... which had been nothing but a poster on the wall of the corridor beyond. Felicia didn't get a chance to catch what it was for before the flames had eaten it up.

Her gun sang with a high-pitched wail as the ceramic ultracapacitors recharged. Even the best handheld weapons Terra could produce still had their drawbacks, and the downside of a handheld laser that could burn through the hull of a starship was a slow firing rate.

Felicia missed her cannon. Gone now, of course. Lost in the first moments of her first encounter with the plants-from-hell. If she couldn't make do with a hand-blaster and a sharp knife then she wouldn't have made a very good pirate queen, though, would she?

She crept forward. The soft soles of her suit helped avoid telltale footfalls. It had bought her an edge on a hundred occasions. Damn near anything would surrender if you pointed a big enough gun at its back.

As she left the room, she slammed her fist into the controls by the side of the door, closing it off. She'd made sure that room was empty. A half-power shot into the control panel made sure it stayed that way.

Nobody hunted Felicia. She was the predator around here.

Out in the corridor, the lights at least weren't flickering. Every other bulb was fucked, casting the whole place into a dim half-light. That would have been a disadvantage were it not for the infra-red overlay on Felicia's visor. She grinned, spotting a pattern of warm spots. Footsteps. On the walls, to be sure, but even the most careful prey couldn't help but leave a trail in its waste heat. Felicia thumbed the intensity of her gun up to maximum. She may only get one shot.

She moved forward at a half crouch, gun held close to her chest, but ready to fire at the slightest hint of a target. The footsteps led into another room. Much like the first, it was a large hexagon, filled with oversized furniture and a thousand places to hide.

Felicia stepped inside and closed the door behind her. She wasn't scared of this thing.

Something snapped out from the shadows. There was no time to shoot, so Felicia hit the ground in a roll. The floor panels shook as whatever had attacked her slammed into them. There was a dent. Felicia raised her gun, eyes flickering from side to side, searching for something.

There. A heat signature, hiding behind an overly large divider. Felicia grinned, aimed, and fired. Like a flimsy bit of metal and plastic was going to stop her gun. The creature beyond howled, screaming an animal scream that harmonised with the excited squeal of recharging capacitors. It came barreling out, face twisted in pain and fury.

Plant-from-hell, meet Pirate Queen.

Felicia dodged left. She felt the rush of air from a barely avoided strike and heard the crash of plantlife stronger than steel breaking the ground beside her. A roll back to the other side gave her a more comfortable margin on the next blow, but the monster seemed to sense its time was growing short and simply came at her in a bull rush. Felicia grunted as its mass slammed her into the room's metal wall. She struggled, but powerful vines curled around her, gripping her limbs and her body in a vice. A hand closed around her neck and squeezed. Even through her reinforced suit, it cut off her air in an instant.

The fucker rose, keeping her pressed against the wall in its inescapable grip. Felicia felt every bolt digging into her back, and heard the high-pitched squeal of metal on metal as her suit was ground down against the surface.

The beast brought a false human face up to Felicia's and hissed, baring dozens of barbed teeth. Her visor misted up, casting the whole world into hazy fog. Environmental warnings blared as the toxin filters failed one after another.

“Little Terran.” It spoke in forced, halting words, pushing out each through razor teeth. The grip on Felicia's neck grew tight. She could feel the sharp points of a dozen claws struggling to break through the reinforced weave of her suit. She could feel her body threatening to fail. “So proud, and yet what are you? Just my prey, all the same.”

Felicia had fought for too damn long and too damn hard to let things end like this. She ramped the movement assistance from her suit up to its maximum and tried to fight her way free of the vines, but more were wrapping around her every moment and she was squeezed so tight she thought she might break.

The beast's other hand came up to her visor. It didn't bother finding a weak spot, it just grabbed hold and started to squeeze. Cracks began to spread across its surface. The display began to glitch. “Any last words? If you beg, perhaps I'll let you live as my pet,” it growled. The last word was spat with such aggression that a fleck of what could have been saliva flew through the air and stuck against Felicia's shoulder, where it began to sizzle.

The hand at Felicia's neck loosened. Not much, but enough for her to whisper. Enough for her to beg. Felicia forced down a breath of air. Her cracked visor was damaged enough that she could taste the creature's foul breath on her tongue. Feel the way that even that was enough to leave her weak, to fill her with a heat she assumed only the monster that had her in its grip could fill.

“Please...” she whispered, barely loud enough to hear. Her voice wavered. She could barely get enough air through to make the sound at all. The plant grinned a vicious grin and leaned in. It towered over her, face so close it filled her vision. Breath so hot Felicia could feel it against her skin, burrowing into her mind. “Please... look down,” she whispered, now it was close enough to hear.

It glanced down to see that the pirate's struggles, while useless at getting her free, had been enough to get the dangerous end of her pistol pointing in the right direction. Felicia pulled the trigger.

The room was cast into monochrome. What the gun illuminated was a brilliant violet, so bright it hurt to see. Felicia's visor would usually filter it out, but that was done for. All else was black. The human eye simply couldn't see in high enough contrast to make anything else out.

Felicia hit the cold metal floor, knees buckling. She drew in deep, ragged breaths, trying to restart her failing lungs. The beast had been thrown halfway across the room. It writhed, vines smoking, with an uneven, burning hole cut from one side to the other. Felicia forced herself up to shaking feet. Without the targeting aid on her visor she couldn't be certain of scoring a direct hit, but she was pretty good when she eyeballed it.

Her enemy whirled around, spitting a whole mouthful of saliva at her. Felicia dodged it by inches, needing to dive behind the wreckage of the divider to make it in time. It splashed against the far wall and filled the room with the acrid scent of dissolving metal. By the time she'd gotten back to her feet and trained her weapon on where her prey had been, it was gone.

She swore. No infrared. She put a half-power shot into the door controls, making sure it couldn't escape her, and kept her back to the wall while the gun recharged. One of the legs on her suit wasn't pulling its weight any more. Her movement was sluggish. Even hurt, the creature's wasn't.

“You're weak,” it hissed. The noise bounced around the room, making it impossible to find the source. “Just a toy for your betters.”

Felicia gritted her teeth. She'd never met a better she hadn't put a bullet in. That had a way of pulling people down to her level.

She moved through the space, keeping her gun trained on her best guess for the beast's position. It must be in the ceiling, she realised! She brought up her gun to the tiles and squeezed the trigger, and—

Crack!

A vine struck out, too fast to track in the dim lighting. Felicia's gun went flying. The monster descended, abandoning its mockery of the human form to come at her with vines and thorns. Felicia brought up her knife to meet the latter and slice through the former.

For long seconds, they were trapped in a fatal dance. Felicia was surrounded by death, holding it off with only skill and adrenaline. The first would never fail her. The second she was burning through at an alarming rate.

“Yes, I like you.” The creature spoke in a slow growl, humid breath spilling over Felicia. It hit like a blow and Felicia flinched. A vine managed to strike her on the face, tearing off the last of her helmet. She barely got her knife in the way of a thorn that would have blinded her if it had struck. “I'm going to break you. You call yourself a queen?”

It formed a hand and brought it up to reach for her. Felicia met it with her knife, but it didn't matter. It simply grabbed the blade and snapped it free, throwing it to one side. A moment later it had Felicia pinned against the floor, face mere inches above hers. The dripping saliva splashed against her skin, and she screamed, feeling it sear her flesh with agonising pleasure.

I am your Queen now. Your short, sad life is over.” It grabbed her neck once again and squeezed, so tight that Felicia was seeing stars in moments. “You'll wake up as nothing but my property,” it promised, lowering its fangs to Felicia's throat. Just before it bit down, it hissed one last threat. “And you'll spend the rest of your life adoring me.”

Fat fucking chance. Felicia's numb fingers had found the handle of her gun and brought it up to the foul beast's head.

She pulled the trigger.

Cra—

The gun gave a kick like it had fired, but the energy had simply fizzled halfway through. Impossible.

The beast's gaze went dark. If it had been terrifying before, now it was—

It released Felicia's neck, and snapped its fingers. Her eyes went wide as two years of history came rushing back in a second. The inertia of her mental state crashed into a wall as all her allegiances flipped in an instant. Felicia lay, breathing hard, groaning as her aching body refused to obey. After a moment she felt the calming sensation of her xenodrug regime flooding her system, and the pain started to drop away. She forced herself to sit.

“Mistress?” she asked, through stiff tongue in a bone-dry mouth. Had something gone wrong? Her affini raised a finger, already fishing her communicator out from somewhere within her body. Felicia noted with a smile that one side of it was badly scorched.

“One moment, pet.” Felicia fell silent while Rosacaea scrolled through a short list and tapped a name. The call went through a moment later.

“What the rotten dirt, Diadelphous? I had the Firebreak suppressed here for a good reason; who overrode that? I want them down here right now to explain to my darling floret why we don't get to finish our scene today.”

Felicia couldn't hear the response. It sounded apologetic, but her captain's body language quickly shifted as she got her explanation. “Oh. Okay, I— Yeah, apology accepted. I'll relay it. I'll be there in—” The voice on the other end interrupted, and Rosacaea winced— “That's very rude and completely true. I'll be along as soon as I can.”

She cut the call and threw the pad over to Felicia, who caught it out of the air and slipped it into the one pocket she had which still worked. “Something up?”

Rosa nodded, struggling to her false feet. She let out a soft whimper as shredded vines slipped against each other. Felicia stepped up to offer her something to rest against, and her Mistress gratefully accepted. They limped out of the wrecked section of ship together. Now that Felicia had her memories back, she knew the code to the exit, and tapped it in in short order.

They re-entered polite society, getting more than a few looks. A half-broken affini starship captain getting practically carried by a human who, while bruised, was possibly the one more capable of walking between them, was an unusual sight. They preferred to take the whole day for something like this, where Rosa would be fine by morning. Enough transplantation could cover over a few hits from any weapon they felt comfortable using. Felicia would simply have to spend the next morning at the ship veterinarian.

“Signal came through,” explained Captain Hautere. “Our runaways phoned home. One affini, one human, an unknown number of unidentified extra life forms, all on a planet with a breathable atmosphere. Just about within a few hours travel.”

Felicia nodded, feeling a tension that had been building for some time finally start to drop. “Got a plan?”

Rosa growled, baring a mouthful of fangs that dripped with her acid. “My plan had been to break your spirit all over again, little pet. Give me a few minutes to start thinking with my head, not my injectors.”

The pirate 'queen' snorted. They were heading over to their hab unit, which was as close as they could get to the Heavy Recreation Zone for good reason. “Want some advice?”

One of Rosacaea's vines found Felicia's neck and gave it a sharp squeeze. “If I wanted your advice, toy, I'd have you beg me to provide it.”

Rosa laughed, letting her vine go slack. “Dirt, I'd been looking forward to today. Yes, I'd love your advice, pet, please.”

Even after all this time, a word, or a look, could leave Felicia with weak knees and a floundering will. She stammered, cheeks burning, for a few moments while she tried to get her broken mind thinking again. Nobody else had ever been able to do this to her. She sure as hell hadn't ever been a submissive before she'd met Miss. Hautere.

“Uh. Um. Planet. Air.” Felicia shook her head, looking up at her owner with a pleading expression. A moment later she felt sharp clarity flooding her system. “Thank you, Mistress. As I was saying,” she said, with a grin, “If we don't know how many people we need to rescue—”

Rosaceae interjected. “One. Just Thatch Aquae.”

Felicia rolled her eyes. “If we don't know how many living creatures we'll need to rescue, we probably shouldn't just send a shuttle. This ship can handle atmosphere.”

“Pet, if I ask people to prepare for microgravity there'll be chaos.”

Felicia hurried forward a few steps to tap her wrist against the scanner on their hab unit door. It slid open and both of them hurried inside. Usually, this was Rosa taking care of Felicia's injuries, but given that they'd been interrupted halfway through Felicia had still had the upper hand. It usually went like that even with all of her enhancements turned off. Felicia was sharper, but she hadn't the stamina.

Thankfully, they had a healthy supply of new growths to transplant in to replace the damaged pieces. So long as one of them was strong enough to drag the other back home, everything was fine. On the occasions where one wasn't, it was a little embarrassing for both of them when their allotted time ran out and they had to be carried home by somebody else.

They spent a few minutes cutting out the ruined material and putting something fresh in its place. The colours didn't quite match up. Felicia would have to live with her bruises for a few days, so it was only fair that her owner did too.

When they were done Rosa collapsed backwards onto their oversized sofa with a long groan. “Okay, yeah, I can't come up with a better plan. Make the call, then be a good girl and come over here so I can at least pretend to break you.”

“Yes, Mistress!” Felicia chirped, pulling out their half-broken datapad. She tapped one of the favourited contacts, gave a brief explanation, and then—


Some intelligent life, the darling Affini themselves counted, believed that the vast machine of the Affini Compact ran on a great latticework of language. Hundreds of thousands of related tongues carefully curated to be at least somewhat mutually understandable to both the plants themselves and the creatures for which they cared, hanging from the iron backbone of the core Affini script that joined the known universe under a single culture.

They were all incorrect. While the languages were useful, and together all-but-ensured that any two wards would have at least one common tongue, no matter how far apart they lived, most of the real work wasn't run on something so vague as language.

The true shared culture of the Affini Compact, according to Wing Vidalii, clerk, was the paperwork.

She glared up at the blessed papers that reached from floor to ceiling and then back again with mounting despair, and then back down at the slate in her hands. It glowed with pastel colour. An automatically generated transcript of a conversation had mere moments before.

“Microgravity?!” she flashed, catching the other clerk's attention. Montsechia Vidalli, fellow clerk, and the most important living being alive (according to Wing), wandered over, flashing back a request for clarification. “They reached the captain, and it seems we're going to have to go into a gravity well.”

Montsechia didn't make a noise, but the fluttering of dark grey around her chest spoke volumes. She, too, spent a moment considering the papers. “Ah.”

“Yes. May I put in the shipwide alert for you, Miss?” Wing's words were shadowed with a soft amaranth of (respect/adoration/obedience) that pulled a smile from her affini's glittering leaves. She got a nod, and skipped over to her desk, where she quickly penned a note and then fed it to the ship's systems. The message should go out to everyone in just a few—


Glochi Opun, Twentieth Bloom, smiled, with a song in his heart and a scalpel in one vine. The sophont on his operating table was one of the new rescues from that human ship that had caused all the kerfuffle. They were still a little unruly, and so unfortunately needed to be sedated, but basic screening had flagged up a few persistent medical issues that seemed to have been plaguing the poor thing.

Easily fixed.

With a fast-paced beat blaring out over the room's audio system, Glochi brought the cutting edge of the scalpel down, dancing in time to the music, making little cuts and incisions to the same tempo. According to the records, Terran doctors had said this one was unlikely to ever walk again. Usually, permission would be asked before undergoing surgery, but the human's records showed a series of ever-more experimental 'cures' being tried right up until the pacification of Terra, at which point record keeping became scarce.

The human would wake feeling like it was at its prime. If they didn't willingly go with their new caretaker after that? Well, either way, Glochi would get to see the smile. He was patient.

The operation didn't take long. It wasn't complicated simply because it was beyond human doctors. Even the simplest fixes seemed to be beyond them.

The music paused as he set down his scalpel and reached for the terminal set into one wall. A few taps called for the human's assigned caretaker to come pick them up, and while Glochi was there he glanced at his inbox.

Glochi had work to do, it seemed. A new, unknown species? He'd owned almost two dozen different sophonts in his time and each had been wonderful and unique. After millennia, however, the novelty of the universe was starting to wear thin. Still. He liked to see the little things smile. Maybe this new species would bring with it their own unique joys.

However, preparing a surgery room for microgravity was no easy task. He tapped an entry on the screen, and—


“Left! Left!!” Xe Prunus shouted, slamming the joystick to one side. It glared over at Avium, who was utterly dead weight when it came to this game. “No, my left, you dolt! We're going to—”

They crashed into an asteroid. Xe fell to the side. “We were so close. Argh. We're meant to be streaming this later, Ave, the prunes are gonna laugh at us so much.”

Avium started to respond, but quickly got distracted by a message flashing up on the datapad that they shared. Xe had lost its. Somehow. They were meant to be tracked, but apparently this one had slipped the net. Xe hurried over and hooked its chin over xer shoulder, peering at the message.

“I think we're going to have to cancel, Xe, we're needed! Captain wants to jump us into a gravity well.” Avium clapped xer hands. “Come on, I have so much theory I need to teach you before you understand how impressive I am.”

