Chapter Five
The surface of the planet was nothing but dead rock and mausoleums as far as the eye could see, and if Helen was to be believed, there wasn't another living soul basically within ten minutes flight in any direction. The defenses were all automated, and many of them were basically antiques at this point so Sketch wasn't especially worried about them, although there was always a chance that a patrol could come swooping by or that they could trip some alarm he wasn't perfect at dealing with. There wasn't even much in the way of weather on the planet either, simply because the oxygen was produced and balanced by machines, and there wasn't much in the way of things to consume that oxygen.
It was a tombworld in nearly every sense of the word.
Sketch had expected the buildings to be closer together, but it was a decent walk from the landing spot past the Brookian structure over towards the tombs of human royalty. They hadn't been originally located on Jamolti, but when the Starless Dominion had taken over, they'd insisted that the remains of the human royal familes be kept on the Dominion's primary tombworld like all other royalists in fiefdoms under their control. A large structure had been built and everything had been interred from their original home on Earth and relocated to Jamolti, something the human royals had been told was a great honor, although in his reading up on the Dominion, he'd been able to recognize their *
real*
reason for doing so.
With all the deceased royalty of the Dominion's subjects on one distant tombworld in the middle of nowhere, there were less reminders of times when all these species had been under their own guidance and not under the iron fist of the Starless Dominion. Royals were contained to their palaces. The currency was that of the Dominion. Anything to remind subjects of the times before the Dominion held control was constantly being minimized and swept under the proverbial rug. Beneath the Dominion's iron fist, royalty was like a caged animal in a zoo, something the people had to think to go and look at, instead of it being constantly around them.
And if ever the royalty got to be more trouble than they were worth, it also made it much easier to remove them as well, lessons the humans had learned the hard way.
Sketch found himself looking at the building more closely as they approached it, and it had clearly been built by the Dominion itself with only a smattering of care towards what the humans whose remains were interred in would think of it. There were handfuls of pieces with human iconography scattered around the place, but it was all obfuscated beneath layer after layer of Dominion stamping, revealing a complete lack of understanding of who and what humans were. Or, more likely, the Dominion just didn't give a shit. The imagery was strange - people with antique musical instruments and microphones, performances, thralls of people in worship to the performers. There also seemed to be one figure who recurred in multiple different mosaics across the surface of the building, a strange heavyset man in a white suit that seemed to be adorned with jewels, a large coif of onyx black hair atop of his head, clinging to a microphone as legions of adoring humans heaped praise upon him, droplets of sweat flying from him in every direction.
Parts of the building had become slightly run down, dings and dents peppering the outside of the structure, and the dust that had accumulated on the path leading up to it was thick. Nobody had been near the human mausoleum in quite some time, which made Sketch feel a little bit more relaxed about their whole endeavor, because the last thing he needed was some nosy guard coming across them. It seemed, however, like the Dominion liked to keep humanity out of sight and out of mind.
"I guess I should've been here more often when I was still considered royalty," Serena sighed. "No one's been in this place for far, *
far*
too long."
"In that you humans and we Y'bari are alike - we have no use for our dead either," Aliara said.
"Well, we've got *
some*
use for them today," Sketch said as his eyes combed over the area around the outskirts of the building, looking for some sort of automated defenses that they might have missed, but finding none. "Assuming you're right about this."
"I'm right more often than not," Serena said proudly.
"I've been looking through the royal archives and I don't see anything about Fury Rose listed in there, Aliara," Sketch said. "Hell, I didn't even see her name *
mentioned*
all that much."
"It wouldn't be," she said as they approached the front door of the mausoleum. "We had to keep most traces of The Calm hidden from the main records in case the Dominion obtained a copy of our archives, which is why there's a severe decline in us talking about them internally after Dominion took over. There's lots of things that are still in there, but they're encoded, and I'll teach you the code. We grew very paranoid about being kept so close to the Dominion after humanity's submission. The only reason I even know about this particular internment is because of the stories your friend Lord Ardbard told me growing up. He was friends with Fury Rose, said while she could be unpredictable, she was also remarkably insightful."
"Unpredictable," Sketch laughed, examining the door as he shook his head. "That's certainly one word for it. She often claimed to hear voices no one else did. Keep in mind, she was able to change the minds of hundreds of thousands of people, but even many in The Calm itself were never entirely comfortable around her. The tools of our trade, the abilities we wielded as Calm... they came incredibly easy to Rose. *
Too*
easy if the other Furies were to be believed. They were worried that she held too much power, and that it had taken a toll on her mind. I sort of thought it sounded like superstition, especially since she'd only just become a Fury when I joined up in The Calm. People tend to gossip in any workplace, you know?"
"But... hearing voices?"
"Could've just been eccentricities," he said hopefully as they came to stand directly in front of the door, his hands reaching out to smooth against it. "So how do we get in?"
"We've got two options," Serena sighed. "We can break in and hope the alarm doesn't go off, or we can use my access code, which will guarantee the door will open without an alarm, unless my ID code has been tagged, in which case they'll definitely know I'm alive, and then we'll be in an entirely different kind of mess."
"What are the odds your ID code has been tagged to send an alert?" Sketch asked before turning to Aliara. "Is that the kind of thing the Y'bari would do?"
Aliara looked amused by that suggestion, tilting her head almost scoldingly. "Y'bari troopers don't do *
anything*
that we aren't directly ordered to. As dangerous as they may have seemed before their deposal, I don't think the Dominion gave the human royals a second thought after they were slaughtered," the ex-Y'bari soldier said. "My vote is for using her code."
"That's sort of how I feel," Serena said, approaching the terminal. "I think my code's still going to be good, and I'm not all that concerned about what happens when the door opens. Even if an alarm goes off, it's not going to be responded to very quickly. There isn't anybody all that nearby on world, and if some kind of notice is sent to the Dominion, they're several hours away, at the very least. We can go and have ourselves a looting before anyone shows up, I'm sure of it."
"Fine," Sketch said, pulling his cloak a bit closer around him reflexively. He'd gotten out of the habit of trusting other people, so this all still sat a little uncomfortably with him, but it seemed like both Serena and Aliara were intent on being in his life for the long haul, so it would be best to just accept them as allies and putting faith in them.
He just needed to remember how to actually *
do*
that.
Serena stepped right up to a scanner and placed her palms flat on ID readers, her eyes looking straight forward as an automated system scanned her. "State access code."
"O'Quincy, White Dwarf, Zulu Baker Echo Echo three three seven."
"Access granted," the door replied drearily, as the two sheets of massive metal slid open to allow them access into the tomb. "You have... three hours... of access before doors will close. Do not exceed time allotted or you will be locked inside until an attendant can come and verify your identity, at which point you will be released. Thank you."
Sketch tapped the syslink on his neck to open a channel to Helen. "Helen, set a timer for two hours. At the end of it, give us a call and tell us to get our asses out of here. I don't even want to be here *
that*
long, but who knows how long it'll take us to find what we need and haul ass."
"You got it, boss. Stay safe."
"Only thing I know how to do well. Sketch out."
The path inside the building wasn't covered with as much dust as Sketch had expected it to be, but he could see there were tiny little air vents blowing across the ground, recirculating the atmosphere, and keeping anything from settling on the floors. That only applied to the floors, though, and all the sarcophagi near the entrance had a caked on layer of grime atop of them. There were also cobwebs linked among most of the ceilings, although he found himself wondering what spiders could possibly feast on in here.