Growing light, coming out of the long sleep. Lobsang wasn't sure how long he'd been unconscious after the crash: it must have been days. It was a twenty by thirty room he found himself in, dank and fetid with the stink of several unwashed men. A distance light source, that grudgingly illuminated.
A face noticed he was awake. An older face, creased and wrinkled, drawn and haggard with malnutrition. "Hello, hello, hello. Who do we have here? Oriental heritage, if I haven't lost my touch. Not India, not China. Vietnam? No, no, don't think so. Thailand? Not far enough north. You look like someone who hasn't had an easy life, even before we were bailed out. Tibet. Yeah, from the Himalayas."
A sip of water and Lobsang's mouth could function. "Yes, yes," he whispered, "I am from Tibet."
"Didn't know you buggers were this far out. Most of your lot stayed on Mars after the Centaurians terraformed it."
"Not all. Some traders, some adventurers, some fleeing the loss of our culture."
The face was scratched by thick, ungainly fingers. "Yeah, we've all pretty much given up over the past hundred and fifty years, ever since the Galaxy saved us from ourselves."
The newcomer looked around. "Where am I?"
"A gilded cage, buck, a gilded cage."
"I beg your pardon?"
Lobsang's eyes grew more accustomed to the light: a strange, blue glow reminiscent of the old flourescent bulbs. Looking around, he saw a large, squarish room, with a long central table surrounded by bunks like the one he lay upon three high. Despite the smell and the lighting, it was quite nice, with comfortable chairs and fine furniture. A sideboard held several interesting bottles and fruit and cheeses. Several gaunt figures lounged around, some wheezing heavily. The face gave him another sip of water and smiled, "Do you know about Gillam's Nebula?"
"Yes. A dangerous part of space; no one has penetrated it and returned."
"Well, you've penetrated it. You're on a planet in the midst of the nebula, circling one sun with a half dozen more-less seven light years away. Enough radiation ta break your equipment."
"How have you survived it?"
"Who says this is surviving?"
************
Larry Marsh was sitting naked on a soft plant of an almost indescribable nature. All he knew is it conformed to his buttocks like an old beanbag chair and tickled his skin; he heard it was a tricolor plant, but it appeared grey-green to him.. The sky was a grayish, milky haze with two red dots of light the size of Earth's Moon and a blue one half that size. The air temperature was around his body temp: warm and caressing with a slight breeze. He had been here five Earth years, and wasn't ready to leave.
Growing up in the Orion system, he was a stocky kid from his youth, strong but awkward. He only cared about the skills and education that would advance his wants, leaving the Terran Learning System as soon as he could. As he matured, he went into the family business: smuggling. The physical labor still required for the odd tasks and the physical confrontation standard with that class of human kept his body strong and reasonably agile, although his face testified to two broken noses he'd never had fixed properly.
Larry also had a talent for getting caught, so he drifted to the edge of human habitation where law enforcement was less rigorous than the core of the Apulnian Empire. One day, he found himself alive in Gillam's Nebula and in touch with an entirely new race.
It was apparent early on they could read his thoughts, and fortunately, he had a Vocalizer that could interpret their gesticulations and electronic thought patterns into audible speech. This race had neither ocular nor aural senses, but sensed everything through their extremely soft and sensitive limbs, which numbered in the hundreds in many different sizes.
His loins ached as he approached a sticky, salty outburst. The mass of tendrils that covered his pelvis, red, blue, yellow, green and two colors he could not describe, pulsed as the moment approached. The Vocalizer chirped and hummed: "Yes, my pet, my tasty one, give me your Nectar. There is no vintage sweeter than you. Send your fluid on my receptors, I cannot wait much longer. Now, now, now, now. I will reward you with your heart's desire."
Being a simple man with few personal ambitions, he thought he was already being rewarded with his heart's desire. Getting ridiculously rich off a contraband trade shipping the resources of the Nebula from a perfectly secret base and having a small, docile tribe of humans to terrorize were bonuses. His head jerked back and he gave the alien what he desired, screaming and thrashing as his reproductive system emptied itself. Looking down at the mass, he gently squeezed the tendrils close to the hands he buried in the alien's maze. "To think they call you Medusa," he said out loud, which the alien could not hear.
**********
Lobsang was sitting on his bunk sipping vegetable broth. The replicator had the cognate down pretty well; as with most replicated food, there was a hollowness in the taste. Looking around the room, the other residents were sitting lazily, staring at the ceiling or at walls, a couple were having a whispered conversation holding hands.
"I thought the Empire wasn't lettin' Religious folks of any kind travel the Galaxy freely any more. Not after Pontus III." The face had identified itself as Brendan McShane, from the planet Cork out toward the fringe of the Apulnian Empire. "Those Christian missionaries stirred up so much trouble the Imperial Diet passed restrictive legislation faster than lightspeed."
"We were exempted from the new laws," Lobsang replied. "The Centaurians have admired us since First Contact and the Evacuation, so they used their influence. They also provided our ship, the
Sangha Lhasa
. It has been twenty Galactic years since we started our journey from Centauri VI."
"You guys're kinda like tha old Irish monks, who sailed around up Iceland. Have to say I admire ya. What happened to your ship?"
"I do not know. We were holding a position at a safe distance to Gilliam's Nebula, taking readings and contemplating the beauty of it shape, when our instruments started going off line. The ship began to lurch erratically and the Masters ordered us into the lifepods. Mine was ejected on a trajectory toward the Nebula, and I had an excellent opportunity to practice calming meditation as I approached the boundary. After I went in, my memory went grey until I awoke here a few moments ago."
Brendan scratched his face again; he looked as though he hadn't shaved for a week. "I might be able ta fill in tha blanks. But first things first: sooner or later Larry will show up. If you do what he says, you'll be fine."
"He is the leader of your community?" Lobsang inquired.
"Yeah, ya might say that. Not that he was democratically elected, of course." A dry chuckle.
"So what is the extent of your dwelling?"
"Almost what ya see here. Can't go out for long periods of time, due to the radiation."
"Yes, I was wondering about that. Life as we know it cannot exist within the Nebula due to the radiation background."
"That's what I thought 'til three years ago," Brendan mused, "Then tha universe screwed with me, so to speak."
A hatch opened and closed loudly, and a stocky man around six foot tall, with greying blond hair and wearing a green-t-shirt and shorts entered. The other inhabitants of the room drew away from the newcomer, trying to avoid eye contact. Brendan sat on his stool across from Lobsang placidly. "Hello, Larry."
"Hi, Brendan. How's life treatin' ya?"
"'Bout the same. You?"
"It's another lovely day here in paradise, right lads?" There were a few murmurs of forced assent. "This the new meat?"
"Yes, his name is Lobsang and he's from Mars."
Striding over, Larry stood in front of Lobsang, towering over him. "Well, he looks kinda scrawny and weak. Hope the Masters like him; we'll find out in a few hours." Bending over, his brown eyes bore into Lobsang's, which returned his glare placidly. "There's a few things we need to get square, first, bucko. Brendan'll give you the full history why we're here when he can. But first, I need to get straight with you who's in charge here beyond a shadow of a doubt." Swinging from his hips, he landed a savage uppercut to Lobsang's jaw with enough force to knock him backward and bounce his head off the wall.