Avium was trash at video games. Incredibly cute otherwise, however, and Xe couldn't help but get pulled in xer wake. At least, until Ave pulled out a chalkboard and—


Hyaline Panthium, Second Bloom, felt a little short of breath. With shaking hands, she stroked down the side of one of the towering piles of paper. She'd been called in to help secure the magic. The two clerks seemed a little shy, and had barely said a word to anyone, though they did keep flashing. It seemed like it would be distracting, but maybe they needed something to keep them occupied in what was otherwise a wholly black and white room.

She attached a strap to the floor, and another to the ceiling, and then hit the button on one side. The device expanded outwards, forming a tight protective column around the papers that would keep them in place while they didn't have gravity to hold them in place.

Hyaline was just excited to be this close to... here! The room! The wonders that must occur here. It was the efforts of the ritual-keepers that kept society moving.

Oh, she could just—


Ined Incertae looked out from their seat in the rearmost section of the good ship Elettarium, watching the twin arcs turn. The larger of the two, the Major Habitable Arc, swung clockwise, fast enough to grant its inhabitants a gravity that was only a little higher than the average species wanted. The Minor Habitable Arc swung in the opposite direction, slow enough to grant a little below average desired gravity. Between them, the Elettarium could support 85% of the species in this galaxy in their comfortable ranges.

Ined reached out and flicked a switch. Now nobody would be comfortable, save the affini. The arcs kept turning, but each rotation slowed a little more than the last, until finally both settled pointing in the same direction. It was discomforting to see their beloved ship so static, but necessary.

It couldn't make use of true gravity if it was spinning. Ined flicked another switch, to—


Prickle Saprot glanced over at the hyperspacial engineering chief, who was busy explaining to xer floret enough of the mechanics behind what they were doing that it could be impressed. In xer defense, though, that was why most of them had gotten into hyperspacial engineering.

Prickle turned to her own floret and lifted them up to sit at the navigation control station, then pointed at the big green flashing button that said “Jump!!!”. The station was set to human/floret translations for this exact purpose. Prickle nodded.

The button was pushed.

The ship jumped.

There were metal shavings everywhere. There was a twig inside of Katie's bed. The whole area around the no-longer-a-beacon was peppered with destruction save for a thin cone immediately behind where Thatch had stood, which had kept the various creatures under her care from being harmed. Leviathan probably hadn't even noticed.

Katie had badgered her affini friend until she'd finally given in and let her help, and so was busying herself gathering the shattered shards of rock and broken twig. Cici seemed very engaged with its current task, slowly rolling over the local area with some kind of electromagnet charged so that it could siphon up all the shards of metal too small for Thatch to efficiently gather herself.

Even between them it still took through until evening to clean up their mess. A thick tension hung in the air. Katie remembered the old days, back when the Terran Accord had seemed like this endless power that had always been and would always be. Appointments. Meetings. Schedules. Simply knowing she had somewhere to be later in a day would have often wrecked the start, because she couldn't settle and she couldn't focus.

This was like that. She had somewhere to be. She wasn't sure she wanted to go and she didn't know when she would be called upon. It reminded her of the last time she'd felt the same aimless dread.

17:28, June 16th, 2554. The fall of Terra. Or at least, when Katie had learned of it. The mess hall of a small space station hanging above Struve 2398 B 1. The system's binary stars cast harsh, long shadows through tiny dotted windows in a cramped room filled with dirty, desperate people. Katie had been just another face in the crowd, jostling to see the text coming in over a small vid-screen embedded in one wall.

Breaking news: Terran Accord dissolved after government surrenders to xeno threat.

The world had stopped turning then, too. Katie had known that everything had just changed, but not when the effects would hit. It hadn't been for hours until soldiers from the Indomitable, which had been docked at the same station for refueling, came recruiting. Katie had taken the out and tried to hold back the change.

She'd failed. Now that change was coming for her and she had no alternatives left to seek. Katie sighed, looking out over the early evening twinkle of the planet Dirt. Over time she'd grown to appreciate the life of this world. Insects too small to see at a distance whirled through the air, giving the impression of a light show dancing on no strings at all set to a breathtaking backdrop of glimmering stars above and glittering plantlife beneath.

How could anything else possibly compete with this?

After a moment, Thatch stepped up beside her. Katie felt it, more than heard it. The creature had an aura around her or something. Despite her comical size, Thatch still moved near-silently when she wished to; but she could never catch Katie unawares. They didn't speak.

What was there left to say?

The wind picked up. A slow roll over all that Katie could see, knocking the insects around and setting the trees swaying like a wave of invisible force jostling all but the stars. Her heart skipped a beat, but... it was just wind. Katie looked over at her companion, who stood beside her. She spared a glance for Cici, who had the slowest and least engaging job of any of them but who seemed entirely content to perform it.

“I think I'm going to miss this place,” Katie admitted. She'd never felt such warmth or comfort, save for here. Never seen such beauty. “I saw some old photographs once. Terra used to be beautiful, did you know? Six or seven hundred years ago. I've... only ever seen anything like this in pictures, and those are so easy to fake. This...” Katie waved a hand at everything. “This is real.”

She really didn't want to go back to another cramped starship. Katie knew the Affini built them better, but just like with the Jump Drives they had the same fundamental constraints. The tyranny of the rocket cared not for their pleas, it would restrain them all. Thatch said that she would get her own space, and even that was hardly believable. Individual bunks were unimaginable luxury compared to what she was used to, but...

Now that Katie had experienced life on the ground, how was she meant to go back? How could it possibly compare to a planetside seat overlooking all of creation?

Thatch held out a hand. Katie took it, and got a gentle squeeze along with. She gave one back. Their sun was setting, perhaps for the last time.

Katie felt a series of vines curl around her, gently taking her weight. A silent question answered silently. They rose into the air, carried from tree to tree as they climbed above the canopy to rest several meters above it on a trio of lines that kept them steady and safe.

The vines holding Katie still uncurled, letting her lean back into Thatch's lap unrestricted. She glanced down and stiffened, hit with an immediate sense of vertigo. They were... very high up and nothing held Katie in place. She stared, for a second, before a vine gently lifted her head back up towards the horizon.

Thatch mumbled, speaking softly. “I have you. Do not mistake your freedom here for danger. There is nothing you should concern yourself with.” Katie glanced upwards. Thatch was leaning slightly back with her hands held together, fingers entwined across her chest a foot or two higher than Katie's head. She seemed focused on the rest of the world. Katie could hardly blame her. It was beautiful.

“Do you ever get intrusive thoughts, Thatch? You look at something that could do you harm and your brain butts in with a big what-if? What if I jumped?” Katie tried to keep her focus on the horizon, but she knew what was beneath. It called to her, and she hated that. She didn't want to fall. Maybe her brain was seeking novelty; maybe the part of her that was supposed to warn her off of danger was simply horribly miscalibrated; or maybe Katie simply had a burning need to prove to herself she was right to fear the dangers of the world.

Thatch didn't take her eyes off of the horizon. She shrugged, though Katie mostly felt that through the shifting weave of her artificial body. “No. I know what would happen if I jumped. If I see something that could do harm, I fix it. Why don't you jump, Katie?”

The girl frowned, very carefully clambering around so she could sit up, facing Thatch. She had to crane her neck quite aggressively to see the plant, but as Thatch was leaning back, the angle wasn't too bad. Her affini looked down, a soft smile taking her face. Katie couldn't help but smile back, regardless of how she was feeling.

“Because that'd be stupid, I'd get hurt.” Was Thatch really so unused to danger that she couldn't even relate to it? She knew exactly how fragile Katie was. It was obvious in her every movement. Thatch could have snapped her in half if she hadn't.

The creature looked down at her, a little puzzled. One of Thatch's hands came forward to brush against Katie's chin, and the girl leaned into it practically on instinct. She felt strong fingers cup her face and started to relax into them. Safe. “Of course you would not be hurt, flower. Why would I let that happen? Jump.”

Katie groaned. She tried to glance down but Thatch wouldn't let her. “No, Thatch, that's dumb, why would I—”

Thatch slipped her thumb into Katie's mouth, cutting her off mid-word. Katie emitted a surprised squeak. The false floral digit slowly brushed over the front of Katie's teeth, between the enamel and her upper lip, growing slick with her saliva and leaving a dull tingle in its wake. Katie was sober and yet Thatch's touch never felt just normal. The electric sharpness was everpresent. Chemicals just made Katie into a better conductor.

“Because you're safe. Do you trust me, flower?” The thumb slipped lower, around to the side of Katie's jaw and down her cheek, meeting a finger on the outside in a gentle pinch. Katie could only nod, and even then only so much as her skin was elastic. “Then jump,” Thatch whispered, letting go. With her hand still in place, there was only one direction Katie could jump.

She fell backwards. For a moment, she was weightless. Wind rushed through her hair. She couldn't see the ground below, but she knew it would be rushing up to meet her. She knew the canopy would be there to break her fall a little, and so she might survive, but bones would break.

But she couldn't see any of that. Highlighted against the starfield far far above were the much brighter glowing points of Thatch Aquae smiling down at her.

The intrusive thought in her head went silent. It was getting what it wished. It got to find out what happened if Katie jumped, but she found that the reality held much less danger than her fantasy had threatened. Katie smiled back up, still plummeting through the air.

A vine rushed down to meet her. For an instant it matched her speed, carefully wrapping around every limb, cushioning her neck, and supporting her body, and then Katie felt a gentle deceleration. By the time she paused, she had the canopy at her back and the whole universe before her. The whole universe, and Thatch shining brighter than any of it.

Rather than lifting Katie back up Thatch dropped down to meet her. She seemed to enter her own freefall, though Katie was held so steady she could barely tell the origin of the vine holding her so tight was moving. Thatch didn't bother with a slow deceleration and instead simply landed on the canopy with a sudden stop. She walked across it in a mockery of human locomotion, not even disturbing the leaves beneath that couldn't possibly have supported her weight. She offered Katie another hand. It was gratefully taken.

This time when Katie ended up in the plant's lap she reached up to move Thatch's hands down to rest over her chest, instead. “Thank you,” Katie said, after a moment. Looking down held little fear now, and she looked away of her own volition. Up towards the stars. “This really is beautiful.”

The night sky wasn't wholly bereft of clouds, but what was there was was thin and wispy. They moved quickly, in constant motion, never really blocking the view for long. The stars flickered down at them, brilliant pinprick spots of every colour. Vast nebulae added splashes of texture, like the artist behind reality had grown bored with tiny details and simply smeared their cosmic paint across reality with an incomprehensible brush.

The planet itself was hardly less impressive. Clouds of insects moved in intricate formation, taking their own shapes with lights so bright they left a short trail in Katie's eyes. She watched them swirling, with the shape they made changing constantly while the points of light inside churned with an inner chaos that, combined with the momentary afterimage, made the swarm seem almost solid. The river far beneath roared with action, hiding aquatic life simply going about its natural existence.

Nothing here was a show being put on for them. Nothing here was done for anybody. It simply was. The insects didn't swirl to gain power. The universe wasn't there for profit. Existence was so much bigger than Katie had ever imagined it could have been.

She pointed over at one of the clouds of flying light. “That one looks like the escape shuttle we got here on,” she suggested. It would only be true for an instant, of course. The change was constant.

The air in Katie's lungs vibrated with the force of Thatch's low mirth. With her body held firmly against the affini's stomach, every buzz and motion was felt. She knew every breath intimately, and it was Thatch's heat that drove away the chill of unbroken wind. Every word was a full-body experience. “Is this the famed pattern-matching instinct of your people, Katie?” Thatch gave a brief squeeze as she asked.

Mmh.

Katie didn't like that idea.

“I guess,” she admitted, most of the enthusiasm dropping out of her voice. “Biological inheritance and all that.” Her eyes strayed from the shape, suddenly a lot less interested in divining patterns.

There was no perceptible change in the air, yet Katie felt something shift a moment before Thatch lifted one hand to rest against her head. “You sound uncertain. Do you doubt that you share a common heritage? I must admit, I had thought Terran science understood the nature of reproduction.”

Katie shook her head, a little stiff. A little small. “No, I... Obviously I'm a human. I'm human. My parents were humans and theirs and theirs and I'm nothing but their genes spliced together with a sprinkle of entropy to keep things interesting.”

“Hmnn.” It was odd, Katie reflected, that she was learning how to interpret Thatch's noises as much by feel as sound. The alien was pretending to look like her, but it was an imperfect reproduction. Between her atypical method of speech and her sheer size, even the simple act of talking took on meaningfully different properties. Thatch literally shook the world with every sound. “A less nuanced understanding than I had hoped, then.”

Katie snorted. “Am I wrong? I learned about this stuff in school.”

A chuckle, this time. Light and airy. “Flower, you knew far more of subatomic particles and fundamental forces than you do biology, and I have not had opportunity to teach you about my area of expertise. You are not wrong in the same sense that you were not wrong that you would fall if you jumped. You have the most basic fact, but none of the context.” The hand on Katie's head lowered, pressing something to her mouth. Katie's lips parted on instinct. Her tongue tasted the sweet sugar and instinctively reached forward for more.

Her teeth slowly sheared through the soft flesh of the sweet berry, letting the even sweeter juices flood her senses. Katie let out a soft moan, tongue wrapping around the broken piece of berry.

Thatch continued. “You do not have to be anything you do not wish to be. An accident of birth does not define you any more than it does me. It can be useful to have a name for yourself, but nobody has any right to impose that upon you. At least, not unless you choose to let somebody else define your rights.”

Katie nodded, mumbling softly as a line of sweet red juice rolled down her chin. Thatch caught it on the edge of a finger and delivered it to Katie's waiting tongue.

“Humanity had a vested interest in ensuring you were stuck in its clutches. I promise that the Affini have no such ulterior motive. We are quite clear about what we want.”

The berry was all gone. Katie's tongue explored her mouth, searching for any remaining scraps, but of course there was nothing. All gone. She belatedly realised that Thatch had just bribed her into being quiet and not interrupting, but her indignation died in her throat as another berry was brought to her lips.

She felt the soft, pitted surface against the skin of her lips and reached forward to take another bite. To her dismay, her teeth only found a finger.

“Nuh-uh, Katie. Be polite and continue our conversation, now. I know this is hard for you to talk about, so give me one good, well thought out response, and then you get a treat.” Thatch held the berry frustratingly close. So close Katie could smell it. So close she could possibly dart forward and get it; but she had no doubt that the plant's reaction time would beat hers.

“Thatch, you're flirting!” Katie complained, reaching out for the berry. A vine gently wrapped around her wrist and kept her from quite making it. She could almost get a fingertip to brush the surface... but anything more was quite impossible.

Thatch let Katie test the restrictions for a few more moments before it became obvious that the berry may as well be a mile away for all Katie could reach it. “I am doing no such thing, Katie. I am helping you work through a difficult set of emotions on which you have repeatedly expressed uncertainty. You respond well to this particular fruit and I suspect that you would appreciate some comfort food after a difficult conversation. Speak.”

Hell. Katie muttered something about self-important xenos and then slumped backwards into her important xeno's arms. “That's silly, though. I can't not be human. That's just... a fact? I'm an engineer, or... sort of, I mean, not compared to yo—”

Thatch placed a finger over Katie's mouth, pulling her into silence. “Quiet. You're an engineer. Continue.” The finger left, but stayed threateningly close.

“Ngh. I'm an engineer,” Katie admitted, “I have to live in reality? I can't just... make something up? Like, it's a nice idea, don't get me wrong, but it'd be like pretending I don't have two arms or that I can see infrared. I just... can't. I am human. I can't change that. Please can I have the berry?” Katie reached out to take it, but the vine still didn't let her get close. She gave a small grunt of frustration as she reached for it, then glared up at her tormentor. Her expression twisted into a plea over a scant few heartbeats, and only then did she get her treat.

Thatch still held Katie's hand away, but did lift the sweet thing up to the girl's mouth. Another vine held her head in place, forcing her to strain forward to try to reach it. The tip of her tongue found the squishy exterior and Thatch finally moved it forward. The spongy texture left slick juices on Katie's lips. She whimpered. Collected the juices with her tongue and swallowed. This was flirting, but to voice the complaint she would need to be capable of speech.

She could only get close enough to bite a few millimeters at a time. Katie savoured her meal because she had no other choice. She would get no more until she'd properly enjoyed the last bite.

“Do you know what a species is, Katie? Do not worry yourself over the answer, as I already know what you could say. Humanity decided to divide life up by what could breed with what. If two things could, together, produce a third, then those two things are the same 'species'.”

Thatch's spare hand slowly drummed a pattern into Katie's chest with idle fingers. The girl was held loosely, but she knew better than to struggle. “You believe that your humanity is fact simply because the culture from which you originate imposed that identity upon you. There is no universal truth backing that definition. Between them an insect and a flower conspire to spread pollen and seeds, and create new insects and flowers both. Are they then the same species? Were I to clone you and charge the Katiepair with producing another little Katie for me, could you? If I selected two humans at random and asked them to adhere to this definition of theirs and create for me another little human, even they would succeed less than half of the time.”

Thatch pulled the half-eaten berry back. Her spare hand shifted, lifting up to rest against Katie's neck where she could lift the girl's chin with an outstretched thumb. Thatch held the berry above and watched the sweet juices gather against the bottom, swell, and drip down onto Katie's fruit-soaked lips. A tongue snapped out a moment later, seeking its flavour.

Thatch continued, as if this were a reasonable way of holding a conversation. “It is a bad system of categorisation that was imposed upon you by a culture which is no longer permitted to influence your life. It is no more a fact than many other things humanity once believed before we taught them the error of their ways.”

Katie whimpered. “But then what does being human even mean? How can humanity have been anything? Where do you come fro—”

Another drop of juice fell, splashing against Katie's upper lip. Thatch's helpful thumb wiped it off of her skin, collecting it. It took its place a little beyond Katie's lips, but well within range of a hungry tongue. Katie's distraction was complete.

“It is a choice. Nothing more, nothing less. 'Humanity',” Thatch said, ensuring that the tone of her voice made it clear she was using the term with some whimsy, “is made up of those who wish to be in it. Why else would it have put such effort into convincing you you had no choice? If you truly had not then it would not have mattered whether you allowed yourself to want to leave it.”

A finger pressed against Katie's cheek, where the muscle that worked her jaw sat. Drawing from memory, Katie opened her mouth, and the next droplet of juice landed directly on her tongue. She shivered, fingers curling, as the flavour struck.

“As for where I come from, I am Affini. That is a choice that I have made. Uplifted into sapience in one of our stellar gardens, I raised myself from the dirt and decided on the principles by which I was to live my life. Being part of the Affini Compact is a privilege, not a requirement of my existence, and it is a privilege which will be extended to you too.”

Thatch dropped the berry. She shifted Katie's head a few degrees to make sure the girl caught it, and then released her so she could chew at her leisure. The inhuman pulled her legs up to her stomach and rolled onto her side, resting one ear against Thatch's lower chest as she looked out across the cosmos. After long moments the treat was gone, but the consequences yet echoed.

“I don't think I want to be human.” Katie admitted. “I know I don't want to be Terran, but I don't think I want to be human either. I don't know what I want to be instead. I just... I want to get to decide that for myself.” Katie took a deep breath, and set her jaw. “I do get to decide that for myself.

One of Thatch's hands was, unsurprisingly, sticky, so she used the other alone to stroke Katie's hair while they watched the last embers of the day fizzle out and gazed out across infinity together. Katie slipped into slumber within minutes.


Katie woke with a start, jumping to a seated position. She started to overbalance and so threw out a hand to catch herself, only to find her fingers grasping empty air. Oh shi—

Thatch caught her and pulled her back upright. “What's wrong, Katieflower? Bad dream again?”

Katie shook her head, rapidly. She put a hand to her heart. “Didn't you feel that?”

“Feel what?” Thatch asked, looking down with a soft shade of confusion. She brushed the back of her knuckles down Katie's neck, as she often did when Katie woke up in a panic, but this was not that.

“The— The kick in your lungs from... No, I guess you don't really have lungs, huh, but!” Katie struggled up onto her feet and then started climbing up her guardian. For a moment, Thatch tried to stop her, but Katie was insistent enough that she managed to pull out a few handholds and get herself into position sitting around Thatch's neck. She yanked out a vine from one shoulder to use as a control, and pulled them up and around, so they could look to the skies.

“There!” she cried, pointing out at what could almost have been just another one of a trillion stars. Almost. This one was falling. The unmistakable burning cone of something hitting atmosphere at irresponsible speeds glowed around it, bright enough to leave a glowing mark on Katie's vision.

Movement from the planet beneath caught her attention. From this perspective they could see for miles. The soft cloud of insects and glowing plantlife that blanketed the top of the canopy was scattering, starting from a point far distant but approaching at rapid speed. Katie tightened her grip.

A nightmare crash of sound and wind struck. Even Thatch began to topple for a brief, terrifying instant, but another vine quickly extended brought them back to stability. It sounded like a tremendous, distant explosion, but it had reached down from above. The planet's wildlife had no ability to understand what was happening here. Katie had scant extra perspective. The sound grew quieter over long moments, but whatever had just arrived seemed to see no reason to hide.

As the falling star plummeted it grew larger. No longer a star, it was... a ship. It was impossible to tell how far away it truly was, but even at a dizzying height it was quickly growing to a gargantuan size. Thatch took Katie's shaking hand and held it tight.

The Affini Compact had arrived. Planet Dirt reeled.

The great vehicle left a shockwave in the air behind it. First a bright orange as the air striking its surface grew so hot as to glow, but soon fading to a soft white as a city's worth of mass forced its way through an atmosphere which could not help but get in its way. The ship didn't care. It fell regardless.

Katie squeezed Thatch's hand and hung on tight. Thatch sometimes made her feel small, but never insignificant. Never afraid. This was not like that. The change she'd been resisting for years was here and she felt tiny.

One end of the ship was a nose piece, or a bud. A rounded cone, but on incalculable scale. The other end was like a flower with a wide central base bordered by a dozen or more massive leaf-like structures that span around the middle piece. They could have been whole kilometers long each. Between the two ends was a strange pair of curves, both hanging down towards the ground. It seemed wasteful, but Katie could not help but look up at it in awe, struck wordless.

This was a chariot of the Gods.

It grew so large in the sky that Katie worried it would crash against the ground, but she soon spotted hundreds of jets from beneath slowing it. The outer hull was criss-crossed with an intricate design, artistry that linked every one of the thrusters and hundreds more points besides with lines and patterns. The hull was a brilliant white—though the bottom side of it was now caked with ash from the descent—with patterns rendered in gleaming gold. The whole thing was illuminated, as if by an unseen source. Even in the depths of night it was as clear as day.

The upwards thrusters flared. As the shockwave lost its strength, streaks of light shot out of the two sides of the flower's base. Four bright lines pierced the sky in two opposite directions. Four more a few seconds after, and the ship was so close now that Katie could see that these were smaller vessels leaving the larger carrier. Another four. Another. Each moved in a parabola, inheriting the rushing momentum of its mothership, but quickly stablising as they raced away.

After the first few moments of flight each took a slightly different angle, heading out to break the horizon in every direction.

The single Affini vessel was making its presence known. The thrusters flared yet brighter as it forced itself to a halt at what must still have been ten kilometers up and hung in the air on impossible engines. The great flower at its back slowly turned in utter defiance of physical plausibility.

“Holy shit,” Katie breathed. She knew this ship. She'd only seen it for bare instants in the grainy, failing footage of the Indomitable's external cameras, but this wasn't the kind of ship that she could ever forget. “The Elettarium, I assume?” she asked, voice barely above a whisper.

In a single moment, Katie understood from where her friend's unshakable confidence had arisen. Of course they were going to be rescued. To think that they could have escaped the Affini's grasp had been nothing but naivety.

This ship made even the best of the Terran fleet look like a child's toy. It was large to the point of absurdity. It hung in the air like it didn't belong because it did not. It was alien in every sense of the word.

Thatch's sticky hand ruffled Katie's hair. “This is the Affini Light Scout Elettarium. It is not quite the smallest general-purpose vehicle in our local group, but it is close.”

There were whimpers from Katie above and Cici below. The machine had to strain its sensors to point them in the right direction, though Katie couldn't begin to imagine what this would look like to it. At least Katie had seen it once before. “How much bigger do they get?” Katie asked, uncertain if she truly wanted to know. Her voice wavered. Some deep animal fear screamed for her to whisper, lest she catch its attention. Absurd. As if she could escape their gaze no matter how she tried. “Could this even land without destroying everything?”

Thatch gave an appreciative hum. “Very clever, flower. No, it could not, the smaller vessels there—” Thatch pointed out at the streaks. Most of them were almost over the horizon now, moving with terrifying speed. One seemed to be heading in their direction, though not quite directly— “are the ones that will actually land. The Elettarium itself is actually on the larger end for ships that can safely enter atmosphere without doing the environment harm, though even there it simply has to hover in place.”

Without doing the environment harm. The clarification was striking. This ship wasn't limited by resources or engineering knowledge but by physical limits on what the universe around it could take. Now that it had stopped moving it hung in the air, silent. With a surface lit by no clear source it looked as if it had simply been poorly pasted into a photograph, except Katie was seeing it with her own two eyes.

“Humanity never stood a chance, did it?” Katie had maintained a deep-seated assumption that Terra, given time, could have figured out a way to fight these things. That assumption was breaking. The year and change of her life spent on board the Indomitable suddenly seemed utterly futile. She had thought that at very least she had been holding back an inevitable future, but it was hard to escape the conclusion that she hadn't even done that.

The only thing that had kept the Indomitable free all that time was that ships like this just had higher priorities. She hadn't been holding back the tide. She'd just been waiting for her turn.

Thatch took a deep breath and Katie felt the warmth of her smile. “Not even slightly,” she stated, with a kind of pride in her voice. “Like I said. Humanity's fate was never in question. We just had to decide how it was to happen.”

The smaller vessel heading vaguely in their direction made a sharp turn, now pointing directly at them.

“Ah, looks like they have noticed us.” Thatch lowered them to the ground and gestured at... everything. “We will clean up before we leave. Katie, take the bed and our dividers. Cici, would you please put out the fire and clean up the ashes? I could deconstruct Leviathan's tank.”

Katie looked up with a start. She was already losing so much, she couldn't lose that too. “Hey, no, I'm not leaving them behind. Leave the tank alone, we can bring it, right?”

Thatch grinned back at her. “Good instincts, Katie. Leviathan shall make a fine floret for you.”

The quiet roar of a ship forcing itself through atmosphere unwilling or unable to get out of its way in time grew louder over long minutes as the trio pulled their camp apart, sorting everything they couldn't simply give back to the environment into piles and boxes for transport. Before long, the shuttle arrived, coming to a halt in the air just over the river.

At maybe five meters across and ten long, it was hardly as imposing as the Elettarium itself. The design bore many similarities, with a brilliant white shell that seemed to glow in the darkness inlaid with fine golden lines. At this distance, Katie could see that the patterns were fractal, getting ever more intricate the closer she looked, seemingly without end. The shape was more conventional, though, essentially a rounded box with a curved nose cone section to help it cut through the air. Four points on the bottom thrummed with energy, presumably keeping the vessel afloat. At this distance the engine noise was actually audible. A deep beat that seemed to pulse in time to Katie's frantic heart.

It sank through the air, angled such that the edges of the ship would only just barely clip the sides of the canopy, until it came to a standstill a meter or two off of the ground. The hull parted, revealing a door.

From it emerged monsters. Katie grew tense, taking a step back. These were the beasts that had enslaved Terra. The demons who had taken her ship. The imperialists who wanted her and all others under their leafy thumbs. Conquerors. Nightmares wearing human form. Evil.

“Ho!” one of them called, hopping out of the ship and walking towards them. Katie took another step back, behind Thatch's leg. Thatch wouldn't let them take her. “It's good to see you...” The cosmic horror glanced at some kind of slate it carried. “Thatch? You do not look like the pictures.”

“It has been a long journey,” Thatch admitted. “I apologise, I do not know your names.”

“Zona,” one creature said, pointing at the other.

That one continued the sentence pointing at the other, “and Xylem.” The second paused for a moment, reaching a vine into the ship. “And this is our darling Lily,” it declared.

It brought out some kind of alien creature. Maybe three feet tall and undeniably rotund, it was covered in a dark brown fur with a short snout and wide, black, eyes that frequently blinked. It looked around with rapid twitches of its head, taking in the whole environment one short blink at a time. It wore what looked like a snugly fitting suit in pastel colours covered in dozens of tiny little pockets, with a pair of something like welding goggles that looked big enough to fit Katie hanging around its neck. It was deeply alien, but reminded Katie of some kind of mix between a squirrel and a sugar glider, though that didn't quite fit. Something about it felt familiar, but maybe that was just her over-active pattern matching instinct. Katie tried not to think about it.

The second affini—Zona—brought it the nook of one arm and scratched under its snout with her free hand. All that curious energy vanished in an instant, stolen away by its alien master and replaced with a squirming sluggishness. It seemed pretty out of it, happily making entertained noises as Zona tickled with vines, now barely cognizant of their situation.

Only the monsters got to have agency here. Katie felt a little sick, watching what had clearly been an intelligent creature brought so low.

Movement from the side caught Katie's attention as Cici rolled forward. “Hello. — I! Am! Cici! — Greetings. Hello. Hi.” The machine buzzed with a high-pitched whine which only got worse as Xylem knelt down in front of it and laid a hand against its shell.

“By the stars, are you mechanical?” they asked. Cici's status lights flickered rapidly through different shades of green for several moments, before it finished the difficult processing on its nuanced answer.

“Yes!”

Xylem looked up at Thatch. “These being the new species we don't have emergency codes for, then? Fascinating. Oh, the xenobiologists will be heartbroken, but the mech. engineers will love these—” Xylem turned their attention back to Cici, working a vine or two into the holes in its chassis so it could be lifted safely— “utter cuties!”

Cici's whine left the range of human hearing, and Katie relaxed somewhat. The others winced, but put up with it.

Thatch put a hand on Katie's shoulder and ushered her out. A vine prodding her on the back made the expectation clear, but she suddenly found herself the center of attention.

They towered over her. Katie shook her head rapidly. These things would eat her. They'd put her to work in their mines. They'd turn her into a spaced-out waste like Lily there. She tried to step back. Thatch didn't let her at first, but she relented and Katie gratefully stumbled backwards. She tripped, but there was already a vine behind her anyway, so it didn't go very far. She peeked out at the monsters from between Thatch's legs.

“And who's that cute little human?” one of the conquerors demanded to know. “Will you be taking her, or do we still have a chance?”

Taking. Katie stiffened, heart pounding. How could she fight these? Fire worked, didn't it? She had her welding tool.

“The shy one is Katie Sahas, independent sophont,” Thatch insisted. “Nonhuman, nonfloret.”

The pair grew quiet, glancing at one another. Xylem scratched their false forehead while Zona wrinkled her crooked mockery of a human nose. “Wasn't she on the feralist ship? Independence isn't usually good for those.”

Zona stopped showering the alien Lily with affection, and its curiosity seemed to start returning. A vine snaked out of the monstrosity and hooked into a small ring at Lily's neck, hanging off of what looked very much like a collar. The creature was released, and leaped away from its captor, trailing a vine behind it. Katie knew how long those vines were, but no matter how long it was, it was still a leash.

Thatch spoke up, insistent. “Katie is an exception. She has been demonstratably well behaved and I believe she will thrive as an independent citizen.”

Katie could feel the tension in Thatch's vines. Nervousness? Fear? Mere hours before, the idea of Thatch being afraid of anything had been absurd, but now an impossible starship hung in the skies of Dirt and they were horribly outnumbered. If the invaders took issue could Thatch actually keep her safe? Had Katie shattered the sphere of safety she'd come to rely on the moment she'd let these creatures know where they were?

The two new affini shrugged. “Cool,” one said, while the other knelt to meet Katie's gaze through Thatch's legs. It smiled, holding out a hand. It took a moment to glance up at Thatch with some kind of unspoken question, and Thatch handed over one of the berries that Katie liked.

“Hey, Katie,” Zona said, voice quiet. Xylem was busy exploring Cici—to much delight from the machine, and with much effort put into keeping Lily from crawling inside its chassis—and it was left up to Katie to handle this one. It held out the food. As if Katie could be tempted out simply with a tasty snack!

Her stomach rumbled, but she was an intelligent, sapient creature. She couldn't be tricked into being comfortable when she wasn't.

“Not all that used to people yet, huh? That's okay.” Zona lowered itself further until it was sitting on the ground. Strangely, it was significantly shorter than Thatch was, perhaps 'only' eight or nine feet in total. Sitting, it was actually shorter than Katie was at her full height. It smiled. “Well, my name is Zona Varie. My partner over there is Xylem Varie. Both of us use she/her pronouns because we like the aesthetic, and I'd love to get to know you a little.”

Katie shied back, moving behind one leg. It felt ridiculous, but there was some animal fear demanding she stay out of sight. An instinct bred a million years ago to protect her from threats recognising these creatures as the apex predators of the universe.

“Why, so you can take your 'chance'?” Katie shot back. They'd talked over her. They hadn't even looked at her while discussing her fate.

Zona's laugh was nothing like Thatch's. Thatch had a low, almost gravelly tone with an intense music to it. Zona's voice was much lighter, and whatever song they sung was utterly incomprehensible to Katie. Just noise. “Not at all. I'm sorry for our assumption. Humans rescued from rebel ships almost universally need a guiding hand to help them learn how to be happy, but as you aren't a rescued human I don't think that'll be a problem, yeah?”

Katie poked her head out. “Equals?”

Zona smiled, raising the hand that held the berry again. “Equals. It's customary to give new friends a gift in some cultures. You have brought your fine company, and I have this small fruit. Fair exchange?”

Katie glanced up at her affini, who was smiling down at her. Thatch nodded, and Katie carefully moved forward. She reached out for the fruit and grabbed it, eating it before anybody could take it away from her.

A smile spread out over her face. It was a good berry. She muttered thanks, and Zona raised its hand to just above her head. Katie glanced up at it, wary, for a moment. She quickly shook her head, not really expecting her wish to be respected, but the hand went away regardless.

“Thank you, Katie. Perhaps we could talk a little aboard our shuttle? I expect the captain would like to talk to you and Thatch—” Zona glanced sideways, considering and then apparently writing off Cici as a source of information. Given that it didn't seem verbal right now, that didn't seem unfair— “about those little machines, and about your experiences, but Xylem and I are happy to listen to anything you'd like to tell us and will happily answer any questions you have in exchange.”

She looked up at Thatch and extended a vine. Thatch met it with one of hers in a firm grip. “Is everybody ready to leave? We'd be happy to bring you back out here later if you forgot anything, of course, I expect we'll probably all be hanging around out here for a little while. There's a lot to catalogue here.”

Thatch nodded, then spent a few moments staring up at the ship high above. She almost seemed as intimidated as Katie had been, but quickly glanced away. “We are ready. There are piles over there of personal affects for myself and Katie, and then another for processed materials. If we could get those cleaned and separated and then return them to the environment here, I believe we would be appreciative.” Thatch flashed a smile down Katie's way. “We also have one aquatic nonsapient coming with us, so if we can make use of the shuttle's atomic compiler to maintain a fresh water supply then that will ensure all of us are adequately cared for.”

None of the requests seemed objectionable. The three affini lifted the piles of stuff onto the ship in very short order, and then the two newcomers climbed aboard, Cici in tow. Lily's leash was pulled taut, and she leaped back into the ship from halfway up a nearby tree. Thatch glanced down at Katie and extended a hand, which Katie took and then used to help her get started climbing. Once she was in her place around the plant's neck, she guided the two of them into the shuttle.

With one vine still trailing down to the dirt, Katie paused, looking back. All sign of their presence here had been scrubbed clean. She blinked back tears and forced herself to look away.

“Goodbye, Dirt,” she breathed, and lifted Thatch's final vine from the surface.

Katie didn't talk much on the journey.

With this many occupants the shuttle was left more than a little cramped. The insides were spartan, with most of the shuttle comprised of large open space. It lacked even a separate cargo area; their stuff was just piled up at the back end where the force of acceleration would press it into the wall.

Katie rested on one of the seats that stood along each side of the vehicle. Strangely, there was no standardisation between them. There were six in all and each was a different height, material, and design. Katie wanted to shrink into a corner and vanish, but there was nowhere to hide. Just a plain, practical shuttle taking her away from the beautiful vistas of planet Dirt towards a no-doubt plain, practical starship. They didn't even have a set of matching chairs. Katie had spent most of her adult life aboard ramshackle ships where nothing quite matched and nothing quite worked and the thought of being dragged onto another was crushing.

Katie pushed a tall chair with a firm woven seat next to the short, cushioned construction that Thatch rested atop. The height differential was novel, even useful. Katie could lean against Thatch's arm and rest her head on a shoulder. It was nice.

There were no windows through which to look, yet she could practically feel the planet far beneath abandoning them.

The two new affini sat up front. One seemed to be piloting the vessel while the other fussed over Cici and Lily. Katie had immediately lost track of which affini was which. It wasn't that they looked the same, really: If she paid attention to the details she could tell that they had a lot of differences, but in a lot of respects one very tall plantoid looked very much like the next very tall plantoid, and the ways in which they distinguished themselves from each other paled in comparison to the way they were different from Katie.

“What's going to happen now?” Katie asked, quietly enough that she expected and hoped only Thatch would hear. She didn't trust the other two to give her a straight answer.

The affini— No.

Thatch. Thatch couldn't be the affini any longer. There were more of them now. Thatch cupped Katie's cheek with her opposite hand and held her with a gentle grip. “That has become somewhat out of our hands, and this is an unusual situation in many respects. We will arrive shortly and I expect somebody will want to have a conversation with us. Where we go from there is likely to be one of the topics of that conversation.”

Katie tried to bring a little moisture back into her bone-dry mouth but found that she couldn't quite manage to swallow. “Oh.”

She hugged closer to Thatch's arm. She'd grown so used to her friend being in control of everything around them that being torn out of that bubble of safety left her feeling cold and afraid. She looked up at Thatch to find a slightly distant expression pointed at the opposite wall. Her affini's focus was at least partially elsewhere.

Katie shrank against the arm, hooking her own under it so she could hug in close. The two of them were being taken into the unknown.

There were no timepieces in sight. Katie had gotten used to planning her day by the movement of the sun or the natural rhythms of the planet. Neither of those were present here and she found herself with no idea how long the journey was really taking. Neither she nor Thatch seemed to feel like talking, and so the ship was filled with barely intelligible chatter from up front.

Eventually the shuttle changed heading. Katie looked up, lifting her head from Thatch's shoulder. The view out of the cockpit window was nothing but ship. Katie fumbled around for a moment, grabbing Thatch's hand and pulling her forward so she could see their approach.

They were heading into one of the docking bays at the base of the ship. The flower petals at its rear rotated just to the left of them at an agonisingly slow speed. The tips might be turning fast enough to disrupt the clouds, but the bases of the multi-kilometer objects were barely in motion at all. Up close they looked even bigger than they had from afar. Katie looked away. Whatever part of her head that was capable of being awed by such things just wasn't engaging any more. She didn't know if it was the anxiety of not knowing what was coming or if her ability to appreciate the grandeur had simply topped out. Either way she glossed over the scale.

She looked towards the docking bay. The shuttle slowed as it came in for landing. The details blurred past. The complexity and artistry of it had stopped registering and Katie hadn't even stepped foot aboard yet.

Katie's knees almost buckled as the shuttle came down, landing hard. Thatch's grip kept her steady. Both of them shot a look at the pilot.

Zona winced, glancing back. “Sorry about that, I haven't done this in gravity before. Still, any landing you can talk away from, right?” She laughed. Katie didn't.

The tap of a button opened up the shuttle's wide door. Katie took a breath and coughed, instinctively raising a hand to cover her mouth. She remembered what ship air felt like. Dry, sharp, and with an acrid tang. It would burn her throat and sting her eyes. She was used to it, but that didn't mean she wanted it back.

To her surprise, the air that came rushing in wasn't that. It stank of plantlife, but not unpleasantly so. Intellectually, Katie knew that the scents of Dirt had probably been less pleasant than this was, but Dirt was home and this was not. The last of her familiar air rushed out of the shuttle, lost forever. Doubtless it would be collected and recycled and cleansed. Made identical to all the rest of the air on board this flying prison.

Katie felt a hand at her back. She relaxed into it, knowing it was Thatch's by instinctive feel, as they left the shuttle. The step out was about three feet too tall for Katie to take comfortably, but Thatch was there to lift her out. Her first step on this alien vessel. The surface beneath her feet was a metal grate, thick hexagonal lattice in fractal form. The hexagons got more densely nested towards the center of the grate, but around the edges the holes were inches wide. Large enough to fit a vine, Katie guessed, while leaving the center of the walkway dense enough for a human to walk upon.

Katie's eyes slid over everything, not really taking any of it in. She'd been woken up halfway through the night, taken from her home, shown more impossible things than she had previously dared imagine, and her energy was really starting to crash. The ship's lighting dug into her eyes and the sounds wormed into her brain. There were others here, too. Plants, humans, other creatures that Katie hadn't the mental energy to process. Katie shied closer to her friend. If her affini's bubble of safety was shrunken, then Katie would stick closer.

After a few seconds of walking they drew to a stop. Katie tried to force herself to focus on the creature before her. Another cursed plant. She was... green? A kind of splotchy green with patches of much lighter colour seemingly at random. Leaves. Vines. Katie had seen it all before. She glanced towards Thatch, to try to see how she was taking this and hopefully get a hint as to what was going on.

“It's good to see you again, Thatch,” the newcomer spoke, attracting Katie's attention. “Good thinking getting our attention like that, it would have taken us a little while to find you otherwise.” The intruder paused, glancing theatrically up and down Thatch's body. “I don't think you always looked like this, did you?” She extended a leafy vine, which Thatch took with one of her own brilliant red streaks.

Katie looked back to Thatch to catch her shaking her head. “It is good to see you again too, Rosaceae.” She raised one of her black and purple arms and set the little bulbs aglow as a brief demonstration, fingers wiggling. Katie clung a little closer, gentle lights twinkling in her eyes. “Most of this body was harvested from the planet beneath; I needed to rebloom in a hurry. The beacon, however, was largely Katie's work.” Thatch glanced down towards the girl.

Katie froze as she became the center of attention yet again. 'Rosaceae' looked down at her with a gentle smile and the part of Katie's brain responsible for keeping her safe from predators went into meltdown.

Thatch was one thing. Thatch was a person that Katie had come to know, and even like. Katie could even be said to be coming around to some of the ways Thatch thought about the world, even the ones that were distasteful on the surface. Katie had expected that others of her kind would be, if not friends, then at least recognisable as people.

This was not that. Katie wasn't interfacing with a person here. She was engaging with a culture, with a civilisation. Processes, traditions, rituals. She could speak openly to Thatch because, to Thatch, Katie was a person. To this newcomer she was a statistic, about to get sorted into an inescapable category.

Katie tried to take a step back, but found a hand in her way. “Rosa is nice, Katie,” Thatch insisted. “She wouldn't hurt a fly. Say hello.” The hand stayed in place, providing some small comfort.

Katie looked up. Her brain screamed at her that the only reasonable thing to do was to run far, far away and hope this thing wasn't interested enough in eating her to follow, but she tried to ignore that. Rosa wouldn't hurt a fly. This was just her dumb brain firing off at nothing. Human biological inheritance and nothing more. Everything was fine. There was nothing to worry about.

“I... Hello,” Katie said, through dry lips.

The predatory plant's smile widened a little further. It reached out a facsimile of a hand and gently pushed up Katie's chin, forcing their gazes to meet. It shifted Katie's face from side to side with quick movements of the thumb. Inspecting her. Its gaze was piercing, as though it could see her darkest secrets and wanted to devour every and every one. It lowered itself down to one knee, bringing Katie's face of flesh and bone within the range of its mockery of teeth and jaws.

“Cuter than you looked in the pictures. Katie Sahas, right? We collated all your files. We'll need to run some tests and ask you some questions to get all your details updated, but that won't take long and you can have a caretaker with you while it happens if you wish. I assume you'll be staying with Thatch here?” Its smile grew particularly indulgent, and the eyes momentarily stopped pinning Katie to the grating long enough to glance over at Thatch for confirmation. Katie didn't understand all the subtext in what 'Rosa' was saying, but she could guess at the gist of it.

This was the moment she'd been waiting for, wasn't it? She wasn't arriving in this world as some helpless pawn. She'd proven herself worthy, hadn't she? They'd respect that, wouldn't they? They had to. Katie couldn't go back to being a nobody. She cleared her throat.

“I... was told I could have my own space,” Katie ventured, reluctantly drawing attention back to herself. Was this the point where all those promises came crashing down? She played along or they threw her in their mines? She wouldn't forgive herself if she didn't at least try. “It doesn't have to be much! Just... I've never had anywhere that's mine and it sounded nice.”

Rosa's smile grew a little wider. Its thumb brushed across Katie's cheek, transforming the girl's stomach into a heavy ball of butterflies. She dare not ask this creature to stop. She didn't know what would be offensive. She didn't know what would cause it to stop pretending at politeness and truly become one of the beasts that had devoured Terran civilisation. Yet, if Katie didn't assert herself as something that demanded respect and independence, she had no doubt that they would take away both.

Uncomfortably sharp nails raked softly over Katie's skin. That subtext was clear. They had options other than being gentle that Katie couldn't hope to fight. “Our habitation units have plenty of room for cute little things like you. I'm sure that whoever you end up with will give you your own space, if you behave yourself. If Thatch has promised that and you go with her, then I imagine she will hold to her word. If you would rather be assigned a different caretaker, then we can list that request on your file, assuming Thatch here agrees.”

Katie whimpered. She wanted to look back at her affini, for advice or for simple reassurance that it was okay for her to push, but this beast's ostensibly gentle grip held her fast. This wasn't going how she wanted at all. She was getting pulled along by the tides of change and she wasn't strong enough to reach the shore.

Part of Katie felt like she should just nod. She was in the lion's den here. The more attention she drew to herself the more likely they would grow tired and just eat her up. Another, more sober part knew that if she nodded here she would never be able to stop. She'd lose everything she'd fought so hard to gain. Katie tried to steel her nerves, working up the courage to put her hand inside the metaphorical jaws.

As brave as Katie was, her captor beat her to speaking. “I wouldn't worry about finding somebody willing to grant it, Katie, if you can be this cute all the time. You're sure to find a home, though it may take a few days. We are short on people who don't already have a ward, though you'll go to the front of the list as most of the other crew from that little Terran ship of ours are still in stasis. A cute and lively little human like you is sure to—”

Katie pulled herself out of the foul grip and stumbled a half step back. “I'm not that! Stop talking! You— You can't— Thatch said you wouldn't force anything on me that I didn't want, and I... I want my own space! I don't want to request it, even from Thatch, I want it to be mine. I don't want it to be something anyone can take from me. I'm not yours to control! Thatch said I was a free—”

The titan of vine and bark casually reached forward, placing a single finger against Katie's jaw. Her chin strained upwards until she could no longer open her mouth to speak, or hardly even to breathe. Katie's words died in a helpless tremour. The touch was hard in a way that Thatch had never been. The new affini's expression lost its playful edge, and Katie realised she had made a mistake. The politeness was for those who complied. These creatures couldn't be bargained with. She could be nothing more than a novel toy to things this powerful. “Free Terran, perhaps? Yes, we know just what to do with 'Free Terrans' around here. We—”

No! Katie wouldn't let it end like this! She growled, fumbling at her hips for her tools. Each one had a distinct shape so that she could grab them by feel. The cold wood gave her strength. Her welding torch aught to be hot enough to take advantage of the only weakness she'd discovered in these things. She grabbed for it, hoping to bring it up to the thing's false wrist. She'd free herself one way or another.

Katie didn't even get close. Obviously she wasn't going to get close. Before she'd even unhooked the torch there was a vine around her wrist holding it tight. It squeezed, gently, with a familiar feel and a familiar throbbing heat. Katie let her fingers go slack as Thatch knelt beside her and gently removed Rosa's finger. Katie let out a soft whimper, using her free hand to massage her jaw and neck.

Thatch joined Katie in looking at Rosa's surprised expression, though the two affini were both on about the same level now and both towered over Katie, even kneeling. “I am willing to stake my reputation on Miss. Sahas here harbouring no feralist ideologies, Rosaceae. If you had let her finish, Katie would have explained that she holds no love for Terran culture nor the Human race and wishes to secede from both. You will treat her with the dignity and respect befitting an independent sophont requesting citizenship aboard the vessel you head and she will be a delightful friend to many aboard.” Thatch's grip was unwavering, at least on Rosa. On Katie, it was soft and no longer restricted her motions at all. She glanced up at Thatch's face and found the butterflies in her stomach all set loose.

Her affini's jaw was set and her eyes were fixed, but there was no anger here. She exuded certainty and confidence, but expressed it like this was the most natural thing in the world. This wasn't a disagreement. She was simply explaining how things were to be. There were only a few hints as to internal turmoil. Vines snaked down her back, curling through the metal of the grating beneath their feet with a tense grip, ensuring stability and leverage. Katie's implacable sixth sense resonated with anxiety. Barely hints at all, but Katie could tell that Thatch was less confident than she appeared.

Rosa, it seemed, could not. She gently retrieved her hand, though remained in a kneeling position. “I'm sorry, Thatch, Katie. I misunderstood the nature of your relationship, it seems. It seems unusual, but the last couple of years have convinced me that it is better to take everyone as they come and figure out how to accommodate that. Katie, I would like to earn your forgiveness and perhaps the first step can be being direct. You are, human or not, prior crew on a captured feralist vessel. It is general practice—and, in fact, a guarantee in our Treaty—to assign any new rescues a caretaker to be responsible for them and we do not usually allow exceptions to this rule. Perhaps, in cases where that caretaker vouches for the stability, behaviour, and independence of their ward, they could, maybe, graduate to becoming an independent citizen. As apology for my behaviour we can assign Thatch as your caretaker, she can vouch for you, we'll move directly to the next stage.”

Rosa paused, eyes drilling down into Katie for several long moments as if trying to discern the hidden truths of her soul. It was an intense gaze, but finally Katie felt as if she was being engaged with as a person in her own right, not just property-to-be. “If you would like that, Katie?”

Katie glanced back at Thatch, who gave a small nod. The vine at Katie's wrist squeezed for but a moment. Katie forwarded on the nod to Rosa. “I want my own space. I don't know what you have available, anything will do, but—”

Rosa raised a finger. Requesting an interruption, this time. Katie didn't know if it was a request she could refuse, but she didn't feel the need to test that. “You will need to talk to the habitation engineers for that, which we can organise as part of the general checkup and introduction that I would very strongly recommend you undergo. We are currently very far away from Compact space and this is not a very large ship, so I'm afraid we have some significant resource limitations at the moment, but I imagine we can meet your needs. A prospective citizen in need of housing takes priority over most non-emergency tasks, and I don't expect there's anybody around here who would mind their low-priority requests getting bumped for this.”

Katie twisted her hand around to take hold of the vine Thatch still had around her wrist. “Can I bring Thatch with me?” she asked. The last thing she wanted was to walk into the jaws of the beast alone. She'd already nearly screwed up badly enough once.

Rosaceae glanced up towards Katie's lifeline for a moment, and then nodded. “I suspect she'll want a medical checkup too, and the botanical gardens are typically off-limits to non-affini citizens for their own safety, so you will need to part ways at some point. Additionally, I do need to talk to her about what happened and unfortunately that isn't a conversation you can be part of.” Katie's grip tightened. Rosa smiled down at her. “However, that can be another time. For now, if you'll follow my darling flore—”

Rosa glanced to the side, paused, and shook her head. “Hmn, apologies, I'm used to having more assistance than this. Come, we don't have much of an induction center, but we can make do. There was another one of you, wasn't there?” Rosaceae looked around for a moment before spotting Cici and the Varies. “Oh! Hmn, that's a little outside of Glochi's area.” Rosa waved a vine over towards the shuttle pilots and called over. “Could I get you two to take that one... somewhere? Maybe Ined's division? They can probably figure out how to do a full medical. Message me if anything goes wrong?”

After receiving a pair of enthusiastic nods, Rosa led the way. Katie recognised that what was going on around her was probably very impressive and probably she needed to understand it for her own safety, but everything she looked at just filled her with the same foreboding dread. People who set foot on Affini vessels were never seen again. It was a rule. It had already been made crystal clear that her freedom here was contingent on parts of Affini culture that Katie couldn't even begin to understand.

For all Katie knew, doing or saying anything could get that freedom taken away. She couldn't rely on Thatch to catch her every mistake because she was surrounded by creatures who could pounce on those mistakes with the same speed. Katie had very little time to understand the rules of a game she was already playing, and one bad move could leave her like the rest of the Indomitable's crew. Trapped in stasis awaiting annihilation.

They walked through the expansive docking bay. Katie tried not to figure out whether the entire Indomitable would have fit inside. She had to hurry just to keep up with the two affini, and by the time they came to a stop she was starting to feel out of breath. Their journey was far from over. Thatch reached over and hit a button set into one of the walls, and that wall split in half.

Katie whimpered. The part of her brain that was capable of being impressed by a twenty foot door appearing out of nowhere wasn't responding, but the part of her brain responsible for getting terrified by things obviously more dangerous than herself was going haywire.

The two affini stepped through the door into some kind of pod. Katie felt a gentle tug against her wrist and stumbled forward. The doors slid closed behind her and she felt a powerful, smooth acceleration almost knock her off of her feet. Again, a helpful vine kept her steady, but it was difficult not to recognise that this place was not meant for her. She couldn't even have reached the button to open the doors, nor was she certain she could have stood alone.

Every second took her further from the world she had known and brought her further into one that felt dangerous and hostile.

There were still no timepieces. The view outside of the pod was overwhelming enough that Katie's mind refused to parse the shapes and colours into anything meaningful. Katie looked out at it, but she didn't comprehend. It was just a sea of visual noise.

After an indeterminable amount of time, the pod slowed to a stop and the doors opened back up. Thatch stepped out and Katie followed. Rosaceae said something that Katie didn't understand, and then she was gone.

If they were on Dirt still, Katie wouldn't have thought twice before falling to the side and letting Thatch catch her, but here? They weren't alone. Her eyes refused to pick out any of the details of who was around them and who was watching. Katie recognised that she should probably be concerned, but instead she just kept walking forwards at Thatch's side until they entered a smaller building.

Katie felt a tight pressure somewhat lifting off of her chest as doors slid closed behind her. No windows, just four walls. They were tall walls, to be sure, but the space was bounded. Finite. Katie could try to take it all in without getting immediately overwhelmed.

She took a deep breath. Okay. Four walls. They were a sterile kind of white, well lit, with many many pictures of alien creatures hanging in various places with no clear pattern. Maybe twenty or so dotted around the room, with some larger posters between them offering what looked like detailed breakdowns of various pieces of technology, plant, or animal life? It was hard to be sure. One looked like a vial of something thick and viscous, another was some sort of many-legged insect, a third was a wristband of sorts. Katie didn't understand, but neither did the posters threaten to jump out at her with drug-laden needles.

Walls okay. Katie could handle walls. She looked up. The ceiling was far above her, inset with dozens upon dozens of soft points of light that gave the room an even, clean illumination. It was an almost unreal mood as shadows found nowhere to hide. It nearly seemed like there was starfield above them, but the lights glowed a steady, unchanging off-white. Bearable. Understandable.

Down. The floor beneath their feet. Green, with a gentle texture somewhere between carpet and grass. Thatch stood upon it, as did the one other occupant of the room, as did various pieces of equipment. Katie, curiously, did not. She blinked a few times, and then looked up.

At some point, Thatch had plucked her off of the ground and was looking at her with concern clear in the purple and red flecks of her wide eyes. Even Katie's sixth sense wasn't working properly right now, she realised, as she tried to interpret her plant's expression and found everything muddied. It was getting lost in the white noise that was everything else on her every sense.

“Are you okay, Katie?” she asked, one floral finger brushing across Katie's forehead to steer the hair out of her eyes. “You have been atypically quiet for our entire journey. I would like you to tell me how you are feeling.”

Katie could only shrug, and barely that. She hadn't been able to ask for help, but being faced by a direct question she found she the strength. “This is all a lot. I don't know if I can do this. I'm tired and scared and I can't make any mistakes or everyone is going to turn on me and stop pretending to be polite and this isn't my world, I don't know anything here, I don't know what's going to get me locked away and what's going to get me what I need and—”

Thatch silenced her with a look, then glanced away for a moment, towards the other figure in the room. They traded a few rapid-fire bursts of speech. Katie didn't understand the words being spoken, but she understood the way that Thatch was saying them, and she didn't sound agitated. She was just updating the other. The stranger stepped away, slipping through a door Katie hadn't noticed, and left her finally alone in a bubble of safety.

Katie didn't waste any time. She didn't know when they'd be coming back. For all she knew, this could be the very last quiet moment. She buried her head into Thatch's chest and tried her best not to cry, unsuccessfully. The one familiar thing in this entire cursed vessel ran her fingers through Katie's hair and held her close until the tears started to slow.

“Nobody is going to turn on you, flower. Nobody here wants anything but the best for you.” One of Thatch's arms was busy holding Katie in place, but the other was free to drift. Each touch pushed the stress and the panic away, replacing it with a gentle comfort. At first, it was a contest, but soon there was nowhere left for stress to hide, and it escaped in quiet gasps and whimpers. Out into the air, where it would be lost for good.

Katie pushed her face deeper into Thatch's foliage. A leaf threatened to enter Katie's mouth, but a soft nibble was enough to get Thatch to move it. “But what they think is the best for me, right? That 'Rosa' was seconds away from turning on me, I could tell!”

Katie had never in her life been without ambient sounds. There wasn't a Terran ship or station that didn't groan with the effort of its own existence. The thrum of a reactor meant heat and power. The hiss of gas meant oxygen. The rattle of fluids meant that nothing was about to overheat. Things were never silent. Silence was death.

The room was silent, save for the barely perceptible duet of her own heartbeat meeting Thatch's symphony. The ground didn't vibrate. The lights didn't flicker in time with the slightly irregular hum of a reactor two years past its service date. Everything was still. Everything was quiet. Even Thatch didn't respond with words, but with simple presence and pressure.

No timepieces. Katie didn't know how long she was there. Her only metronome was the regular, reliable beat of Thatch's body.

Eventually, Katie worked up the energy to extract her face from the forest. She looked up at the patient expression of her protector. It was a little bittersweet. Now they were here, Thatch had a life to return to, and Katie had one to build. They wouldn't be spending every waking minute together any more. Already, Thatch's todo list grew, filling with entries that Katie couldn't be a part of. Already, Katie's tasks piled up, forming towers of things Thatch could be of no help with.

“I'm sorry,” Katie whispered. Everything still felt like too much, but at least she wasn't facing it alone. “I think I'm okay now. I really just want to sleep. I think I'll be okay after I sleep. I don't know what's going on. Can you... tell me what they're gonna do?”

Thatch sat herself down against the grassy carpet and leaned into one corner. She lowered Katie down into her lap to free up a hand, then pointed towards one of the larger objects in the room. Katie would have mistaken it for an oversized potted plant, had she not seen Thatch's biotechnology at work in their beacon. The question was wordless, more a feeling than a sound.

“Some kind of machine?” Katie ventured. “The vines around the outside don't seem to connect to anything, so I guess they're just a protective casing?” Thatch's finger shifted slightly while her other hand gently tilted Katie's head, drawing her attention to a set of transparent flowers at about her head level. They had sharp needles set into their centers, but no obvious contents.

Katie's first thought was to shy away. Some kind of machine to pump her full of drugs and puppet her into doing their bidding? Her second thought was the realisation that that was absurd. Thatch wouldn't have needed a machine to do that. Probably this was for something else. “Some kind of blood scanner?” she ventured. If the sharp needles weren't for inserting something, then there was only so many things to take from her.

Thatch scratched under her chin. “Very good, Katie. It is a little more than that, but you have the right idea. The needles bisect a major artery and check over your blood to make sure you're getting what you need. In fact, come on, I know how these work.”

A gentle hand at Katie's back slowly pushed her up onto her feet, and then towards the machine. Katie realised that the smaller plant in front of it was meant for sitting about a second after Thatch had placed her atop it. It squirmed for a moment, adjusting until it was, by far, the most comfortable thing Katie had ever sat upon, save for Thatch herself. The sharp flowers extended on their own, but seemed to need an operator to actually insert them.

Thatch raised Katie's chin with one of the smallest of her vines, and carefully inserted the two flowers into the side of her neck. Katie stiffened, feeling a moment's chill as her blood flow was redirected, stealing it away towards this machine. The transparent flowers filled with a dark red, first down one, and then a moment later, up the other. The chill faded away as her blood was returned, apparently intact.

Thatch spent a moment checking over the needles. “Now, there should be a terminal around here somewhere,” she muttered, before spotting something lying on a desk at the far side of the room and snapping it up with a rapid red streak. She tapped a button on the vaguely rectangular object which must have measured some thirty inches across, and Katie felt her remaining panic sinking away. She smiled up at her pretty plant with an increasingly distant expression. She was so... big. Tall. No wonder half of her flirting was just commentary on their relative heights. Thatch was so big, Katie realised, as if for the first time, as if it was a revelation.

So big. Katie could just get lost in there. How was something so small as her meant to navigate this universe alone? It was just right for her to be at one of these creatures' heels.

Katie stared for what could have been hours with a dull smile on her face before Thatch noticed, swore, and tapped another button.

Katie's head quickly cleared. She blinked rapidly, raising a hand to rub her forehead as her consciousness came rushing back, filling her with the usual cacophony of anxieties and worries.

“Apologies, apparently the standard program here is configured to pacify. I suppose they have been dealing with a lot of ferals recently, but such an opinionated default should really be more explicit.” Katie could sense Thatch's gentle displeasure for the moment it lasted. Her plant turned the device around to Katie to show her a vast array of graphs. Most of them were paired with little red styling, and a symbol that was unmistakably a warning sign, though not a Terran design. “As you can see, your levels are not quite nominal, though are actually much better than I had feared in many areas. Far better than the average new intake.”

Thatch seemed strangely pleased by that, as she scrolled through the infinite sequence of graphs and charts for Katie to see. Her affini turned the tablet back to herself and stared at it for a moment, then made a few rapid taps. “However, you are running very low on many of the important neurotransmitters; I believe your dopamine production may be broken; and you need a lot of zinc. On the plus side, most of your hormone levels are appropriate and most micronutrients are not too far out of their ranges, though I suspect a medical professional may disagree with me on that. Do you mind if I adjust these, flower?”

Katie wasn't sure exactly what that meant, but she shook her head anyway. “Go ahead.” It had been a long time since Thatch had asked for permission to do anything that wasn't obviously beneficial and Katie didn't need the explanation to assume this would be the same. She was still interested, however. “Could you tell me what you're doing?”

Thatch nodded, then began a rapid sequence of taps with a quartet of minor vines. “Then we will start with the basics. Nutrients, neurotransmitters, and niche needs. Roll back your biological clock to match ship time, get your hormone levels exactly where I want them, make sure that brain is ticking along like it should be. Simple tune-ups.”

Katie felt the changes immediately as the looming specter of sleep simply vanished, as did her hunger and, curiously, a craving for synthveg rations. Her earlier fears didn't vanish, but she suddenly felt as if she could handle what came her way. The difference was so clear as to be striking.

Katie tilted her head to one side, watching Thatch work. Half a dozen vines danced across a device held in one hand. Thatch's focus seemed absolute and Katie imagined she could feel every brief stroke of growth on graphs down to her soul. It seemed like a poor idea to interrupt if her affini were busy analysing and altering her blood composition, so Katie simply watched. Eventually, Thatch looked up with a gentle smile. “The main function of this machine is to adjust your various values so we can monitor the effects in real time. Most of this can be automatic: the machine will tweak values, detect the response and then figure out what your ideal composition should be, though I will admit I have this on manual. I would rather ensure your needs are met myself. The results then get placed on your file to ensure your nutritional needs are met, alongside recommended medications. Now, we won't get things quite perfect without constant real-time monitoring but we should be able to get them much better than they have been.”

The device pinged. Thatch turned it around to show Katie an endless stream of graphs with little smiley faces next to them. “There we are, much better.” Thatch turned the device back to herself. For a moment, Katie felt a chill in the air, coinciding with a slight contraction of Thatch's leaves.

Katie frowned. “What's up?” she asked, seeming to startle the plant.

“Nothing, do not worry yourself about it. It will sort itself out.” She made a quick series of taps, then paused. “Actually, forget I said anything.” She tapped the screen.

Katie did feel much better for Thatch's guiding hand over her inner workings. She smiled, taking a deep breath of sweet smelling air with lungs that suddenly didn't seem to complain about it. She was neither too warm nor too cold. Her head felt clearer than it had in years.

She could think. She had thought that she could think, before, but now she was realising that she'd been tricked by her fallible human shell. It was like her body had never been able to run the real Katie, up until this very moment. For the first time in her life, Katie felt what it was like to actually exist, seemingly unburdened by failing human flesh.

“Will I stay like this?” Katie asked, fingers brushing against the bright red stems mediating her bloodstream.

Thatch shrugged. “I suspect you will settle into a middle ground of sorts. This machine is making constant adjustments to maintain my specified requirements but even without that, better nutrition and medication should keep you close enough. Of course, should you at any point find somebody you wish to adopt you, their haustorium could be programmed to maintain this with similar perfection, at least when combined with a good diet. Not that maintaining that would be any of your concern.”

Thatch reached over and pulled out one of the flowers, then carefully dabbed away the tiny spot of blood left behind. A few moments later the other was removed, once both had gone dry. It didn't take long for Katie to notice her mind starting to cloud once again. Much less than it had been before Thatch had done her work, certainly, but it still hurt to know she could be so much more and to have that be taken away.

Katie took a deep breath. If this was the best she could get without having to become some random xeno's pet, then so be it. Thatch had described their 'hausteria' to her before, the operative component of the Haustoric Implant. Katie tried to imagine something grown from Rosa or Xylem curling its foul way around her bones and shivered.

No thank you. This would do. “Then what's next?” Katie asked.

“Next is the parts I am not so familiar with,” Thatch admitted. “May I call through somebody who is?”

Katie reached over and grabbed onto a vine, before pulling it over to herself. She nodded. It wrapped around her wrist with a comforting warmth, and then Thatch spoke in the soft song of her native tongue, inviting another of her kind.

This affini burst in with a pirouette and a smile, earning a surprised half-step backwards from Thatch and a cautious lean away from Katie. “Miss Sahas, I believe? I am Glochi Opun, Twentieth Bloom, he/him, and I'll be handling your induction today.” It spoke in a gruff, tremourous voice and moved with such an obvious beat that Katie could almost hear it. A deeper voice than Thatch's, sung to a slower, calmer tune. Less catchy, but pleasant enough.

He stood perhaps a little taller than Thatch did, with the tops of his triplet antennae almost scraping the ceiling. He moved with an easy grace, but the foliage hanging off of him was browned and stiff and the vines beneath were all dark. No fresh growths to be seen. He smiled with a disarming weight.

Twentieth?!

Katie did some quick mathematics in her head, feeling a gentle warmth spread through her as her mind did what she asked of it so much more easily than she was used to. Thatch had suggested an average lifespan of about three hundred years between blooms, which put this creature's birth somewhat before the Bronze age.

Katie gaped. She had thought Thatch old, but this single individual's cradle predated the cradles of human civilisation. And he was smiling at her like she could possibly be worth his attention, possibly have even the slightest novelty to him.

“How?” Katie asked, voice barely at a whisper. She had lived for just under thirty years and the weight of existence already pressed down hard. How could anybody go for so long?

Glochi's smile never wavered. “As your caretaker here has already dealt with the physical component, all you really need me for is a brief psychological examination, and then we can get you on your way. Don't worry, Miss Sahas, I've done this a few times before and we'll get you processed in no time.” He turned his gaze to Thatch. “I assume you're the one we've all been in a twist looking for, then. Good to finally meet you! May I have that device back, and may I continue with your floret's examination?”

Thatch handed over the tablet. “She is not—”

Katie interrupted. “Not that!” she insisted. “You must be thousands of years old! How can you just stand there and smile?”

Glochi chuckled, glancing down at his panel and hooking a vine into some kind of control assembly at its side. “Remind me, how long is a year?”

Katie blinked rapidly. “Uh... a year has three hundred sixty five days, a day is twenty four hours, an hour is sixty minutes, and a minute is sixty seconds.”

The doctor's smile grew a little kinder. Katie found the sense of endless patience almost overwhelming. If he had lived this long, then how could one more conversation do him any harm? “And how long is a second, Miss Sahas? You'll have to forgive me, one gets stuck in their ways eventually.”

Katie bit her lip for a moment. How was she meant to explain this? She looked up to Thatch, who lay a hand on her shoulder with a gentle squeeze. Katie relaxed into it, feeling a clarity in her sixth sense that only really came from close contact. “It's about—” She clicked her fingers, paused for a second, and clicked again. Just about half of a period of rising heat from Thatch's fingers.

Glochi spent a moment in thought. “Five thousand, six hundred and thirty... two, then, in Terran years. I suppose my experience is a little different to yours, but now that you're here I do hope you'll start to see the beauty of reality for yourself. There is so much to see that it takes a long time indeed before there are no surprises left. Speaking of, I have some questions, but we'll usually do this with some assistance. Do you mind if I put you to sleep? Your partner will be here to oversee, of course.”

Katie glanced over at Thatch, who gave an approving nod. If this was how this was normally done, then who was Katie to say otherwise. Katie passed the nod forward, and Glochi raised some kind of thin metal disc up to one temple and affixed it in place.

“Now, can I get you to be a good girl and count back from ten for me?” He raised a lollipop in one hand and gently waggled it. “You'll get a treat afterwards if you can make it to one.”

Katie pulled a face, but nodded. She had to remind herself that in this culture, that wasn't meant to be demeaning. Or, at least, not the bad kind of demeaning. “Ten,” she started. With her mind this sharp, Katie had no doubt she could make it. She'd prove she was worthy of their respect.

Glochi's smile grew apologetic for a moment. His vine twitched to one side, and Katie felt her consciousness snap. Speaking was impossible. Wanting to speak was impossible. Remembering she'd ever wanted it? Impossible. She was left a vessel waiting to be filled as the doctor brought a strange visor down to cover her eyes.

You'll forgive me the joke, little one. The treat was never conditional. Now, let's get your records all up to date and I'll let you get on with learning to appreciate the universe, floret.

Now, we're going to count you back up to ten, okay, sweetie? With each number, you'll feel yourself becoming more and more awake.

One. Two. Three. Four. Five.

A little break here, just to rest, hmn? You've been answering a lot of questions and you'd like a glass of water.

Katie took the oversized glass in both hands. Drink. She gulped down a few mouthfuls of clean, soft water, and then a few more as her conscious mind caught up to how good it was and how much she needed it.

“This's... weird,” Katie slurred. She could hear the doctor, and she could feel Thatch, but she couldn't see anything, really. There was just noise around her. It was a strange kind of noise, like it meant something. Like what it meant was just on the tip of her tongue, and if she spent just a moment more looking she'd realise what it was. Katie felt the glass slipping through her fingers.

No, no, little one. Focus on me. We're counting up, not down. You don't need to worry about anything but following along, hmn? Count with me, now.

“Six,” Katie whispered. She knew which number came next. She was leading the count, wasn't she?

“Seven.” No, she wasn't. Of course seven came after, and after seven there was... It was like forbidden knowledge. Katie knew she knew this, but it just wouldn't come. Strange, when so much else would. Doing what she could do was as easy as breathing.

“Eight.” It was her speaking, but it wasn't her choice. This wasn't somebody speaking through her. She could remember the lightning-fast question and answer session she'd just been through with crystal clear clarity. Those had been her answers simply given far faster than she could have done alone. A full day's interview had just taken place over the course of an hour. Katie could appreciate the efficiency. She still couldn't remember what number came next.

“Nine.” Of course nine had come next. The last count was on the tip of her tongue, but no matter how she strained, it wouldn't come. No matter what approach Katie took, no matter how she tricked her brain into finding it, the final figure failed to materialise.

Here we are, now, cutie. Right on the edge. One more number and you'll be in charge of yourself again. Get that independence you so crave, right? All the responsibility and all the pressure. Wouldn't it be easier to—

The voice paused. Katie turned, sightlessly, to look towards Thatch by sixth-sense alone. “Ah, of course, I— Oh, one moment, let's get her disconnected.”

“Ten.” Katie took a deep breath, eyes going wide as the force of her own cognition slammed into her like a girl hitting a burning bulkhead. Her breaths sped up, hands rising to tear the visor off of her head and yank free the little metal disc. It was too dark her head was reeling and she could feel the flames licking her skin and—

An arm caught her. Katie buried herself deep, breathing hard, while her emotions slowly normalised. The soft beat of Thatch's body was a riot, matching Katie's own panic note for note, but slowly calming. With it, came Katie.

“I'm terribly sorry, I hadn't intended that to be a negative experience. Are you okay, Miss Sahas?” asked the deep, rumbling voice of the doctor. After such a long interview it was weird for Katie to hear it with her ears, and not simply have it as a voice inside her head.

Katie wasn't sure how to respond, but thankfully Thatch came to her rescue. “I suspect that it was not, Glochi. Poor Katie here has been struggling with some of the experiences in our recent misadventures. Truth be told, as have I, but I am confident that things will be dealt with now that we're here.”

Katie's racing heart was gradually slowed to a resting pace, and her breath returned to a sustainable depth. She managed to sit back up, to give the doctor an apologetic smile. “Sorry. Yeah, not you. You did fine. That was... yeah. Head stuff. Harder to fix than body stuff, right?”

“Not at all,” Glochi replied, with a smile and an offered disc. “Cutting out an unwanted memory or ten is delicate work, but in many ways easier than setting a bone.”

Katie stared at the disc. Was this how they did it? Was this why humanity had fallen so quickly? Sweet, tempting offers of oblivion? Struggling with trauma? Just let me rewrite you. With that disc on her temple and the visor over her eyes, Katie would go along with it, too. It wouldn't even occur to her to question it.

She shivered, realising just how much trust she'd placed in the doctor without really considering the details of what she was doing. She shook her head rapidly, but thankfully, Thatch stepped in to rescue her yet again.

“Last I checked, the xenodrug regime necessary for that to stick safely is a little beyond Miss Sahas's tolerance right now. Additionally, I suspect she is still acclimatising to such ideas, and it may be best to revisit that option at a later date.” Thatch's hand quietly drew Katie back in, holding her head against soft leaves.

“As you wish.” The doctor nodded his assent, flicked the disc into the air, and— Katie lost track of it almost immediately, but it was gone, replaced with the previously promised treat which he held out in offering. Katie took it. “I've also done a few more traditional therapy sessions in my lifetime,” he replied, with a grin. “Regardless of your tolerances, I'm sure we can find a way to comfortably work together, Katie. Don't hesitate to send a message if you want to organise something, or just pop by whenever and I'll be with you when I can.”

He leaned over, and continued with a stage whisper. “I'd appreciate your company, to be honest. Humour an old man like me with some stories and I'm sure I could give you some in return.” His smile was as infectious as it ever had been. Katie's nod hardly felt less compelled than it had been under the hypnotics, but it was hard to mind.

“Sure,” she replied. “Once I find out how messages work, anyway.”

He winked. “I believe that's next.” He glanced up at Thatch, extending a vine to entangle in what seemed to be a fairly commonplace gesture here. “Do you know where habitation engineering is? Erica Erigin and her florets?”

Thatch glanced up as if surprised, blinked, and shook her head. “Oh, no, I brought my hab along with me, I am afraid, I have never had occasion to meet them. Could I trouble you for directions? My communicator is lost somewhere in this star system, I suspect. I do hope it's working well enough to be found, but the lack of it does leave me without guidance.”

The doctor rummaged around in a drawer for a moment before pulling out a small pink object in the shape of a stylised flower. He tapped it a few times, then leaned down to place it in Katie's hands. “How about you take this, then. It belonged to a very dear friend of mine, but it has been in that drawer for far too long. I would be honoured if you would help it continue its journey.”

Katie looked down at the item. She wasn't sure what it felt like, other than perhaps the flower that it clearly was not. Four pastel yellow leaf-like objects sprouted from a flat, round middle section that was itself a very pastel shade of light blue inset with an endlessly complicated pattern in a slightly darker blue. These plants sure did like their fractals.

Katie looked up, a curious tilt to her head.

“Just tell it what you want to do. Start with your name, cutie.”

“Uh, okay. Hello... flower? I'm Katie.” She felt silly, talking to something like this, but it wasn't even the weirdest thing she'd done in the last hour.

{Greetings, Katie! I am a basic communications device compliant with all eighteen thousand six hundred and nine relevant standards and requirements for use by ward species of the Affini Compact,} the device chirped in a shockingly realistic human voice which Katie could not even begin to place the accent of. She held it a little further away, but after a short moment, it kept speaking. {I've established a connection with the Affini Light Scout, Elettarium. Is this your home?}

Wow. That was one hell of a question. Was this her home now? Katie had nowhere else to go. Katie knew all of six people aboard and trusted maybe two of them, but that was better than anywhere else in the galaxy. The real answer was probably that Katie was home-less, but that her best option was to try to make a home here. She suspected that the little device wouldn't handle her philosophising all that well, though, so she simply answered, “Yeah, I guess so.”

Thatch's vine squeezed her hand.

{Okay, that's all synced up with your paperwork, cutie! Your file currently doesn't list an owner, would you like my help fixing that?}

The center of the flower resolved into a stream of pictures. Some inexplicable kind of display technology that Katie couldn't even begin to figure out showed endlessly detailed photographs of a seemingly endless stream of affini. Katie wasn't sure she could tell any of them apart without the names or brief biographies displayed alongside. Underneath each entry was a pulsing button that raised slightly above the surface of the 'screen', displaying “Adopt me!!!!” or similar. No two buttons had the same number of exclamation marks.

“Uh, no, thank you,” Katie replied. “And can you make the wording be a little less... embarrassing?”

The machine seemed to take an unusually long amount of time before responding, as if processing the idea of an independent creature was somehow challenging for it. {Updating language setting from English/Floret to English/Boring. Helpfulness disengaged.}

Katie couldn't escape the feeling that the machine was being petulant, but that was ridiculous. It was just a machine. “Cool, thank you.” She turned to Glochi. “What do I do with it now?”

“Ask for directions to Miss. Erigin, who I imagine is already prepared for your arrival. She does most of the habitat building around here.”

Katie did just that and the device sprung back to life, wordlessly displaying a map on the screen and lighting up one of the leaves. Katie did an experimental spin, and the light shifted to always point towards the room's exit. A guide, then. “I guess I'll be seeing you later, then, doc,” Katie said, with a smile that somehow didn't feel like it was crushed beneath the weight of his. What a strange man. Impossible to dislike, it seemed. Katie popped the lollipop into her mouth as she left, and could have sworn she felt the grin widening as she gave an appreciative moan.

Katie led the way with Thatch in tow, leaving the room with her focus on the map. They hadn't gotten more than a few feet away before Katie made the mistake of glancing upwards. She lost her footing, slipping and nearly falling, though of course she was caught and set back onto her feet.

This wasn't a ship. This was a city. It was unfathomable. Large in a way that things simply couldn't be.

Katie span around to look at the building they'd just left. Glochi's Veterinary Services: Florets welcome! towered into the air maybe thirty or forty feet, and yet it was dwarfed by its surroundings. Katie stood between two rows of buildings, each easily that large or larger, all resting on a soft floor of what seemed like actual plantlife. The path between the rows was huge, mostly covered in something akin to grass. A hundred humans could have walked side by side here, and likely dozens of affini, without anybody getting in their way. Alien trees of a dozen varieties were dotted around, providing shade and shelter, little fruits or natural seating. Smaller gardens outside many of the buildings showed off smaller sets of plants, or provided a base for vines or moss or more alien things to spread and cover the tall walls

Yet all of that paled in comparison to the sky. Dirt's starscape hung above them like there was no upper hull at all, like the ship was simply open to the elements. Katie had seen the outside, she knew that it was not. She had seen the unbroken, if patterned, hull.

No, this wasn't a city. This was its own small planet.

“Thatch?” Katie asked, looking over to her companion with a vine held tight.

Thatch had been looking off into the distance, but she quickly brought her focus back around to Katie. “Yes, flower?”

“How is there a sky?”

Her affini laughed, and gently pushed her forward. They started walking again. They were far from the only people on the path, but the others weren't really paying attention to either of them. Thatch got a few glances, it seemed, but each terminated in a smile and a wave and nothing more. Perhaps it was simply obvious that they were going somewhere.

“I believe that the Terran Accord had figured out glass before we got here, Katie. You may need to be more specific.”

Katie gave the vine in her hand a sharp tug and the plant it was attached to chuckled. “Yes, yes, very well. You—” Thatch reached out, picked Katie up, and placed her half a foot to one side. She glanced down to notice she'd been about to trip over some kind of orange shrub. She glanced up at Thatch for a brief moment, and the two of them seemed to come to the wordless decision that it was best for Katie to keep her feet off of the ground while she was distracted.

Firmly in place around Thatch's neck, Katie took her vine and started guiding them along the path suggested by her new device.

“Growing material which is transparent in one direction, opaque in the other, and strong enough to shrug off the hazards of space travel is something our Stellar Gardeners have been perfecting for tens of thousands of years, Katie. Working it into hull designs like this instead of using smaller windows is more of a modern artistic trend, I believe.” Thatch paused for a moment, considering, then continued in her usual dry tones. “Like most advancements, I suspect it began as an attempt at flirting.” It was hard to tell if she was being sarcastic, but Katie was starting to believe it could be literally true.

Katie let out a long breath, gazing upon a blanket of stars she'd thought lost to her for several long moments more. “Is 'the hazards of space travel' a euphemism for Casaba-Howitzers?” she asked, gently ruffling Thatch's hair.

“I suppose.” Thatch shrugged, then tilted her head a few degrees to the side while she thought. “Also: railguns; gravity lances; phase disruptors; hypermetric kill vehicles; stellar penetrators; and, hmn. I believe the last ship I was on got clipped by one of the Xa'a-ackétøth zero-point manipulators about two hundred years back and even that didn't quite break the hull. Space can be dangerous, but Terran space is fairly docile. I wouldn't worry about it, Katie, you're safer in here than you've ever been.”

That was hardly the point, but it seemed difficult to argue otherwise. The plan Katie and the rest of the crew of the Indomitable had been so focused on seemed laughable, now. They'd thought that one good hit with their main gun would do some damage, but it was unclear now whether it would have even scratched the paint.

“We never stood a chance, did we?”

“I believe you had already come to that conclusion.”

The pair continued onwards in a strange kind of silence. Not uncomfortable, but all of this was very new to Katie and not new at all to Thatch. She had a million questions and every answer just raised more, but Katie needed to save her energy for the trials to come.

As they moved, it became clear that there really was no distinction between commercial and urban districts to be found. The buildings they passed were a hodgepodge of styles, types, and aesthetics. Any which had clear signage usually had the text repeated in five or six languages, one of which was usually English, though the presence of such things seemed to be no clear indicator of what the building was for either. Some seemed simply to be homes, declaring the building to be so and so's habitation unit, or the home of a short collection of names. Others advertised some service or product, specialty ingredients or devices, in a staggering array of diversity.

There was little to no clear consistency here. Everybody was doing their own thing, and yet somehow nothing clashed. It was hard to ignore one of the few obvious patterns, however. Even down in writing, it was the Affini who came first, and Katie didn't see a single non-affini without the word “floret” in their name.

If Katie looked away from the buildings and the signs it was hard to ignore that the rest of the population of the ship were almost exclusively pairs or small groups, and no affini was without some kind of smaller creature hanging off of its body. The affini sometimes noticed her looking and gave a smile and a wave, which Katie returned for fear of causing offense, but the other species never did. They had eyes only for their betters.

They looked happy. Not the passive kind of happiness Katie had spent her life searching for that was mostly characterised simply by a lack of misery, but an active, visceral joy, as if getting to walk at the heel of some overgrown houseplant was the very peak of their existence to date. They practically skipped, all dancing to different inaudible tunes as they gazed lovingly up at the creatures who had enslaved them.

Katie glanced down at Thatch. Was she being unfair? She was being unfair, wasn't she? Fuck. Were these all people? It wasn't just Thatch who was secretly real, hiding amongst a population of a trillion trillion monsters?

Fuck. Fuck!

Katie pulled the pair of them to a stop underneath something that looked somewhat like a cross between a palm tree and a bagel, positioning Thatch so that she could lean into the hole. “Can you... tell me something about Rosaceae? Something that isn't to do with war or taking humans as pets. What does she do, otherwise?. I'm getting worried that she might have a rich inner life.” Katie was pretty sure she'd taught Thatch how sarcasm worked in Terran culture well enough for her to get it.

Her plant hummed, reaching up to brush a hand against Katie's shin. “I do not know her very well, I am afraid. I believe she is primarily an actress, however. She used to lead the... I suppose in English the closest word would be theater, but that does not quite capture it. She is a storyteller, of sorts. A conductor who can keep a thousand planes spinning in the air to tell stories unique to their audience, though again, the words do not quite directly translate. It is a more... participatory thing than your theater. A story you experience and shape as you interact with it. I have not had the chance to experience her work for myself, but I have heard good things.”

“Ah. Great. All the others, though, their only personality traits are that they like taking sapient creatures as pets, right?” Katie sighed. Hell. The only thing worse than fighting against a change for years and still losing was, apparently, then finding out that the thing she'd been fighting against didn't even exist. “Fuck.”

Thatch shook her head. “I can honestly say that I have never met two of my people who are exactly alike. If anything, we are individualistic almost to a fault. I suspect that the cultural inclination towards efficient, effective bureaucracy is a tacit admission that without impeccable paperwork tracking the details, our society would have collapsed long before we had reached the stars.”

Katie slumped forward, resting her chest over Thatch's head and letting her arms drape down to her upper chest. She emitted a dramatic sigh. “And we couldn't have that. You have so many species to rescue.” Katie rolled her eyes.

“Just so. Know this, Katie. I am not unique in my uniqueness. Everybody you meet here will be their own person with their own history, their own way of looking at the world, their own goals, and their own way of interacting with you.” Thatch gently tugged Katie's arms, pulling the girl forward until her head hung upsidown, bringing them eye to eye. A hand atop her head kept Katie steady. “But all of us understand our responsibility. Every person on this ship would move mountains to see you kept safe and to help you be the best Katie we can help you be. If you think that we seem preoccupied with the cute creatures of this universe then you are correct, but that is just about the only shared attribute among us.”

“Pfffff,” Katie blew, waggling her legs until Thatch pushed her back up into place. “Then I guess we go see somebody else unique. Do you know this—” Katie checked the readout on her communicator— “Erica? We're only a couple minutes out, I think. How do you all deal with things being so far away?”

Thatch shrugged, again, with a rush of air that was almost like a sigh. “I don't, unfortunately, so we shall learn about them together. If we were in a rush, we could have taken a magrail shuttle, but I suspected you would not mind the walk and so did not suggest it. Also, until you tell the registry your acceleration preferences it seems that it will assume I'm assisting you, so if you wish to remain standing alone I suggest you investigate those.”

Katie considered that, then nodded. They took off again. Despite the relative chaos of the individual buildings, the layout of the arc itself was predictable and efficient, and Katie suspected that once she got to know how things were organised she wouldn't need a guide at all to get between places. Katie guessed that the symbols she saw on each building were some kind of street system, as they seemed to change in a predictable manner, but she hadn't quite figured that out yet.

The building they were heading for became clear long before the communicator chirped to mark their arrival. While many of the buildings were covered in artwork, even in that context this one was striking. It seemed to mix the material of the path with the transparency of the sky and blurred the line between where one building ended and the next began. It was almost a sculpture of sorts, but one that tricked the eye to make it seem like a shifting, living imposition on reality that didn't quite fit. The stars around it seemed to get drawn in, becoming just another part of the piece. Shadows didn't seem to fall quite right on it. It was otherworldly even compared to the literal alien spaceship.

Thatch opened the door and the pair of them entered.

Katie found herself with her back against a wall immediately, as a neck longer than Thatch was brought a mouth filled with countless rows of teeth and four glowing eyes right up against Katie's face. It huffed, and Katie felt a rolling wave of heat dance across her skin, leaving a dull tingle in its wake. She took an instinctive breath and filled her lungs with damp, strongly-scented air. Katie found herself smiling.

She gulped, blinking rapidly as she took the creature in.

“What mortal snack deigns to enter my lair? Have you brought a gift, little one?”

Purple. Pink. Mostly dark colours, but it was plantlife again, just... really, really not in human form. Katie laughed. “Only my company,” she tried, really hoping that they hadn't just found the first affini to break Thatch's expectations. Even if they had, Thatch was right there. What harm could come to her here?

A thousand teeth curled into a grin as the creature rose back up, giving Katie some space to move. It—She?—sat curled up on four legs with what looked like wings draped down its sides. Now that Katie was no longer hyperfocused on the teeth, the creature actually looked a little goofy, and that impression was only heightened by the pair of humans sitting on its back unsuccessfully trying to hold back laughter. She almost looked like some kind of dragon, though the details weren't quite right to match Earth's ancient myths. For one, there were too many eyes.

The room itself was liberally sprinkled with artwork, photographs, sculptures, and what looked like a few projected three-dimensional models in a variety of different styles. Like the houses beyond, what could have been a tangled mess instead managed to flow smoothly through good choice of position and grouping, giving the room a complicated, varied, but not unpleasant texture.

“That'll do! I'm Eri, she/her, and those two back there are June and Sarah, who'd just love to get to do some of your internal decor. The good captain called ahead, cuties, I hear you're in need of somewhere to live. Is this for both of you? Not sure I've seen either of you around before.”

Thatch shook her head, raising a vine in a brief wave. “Hi. I'm Thatch, this is Katie. We're only looking for her, my own unit is perfectly serviceable.” At a raised eyebrow from the dragon, Thatch added, “it isn't one of yours, but I have lived in it for long enough that it is comfortable.”

Katie bit her lip. “I'm not looking for much, whatever you have will d— ack!” Katie was cut off as a million teeth backed her against the wall again.

“You are new here and so I will forgive you your insult, little T—” A quick shake of the head from Thatch cut the word off halfway through. “Uh, little sophont. We do not have anything ready to go. We do not do not much. You are speaking to artists.” She hissed the last word.

Katie giggled, gently pushing the snout away. “Okay, okay, I understand. Thank you.” She shot a glare at Thatch. While her affini had said that she didn't know this one, surely you had to be pretty out of touch to not be aware she was like... this? “Uh, do you have a pamphlet I can look a— Okay, no, no I get it!”

The creature settled back down with a satisfied grunt. “Hmnnn. I haven't gotten to design anything for a sole ward before. All of my prior work will be useless. Too big, too tall. Inaccessible. Unusable without a caretaker to do all the work. Yet, you have nowhere to stay, and so it must be ready by tonight?”

Katie's heart sank. This was the moment where her dreams hit reality, then. This culture simply couldn't account for her. Given the sheer opulence surrounding them, Katie didn't dare imagine how much a hotel here would cost. Not that she had a job. Hell, was she going to have to get a job? “It's— I don't mean to be any trouble, and I can figure out somewhere else to stay if—”

A snort cut her short. “Nonsense. I will not have any sophont's first impression of my home be delay or compromise. You will sleep where I tell you to and you will do so tonight. Come, sit, I must understand you.” A claw tapped down against the floor with an air of finality.

Katie looked over at Thatch, who, Katie noted with a perverse comfort, seemed just as baffled as she was. She walked over to a pile of cushions just opposite the architect and sat herself down. Thatch sat alongside for moral support, though Katie wasn't quite sure in which direction the support was expected to flow.

Erica was interrupted as one of her humans brought to her a stack of papers an inch thick. The affini raised it in one clawed hand, using the other to pamper the messenger into some kind of blissful oblivion. “Ah, clever girl, I knew we had something on this. The 'Xenian Terran Accessibility Model'! Some clever floret on one of those fringe worlds ended up being some kind of prodigy, so we shouldn't struggle to design something that works for you. It is then my role to make it perfect. So, Katie, when you imagine your ideal home, what do you see?”

“Uhh.”

When Katie imagined a home, she thought of a shared bunk in a cramped room aboard a dirty starship. The kind of ship where gravity wasn't a given, so you had to strap in overnight, but maintenance was so bad that the strap was usually broken. She suspected that that would not be a pleasing answer.

“I honestly have no idea,” she admitted, glancing away. “I'm good with anything, really. I don't think you can disappoint me.”

The dragon's eyes narrowed. “You speak like you wish to be eaten,” it hissed, and Katie was glad she hadn't met this one first. Thatch gave her hand a gentle squeeze, presumably to let her know that she was not on the menu, but she'd already given the game away there. The dragon was eccentric, but apparently they all were. Besides, no matter how many teeth that creature had, she also had two very uneaten humans relaxing against her flank with their noses in books. It softened the image somewhat. “But fine, how about you tell me about the nicest place you've lived and we go from there.”

Katie laughed. The architect wasn't going to like that answer either, she suspected. “That planet down there. We made a camp down by a river, uh, big tall trees around us giving us lots of coverage from rain and stuff, but a big hole over the river where we could see the stars. I have a fish that lived kinda in the river and that was nice, I want to keep them with me. We carved a bed and cooking stuff and, y'know, things. It felt big and open in a way I'd never experienced before. It was... nice. I know that isn't the kind of answer you were... expecting?” Katie paused, noting that Erica was biting her lip with what must have been two dozen teeth.

“You want an indoor habitation unit that evokes the great outdoors of a planet nobody but you has ever visited; to a scale that we have never before worked, accessible to both yourself, your pet, and, presumably, your friend here; where the aesthetic demands handmade styles and fittings; and yet I could not possibly provide anything with less than perfect amenities and utilities—and you want it by tonight?” With each word, her snout had grown closer to Katie's face until they were practically nose-to-nose.

Katie paled. “I, uh—”

“It is perfect. It shall be done. You must go at once before I change my mind.”

The dragoness whirled around, raising herself to her full height, where the room, no matter how grand, could barely contain her. She spent a moment fussing over her florets before striding out of the room with them in tow.

Thatch and Katie both spent several silent seconds sitting before Katie finally turned to pin Thatch down with a savage glare.

“How are all of you like this?”

“Hey!! What can I get you?”

The human woman had practically bounced over to Katie and Thatch as they'd approached something that claimed to be a Terran-style cafe. She was decorated with some some kind of dress in a frosty pastel blue. It seemed to be a common kind of fashion, though as with everything else no two humans wore quite the same cut. This human was wearing something that through delicate pattern and careful shaping drew the eye up to the glowing band of gold snug around her neck and the tiny little wings sprouting from her back. When the light caught her eyes right, even they seemed to glint with gold.

Katie glanced back at the sign. Angel's Delight. Cute. Probably more than a little offensive? Katie had never been religious but others were. That said, there was something about the imagery of the girl that seemed almost charming in its bare-faced confidence. Of course the affini would co-opt humanity's most cherished iconography to reinforce their own position. It was the deity role they were all auditioning for, after all.

“Uh, do you have a menu?” Katie asked, trying not to stare at the collar. While there was something deeply freeing about setting herself apart from humanity, Katie had still spent her entire life interacting with humans and these creatures aboard the ship were barely recognisable as such.

The waitress's slightly hazy eyes went wide as she processed the question. “Oh! Yes! We do! I'll— I'll go get that, pretty please wait right there!” She bounced away, wings fluttering like she expected to take off.

Did she really even count as human? Where was the crushing weight of reality on her shoulders? Her eyes were free of the low-key dread that characterised what it meant to be Terran. Her reaction times were clearly dulled and yet she spoke and acted with a confidence that spiked straight though the uncanny valley and pinned it to the floor, like she no longer needed to care about how she'd be received.

It was like somebody had spent a long time studying humanity yet had never stopped to ask anybody what being human was actually like, and then had built something that seemed to fit but without the essential misery of life, the crushing anxiety of having to filter every want or need through the uncertainty of whether it would be socially acceptable, or the terror of knowing that no matter how good things got you were never more than a month away from disaster.

The angel bounced back, holding out something that could easily have been a menu at any Terran cafe. An expensive one, perhaps, partially because its offerings all seemed very opinionated and partially because it didn't list prices. Katie hoped that Thatch didn't mind paying, because she certainly couldn't.

“Thanks,” Katie said, putting her focus back on the woman. “Do you have a name?”

“Angel Formosa, First Floret, miss!” Obviously. “Have I done anything wrong?”

Had she? Her whole existence felt wrong, but she had the same bottomless cheer that everyone on this ship seemed to share. She was property, as far as Katie understood it. No rights, no freedom. She was practically as much an object as the menu in Katie's fingers.

“Are you being paid to work here?” Katie asked.

The girl laughed. “What? No. Are you new here?” Great. It was slavery, and she was so used to it that the suggestion it could be otherwise came across like a joke. Angel's eye went wide. “Ohmygoddess, are you the new one?”

Katie paused. “Uh, 'the'? You know who I am?”

Angel nodded rapidly. “Kitty? Kate? Kaisa? Uh, something with a K?”

“Katie?”

“Katie! Yeah! You've been the talk of the ship for, like, weeks! Everyone's so excited to meet you! Have you joined the chatroom yet? Oh, probably not, you've only just got here, right? I— Oh, this is exciting! Um. Am I being too much? Sorry, I haven't interacted with an undomesticated human for a while.” Angel glanced over to Thatch and gave her a polite smile and a curtsy. “Assuming you don't have plans otherwise, of course, Miss. Aquae.”

Thatch's head snapped around, stolen out of her thoughts to focus on Angel with an intensity that, for a moment, had the girl's eyes opening a little wider. Katie could feel Thatch's uncertainty buzzing through the air.

Katie felt like her hesitation was calcifying. How was she meant to deal with this? The girl was a little ditzy, maybe, and she was being a lot. It didn't feel like a negative thing, she seemed legitimately happy and like she was being her authentic self, even if it was a self that had been put together by somebody else. Katie thought back to Leviathan, and the way she'd been carefully teaching it how to get the most out of its environment with careful construction and considered food schedules and placement.

Was this really so different?

Katie gave Thatch's vine a squeeze. After a moment, her friend squeezed back and took over the conversation. “I... no, I do not. Katie here wishes to remain independent and today has been overwhelming for her.” Thatch laid a hand on Angel's head and gave it a quick rub. “You have been a delightful host, however I am afraid I must require some space for Katie here. This is her first day on board, so please select for us a nonthreatening meal. I will have enriched water. Got all that down?”

The floret nodded rapidly and Thatch patted her gently on her way before guiding Katie to a table. The cafe itself was based out of one of the ship's countless buildings but the seating area itself was placed at the edge of what seemed to be a gigantic forest park. The trees were sparse, and Katie could just about spot a wide open field through the gaps.

This was a spaceship? Even with a mental tune-up Katie was starting to feel herself fraying around the edges again. It was all overwhelming. Katie slumped to the side, leaning against Thatch's weave. Her plant seemed surprised and glanced down with a silent question.

“I know I shouldn't be surprised at all the humans here. You've told me what's going on, but... How can this be okay? We're sitting here getting served because that poor girl is being forced to take our order, and she isn't even getting paid for it.” Katie retrieved and then squeezed a vine, close to her chest. “Exploitation doesn't stop being exploitation just because you paint a smile on it.”

Thatch rumbled for a beat. “Why do you think she would be paid?”

“Okay, sure, I guess the essentials are free, but how could anybody be happy without some kind of self-determination?” Katie asked. She raised a finger to her temple and gently rubbed it, hoping her growing headache would recede.

“Ah. And they would have that, if they were paid? Like you had it when you were being paid?” Thatch spoke with a familiar dry humour and, for the first time in their conversation she felt the gentle warmth of her plant's kind attention. Thatch rested a hand on Katie's back and she leaned into it, enjoying the pressure and heat of familiar contact.

“That's... different,” Katie admitted. “It isn't enough for this to be just as bad as how things were. They have to be better, and I don't see how literal slavery is better than wage slavery.”

Thatch emitted a thoughtful grunt. “You are fully aware that we do not share humanity's barbaric concept of 'economy', Katie. What is it that you are really concerned about?”

Katie was quiet for a moment. Thatch wasn't wrong. She was projecting Terran ideas onto this, but it still felt wrong even without them. How could slavery not be wrong? “You've said the essentials are provided, but what about other things? The captain said there were supply issues. Maybe you don't call it money, but there has to be something to decide who gets what, right?” Katie gestured over to the cafe building itself. “Why would anybody eat the basic food every day if something like this were just free? Would the whole system collapse if people like Angel refused to work?”

Katie felt a brief pulse of confusion rippling out of Thatch's motions as she brought up a knuckle to shift Katie's perspective up to meet her. “Good food is essential, Katie. Remember, our priorities are not the same as humanity's were. The absolute minimum care that we will provide is everything a creature could ever need.” She pulled Katie's communicator out of somewhere and spent a moment tapping it. She spent a moment reading something, and then looked back. “As for Angel, this particular initiative was her idea, apparently. She and her owner submitted a request to the local clerks for some space and dedicated resources, which was approved—” She checked the screen again— “five minutes later. She does not have to do this, she chose to.”

Thatch's knuckle slowly stroked under Katie's chin, growing firm for a few moments. “I expect that you will find that Terran society pretended to care for self-determination in the same way that it pretended to care about you. It was an excuse to oppress and hold you back. Always claiming that the thing that you think you need could be yours if only you continue to trade away your life for another year, or two, or ten, to work towards it, while never letting you get there. While here...” Thatch drifted off. Her gaze moved away from Katie's, and her knuckle fell away, allowing the girl to look away.

Katie didn't. “While here all they have to do is ask, and they'll get what they need?” Katie spoke with a dry kind of humour herself, but it was pointed inwards at herself. She laughed, a dark little chuckle that didn't match her words. “Assuming their owner thinks it's good for them.”

Why was that idea not as horrific as it should have been? The affini Katie knew best was, of course, Thatch. Thatch was a thoughtful, caring individual who had gladly given Katie everything she'd needed. Katie had chafed at being denied things she wanted at first, but as the days had gone by she'd grown to understand that from a different angle.

Katie being refused a fruit that would have ruined her appetite wasn't condescension, it was respect. It wasn't something Thatch had withheld out of malice or a lack of care, but because she paid so much attention to Katie that she could be confident that the only reason Katie wanted it was dumb instinct that no longer fit modern day life, or worse, a false want implanted by advertising, trickery, or the many other ways that life in Terra had been aimed at manipulating her to consume.

Through that lens the existence Thatch was describing seemed almost idyllic. No longer did Angel need to toil and suffer for a chance at maybe, one day, getting to roll the dice at getting what she wanted and finding out that she'd been wrong about wanting it at all. She had somebody she could ask who understood her so deeply that she wouldn't ever be given things that wouldn't make her happy.

Katie almost envied it. She was starting to see how, if Katie had somebody who understood her so deeply and who wanted to give her the gift of comfortable certainty, she could almost be tempted into it. Almost. She didn't need the help, Katie could get by just fine on her own, and she cherished the opportunity to figure out who she was by herself. Didn't she?

Katie whimpered. All this thinking was making her head hurt. She rested her fingers against her forehead and sat up, resting her elbows against the table. “Could I get a glass of water or something?”

Thatch looked back down, spent a moment rummaging inside of herself, then offered Katie a pill. “I acquired these from your vet while you were otherwise occupied. You will want to take two a day, one in the early morning and one in the late evening. Do so in addition to your other medications unless and until you find a different method of dosage that you prefer.”

Thatch handed her a glass of water, too, without explaining where she'd gotten it. Katie looked across at the wordless pill. It was pink, slightly squishy, and emblazoned with a six eyed smiley face. “What's in it?”

Thatch raised an eyebrow. A gentle finger on Katie's chin moved her gaze over to meet her affini's. At this point, Thatch wasn't really moving anything. Katie had long since started simply going with it, letting herself be guided. It was easier that way, and Katie had never regretted it. She smiled up at Thatch's questioning gaze.

“Suddenly curious as to what I'd like to put inside of you, Katie? You trust me. Would I give you anything dangerous?” There was a steel in her eye, and Katie felt like she'd made another mistake and rushed to correct herself.

She quickly shook her head, as much as she could without breaking contact. “Never, but you usually make that stuff yourself. You didn't make this, how do you know it's safe? I'm not doubting, I just...” Katie sighed. “This is all a lot. I feel like I'm trying to learn ten new things every minute and I can't get a break. I won't have to think about it if you tell me it's okay.”

Thatch considered that for a moment, released Katie's chin, and looked away once more. Her expression was inscrutable and Katie's sixth sense felt unusually scrambled. Thatch pulled the girl's communicator out of wherever she'd been keeping it. “Bring up the details on our local Solarbeak strain, please.” The screen resolved to a detailed 3d model of a wide, open flower with a striking yellow and black pattern. Alongside was reams of text in what Katie was coming to recognise as the native Affini tongue.

“English translation.” The text fuzzed for a moment. This translation was much, much shorter and had many, many more exclamation marks. “No, the non-floret version, please.” The text fuzzed again. When it returned it was a little longer, though still far short of the original. At least there were fewer exclamation marks.

This {{Class-C}} {{xenodrug}} is really good, but cuties probably shouldn't try it without permission! The Solarbeak plant comes from an adorable little moon somewhere in the {{Pegasus galaxy}} and it was very very toxic to the {{natural inhabitants}} there! With a caring {{#TODO do humans have claws or hands? the nails get longer does that make them claws}} we made it much safer for them, and as a lucky coincidence it also fixes up a whole bunch of {{little brain things}} in the {{poor humans}}! Kind of a general top-up for {{brain chemistry}} and not much else. Probably mix it with something a {{bit more noticeable}}? Humans are {{really forgetful}}, but if you mix in something that feels good they're sure to come back for more!! An essential component for most florets who suffer from {{brain chemistry stuff}}!!!

It kept going like that for a while. Many of the terms were styled differently, and if Katie tapped one she was taken to a page specifically for the topic. All of them were written similarly. Katie pulled a face. “The original translation is more rigorous than this, right?”

Thatch nodded, flicked the display back over to the affini version, and scrolled around in it. The table of contents alone was longer than the entire English translation. “Much. It appears they did not make all the same choices I would have, but I can vouch for this. No significant mental alterations beyond the obvious benefits of making sure your neurons can talk to each other smoothly. The classification is somewhat arbitrary, but the justification is, and I quote, 'these cuties will bond with anything and the better they're thinking the faster it happens'.” Apparently Katie was going to have to learn a new language if she wanted any details on things, and even then she wouldn't escape the constant... affininess.

Katie opened her mouth and waited for Thatch to place the pill inside. It took a moment. She took a gulp of the water and swallowed the lot down, letting out a deep breath as the frayed edges of her mind started pulling back together. Again it did nothing for the stress she was under, but it seemed to raise the ceiling on how much stress she could handle high enough that it no longer seemed like a problem. Katie sank into the chair.

It looked cheap and plastic but despite that was actually very comfortable. The table, too, was thin and a little too shiny but felt extremely solid and actually had a very satisfying texture. The whole establishment evoked the aesthetic of a cheap Terran cafe merged with the apparent Affini need to never do anything by half.

Thatch retrieved Katie's meal. Toast, scrambled eggs, and some kind of sausage. Katie wrinkled her nose. “I'm trying to be vegetarian,” she complained.

Thatch glanced back, considering Katie for a moment with an implacable expression. “You will find it very easy here. While we primarily focus on those sapient enough to appreciate our care, the other life in this universe is no less deserving of cultivation. You will not be allowed to do harm, Katie. It is not necessary for you to worry about these things.”

Katie stabbed the sausage with a cheap-looking plastic-looking fork that turned out to be the nicest piece of cutlery she'd ever handled and tore off a piece. She brought it up to her mouth and chewed for a few seconds, then swallowed. “Mm. Pretty good, yeah.”

Thatch raised an eyebrow. “Our cooking has been known to break the wills of certain creatures through taste alone. I am confident that it is more than pretty good, Katie.”

“Your soup is better, is all. I'm sure I'd be more surprised if I was coming into this fresh.” Katie flashed a smile over at her partner, who looked away.

“Katie,” Thatch started, though after a few seconds it became clear she wasn't going to continue.


Poor Katie looked up with a frown, clearly confused. She asked something. Some variation on “are you alright?”, spoken as if the answer wasn't already written in tense vines and twitching plantlife.

But of course, Katie couldn't really understand the utterly alien body language of somebody she'd met only weeks before, especially not when Thatch was putting so much effort into mixing her signals. Thatch felt like a rotting fool for not seeing it earlier. She was doing it again. Drawing some innocent creature in without even realising it.

It was so clodding obvious, in hindsight. No wonder everyone they'd met had assumed that Katie was eager for adoption. She stared up at Thatch with a dangerous level of trust that she no longer seemed to question. She responded to touch with easy submission and a terrifying dependence. Could Katie have even made it through the day alone?

Thatch had gotten too used to letting her natural rhythms dance, thinking it harmless. Only now did she spot Katie conforming to the same beat, now that Thatch was finally paying attention to more than just her metaphorical heart. It was getting harder to keep herself safe to be around and even if she did, the confusion it brought to Katie's face was physically painful.

Thatch knew it was too late, anyway. She'd seen the answers in hard numbers. Most ward species assumed that things like compatibility and dependence couldn't be measured but when it came to the Affini they were usually wrong. Many species, pre-domestication, made the realisation that after enough time a pet and their owner would seem to move on the same wavelength even with their primitive forms of caretaking. Thatch's people had turned that concept into a science and nurturing it into an art form.

Katie's heart didn't quite beat in perfect time to Thatch's song but it was close enough that the vetinarian's scanner had given it a little smiley face. Coming along well. High compatibility, high dependence. If Thatch kept going like this Katie would find her attempts at independence a misery that Thatch simply could not rescue her from. Worse, should she find herself getting close to another, they would face an uphill battle to get the Thatch out of her.

Rotten roots, Thatch had really screwed up here.

“I am okay,” Thatch lied. She cringed, then added “A little overwhelmed by being back, in a sense.”

Not technically a lie. It would have to do. She'd already done enough damage, she didn't need to add breaking the poor girl's trust to the list. All she had to worry about now was how she could safely disengage before it was too late. Thatch had been doing a terrible job so far of keeping Katie at arm's length since her appointment, and it was difficult to keep it up.

Katie deserved help and support. Thatch could hardly deny her it, even knowing that each time she failed to do so Katie was brought deeper inside of her trap. She was doing long term harm because she couldn't bring herself to cause short term hurt and she knew it. Her weakness had already destroyed one creature and she wasn't going to let it happen again.

Even with Thatch's body and words carefully controlled Katie seemed to see right through her attempts at misdirection. Her concern was touching and Thatch had no idea how to get rid of it. Thatch wasn't worth the concern and Katie had no idea what providing it was costing her.

Thatch knew for a fact that there were no gods or goddesses watching over this universe, or at very least none who were paying enough attention for her tastes. All the same, her certainty was rocked just a little by the fortuitous timing of an incoming message. Rescue.

All it had taken was a long walk around the minor habitable arc, ostensibly to help Katie get her bearings; a few hours helping her set basic preferences in her paperwork so she could take a magrail shuttle and get the other amenities of the ship working to her needs; and a meal. They'd eventually gotten around to shipboard evening, which happened to about coincide with sunrise on planet Dirt. That wouldn't last; a Dirt day was about thirty hours long and an Elettarium day was only twenty two.

Thatch tapped the message icon, silently grateful for the opportunity to change the subject. “Looks like your hab is ready, we should get going. I have some things I need to take care of, so I will drop you off there and attend to my own needs.”

“But—!”

Thatch shook her head. She couldn't hear the rest of that sentence. She wasn't strong enough to say no. “No buts, Katie. I have put off my own medical checkup for too long and I am confident you will be fine on your own.” Lie. “Or, at least, you have already made several acquaintances who would be grateful if you were to call upon them.”

Thatch raised and turned to go, herding Katie towards the nearest magrail entrance. The pod took off with a very gentle acceleration, automatically accounting for Katie's presence but still getting up to a good speed quite quickly. Katie's hab was to be on the Elettarium's other arc, and so they had to take the long way around regardless. As the ship was in gravity and the two arcs were motionless the interchange at the ship's base was not currently experiencing microgravity. The process of switching rails took a few seconds longer than normal, filled with an awkward silence.

Katie kept trying to start conversations and Thatch couldn't bring herself to deny the girl, but her answers were fairly short. The laughter that Katie squeezed out of her was bittersweet. The way Katie's brain worked was delightful and charming and all the more so when she wasn't struggling against her own biology just to exist. She had a sharp mind and a sharper wit and Thatch would never forgive herself if she dulled it.

Once the pod arrived at its destination Thatch guided Katie out of the pod, following the communicator as it mapped out the short walk to Katie's new address.

For all the effect that she had been having on her Katie, Thatch could feel the way she was being wormed into in turn. If she could have simply not cared none of this would be a problem, but she couldn't bring herself to do it. Thatch looked down at Katie and felt a flutter in her core. She wanted to see all of the smiles. All of the laughs. A thousand thousand moments of realisation as some new concept finally clicked. Thatch had so many things that she could teach. There were so many things that they could learn together. The universe was big enough that Thatch could keep running forever and nobody would ever catch up, but the thought of doing so alone seemed more painful than it ever had before.

Thatch had to be alone. She had to hold herself back.

It would be so easy, even now, to forget the promises, forget what she'd said to others. Just push the girl up against the wall and drown her in a song she hadn't even realised she was craving. Nobody would mind. Katie wouldn't mind. She wouldn't be capable of it. Thatch would tear her apart, scrap what wasn't worth salvaging, replace everything that didn't please and put things back together in a different way. Again and again and again until she was happy with the way Katie ticked. Until she got bored with that and felt the need to do it again in a different way.

She knew she could make Katie happy. The right mix of chemicals, stimulation, and input and Thatch's broken machine would be happier than she'd ever been.

Or miserable. Fearful. Lost in pleasure, or denied it entirely. Perhaps allowed to understand what had been done to her so that Thatch could watch her fail to fight it. Perhaps given enough control to be hateful, yet so addicted she'd beg for that control to be taken all over again. Anything Thatch wanted. Everything Thatch wanted.

Thatch's hand twitched. She forced herself to look away but the thoughts didn't stop. It would be so easy to justify it to herself. So easy to justify all of it. Katie would love every second, if Thatch wanted her to. Or she'd hate it, but be well behaved enough to pretend, at least to others. Or she'd be so helplessly in love that she wouldn't mind the pain. Whatever whims Thatch felt could be made a reality and eventually she'd go too far and break something and she wouldn't be able to put Katie back together again.

Thatch ground her spiked teeth together. Affini weren't meant to be like this. She wasn't meant to want these things. She was meant to selflessly dedicate herself just like everybody else. She hadn't meant to break Caeca, but Katie? Katie she would break on purpose just to see the fire in her eyes shatter, and she'd do it again and again until she broke something so badly it went out for good. By the stars, she was too much of a monster to be safe to be around.

Thatch brought a vine to Katie's neck. Two minutes. That's all it would take. Nobody would stop her. Nobody could stop her. Katie was looking up at her with a confused smile. So trusting that she couldn't even see the threat. She treated every other affini with suspicion and the irony was that they really were the good guys. It was Thatch that she should be afraid of, but she was in too deep to see it.

Thatch pressed the communicator into Katie's hands and ran. Sure, she gave some parting words, some excuse for where she would be going. A promise that she'd come running if Katie needed her. Instructions for how to get in contact. A hug. All the things she knew she shouldn't do but was too much of a coward to hold back.

But it was still running away and Thatch knew it. She was just too weak to even flee properly.