Author's note:
This is first and foremost a Sci-Fi story. I had the pleasure recently to re-read a book from one of my favorite authors, Jack Vance. Inspired by the simple pleasure of tearing through an adventure story I thought I would write my own. I can't hope to match Vance, but I wanted to try a longer work.
There will definitely be sex scenes. I expect to include at least one scene in each chapter. I do not believe however, that they will be as lengthy or descriptive as in my other work. With luck they will be enjoyable to read without taking over the narrative.
I'm absolutely looking for feedback. I routinely check the bulletin board and email feedback mechanism.
One final note: There is an exoplanet with the same name as the one where I have set this story. I have taken considerable creative license with it. I was more interested in writing a fun story than a scientifically accurate one.
This is a work of fiction (obviously). All characters are over age eighteen. Thank you for reading!
*****
Lost Colony: Chapter 01
***
Noise and fear. Fragments of urgent conversations pressed in, swelling and receding. Flashes of light intruded, even through closed lids. Lids that refused to open.
Alain Sparr fought for consciousness. His dream-mind fought to make sense of the disturbance around him, the voices, lights, alarms, and chaos that lay just outside his awareness. He almost broke through. Though immobilized, the fog of sleep thinned long enough for him to pick up on a sense of movement. He was being transported, bumped repeatedly as something beneath him jarred his... what, stretcher? A familiar face hovered above him.
"I'm so sorry, Alain."
He faded again into dream.
It was the unexpected sensation of weightlessness that at last dragged Sparr awake. He came to, immobile and disoriented, strapped into a form-fitting chair. Dim lighting greeted his eyes, still thick with cryo-sleep. Sparr recognized the nausea and weakness that accompanied a return from hibernation. There was no point in movement yet. Instead he took in the scene around him.
He appeared, curiously, to be the only occupant of one of the ship's escape pods. The Odysseus had four of the smaller pods such as the one Sparr found himself in, and two larger. He remembered the clamor and chaos that had almost awoken him earlier. If the ship had experienced some sort of damage, it would have been foolish to send forth a pod with just one occupant, especially an advisor such as himself. Non-Alliance crew and passengers were usually an afterthought.
Through the pod's ports, Sparr had a generous view of space. Before he could wonder where he was, the vessel's rotation brought into view the planet below. K2-136-b was immediately recognizable. Not only was the planet's atmosphere distinctive, its image had featured prominently in every pre-launch briefing leading up to the mission. The Odysseus had reached its destination.
"Commencing atmospheric entry."
The pod's safety systems had activated. The AI by now must have evaluated whatever had transpired aboard the Odysseus and decided that a surface landing was the safest option for its inhabitant. There was no overriding it, at least not without military credentials. Whatever had happened, it must be near catastrophic. Sparr thought back to his friends aboard the ship, to Calista. How many had survived?
"Landing site identified."
The pod lurched and shook, signs it had begun its descent. Sparr, hoping for a glimpse of the Odysseus, kept his face pressed against the glass of the viewport. He spotted something which might have been the ship, but it was too distant to be sure, much less make out any damage. Instead, he watched as the planet's atmosphere first approached, then enveloped, the pod. For a time he could make out nothing but the grey mass of clouds.
After what seemed like an unbearable delay, the pod emerged into a clear sky. Sparr caught a glimpse of the planet's surface, brown and orange under the influence of a spreading dawn. Quickly, he scanned the horizon, hoping for some landmark, anything that might guide him once grounded. Initially he found nothing of interest, just a series of ridges like fingers clawing into a wide forest. Beyond lay a dusty plain. If there was any sign of human habitation it was too small or too distant. Then, just before the pod again dropped into the clouds, he made out a city. Mostly sprawling and flat, it changed character toward the center with a cluster of improbable spires.
That would be his destination. If the Odysseus was still intact, Sparr's best chances for establishing contact would be found in a thriving city. And if the ship had been destroyed? Sparr didn't dwell on the prospect.
The pod managed its descent with care. Lacking other guidance, it would identify a location in the planet's temperate zone, with terrain suitable not just for the pod's safety but which also would accommodate the landing of a larger rescue vessel. Secondary priority would be placed upon proximity to fresh water and plant life.
"Winds moderate." The pod's announcements were intended to allow passengers to remain informed without leaving their safety harnesses. "Approach selected."
Only in the final moments did things go awry. An ominous scraping sound rang out as the pod's nose struck the branch of a tree which it could not detect, or could not avoid. With a lurch, the tail swung madly, then sagged. The pod's flight came to an ungraceful conclusion. It fell.
Sparr gasped in pain as the impact threw him first against his harness then hard to the side. The scene through the viewport shifted rapidly from sky, to tree, to soil, then sky again. When the pod flipped for the last time, Sparr found himself laying sideways. A poorly-stowed survival kit had come loose, strewing the cabin with its contents. He began to wriggle free.
"Atmospheric sensors blocked."
"Fuck the sensors," Sparr groaned. It hardly mattered, he thought, whether the outside air was breathable. Long range spectrographic scans had suggested that the air on K2-136-b was Earth equivalent. Of more immediate concern, the viewport had cracked. Even if help was on the way, which he doubted, he was already beginning to breathe the planet's atmosphere. Sparr gathered himself, opened the hatch, and crawled free.
K2-136-b, or Kaybe, had first been detected more than 500 years earlier. At .94 Earth's mass, it had immediately drawn attention as a potential second home for mankind. The improvements over the following decades in exoplanet imaging had only fueled interest, suggesting favorable atmospheric composition as well as the presence of liquid water. The planet appeared to have a narrow temperate zone, but one large enough to support substantial colonization.
Standing on the surface, Sparr found he had lost interest in the detailed analysis that had been presented at the beginning of the mission. The air was sweet, if disconcertingly humid after almost two years aboard the Odysseus. The soil was firm. He was alive.
Was anyone else?
Sparr checked his communicator. The damaged pod shared its diagnostics but there was nothing from the Odysseus. Even drugged for cryo-sleep, the chaos aboard the ship had been evident. Sparr recalled snatches of conversation, fearful expressions, and the sound of alarms. Someone had stuffed him aboard the escape pod in such haste they hadn't had time to waken him first. The Odysseus might still be operational, but Sparr would have to proceed on the assumption that no rescue was likely. He would make his way toward the city.
Having been the only occupant of the escape pod granted Sparr a surplus of certain supplies. He stuffed his pack with extra ammunition, two spare water pouches, and as many nutrient snacks as would fit. On impulse he threw in a second medical kit. The bulging pack was almost unmanageable, but Sparr comforted himself with the thought that due to Kaybe's lower gravity the pack weighed perhaps a kilo less than it would have on Earth. He took off.
"Mark location as pod impact site," Sparr said. Advisors, as well as most Alliance personnel, had voice-activated implants located just beneath their ears. As Sparr began his journey he issued a series of commands.
"Secure pod."
"Pod secured." The response rang in his head, inaudible to anyone, or anything, else that might be listening. "Hull integrity compromised."
No shit
, Sparr thought, still aching. Not that it truly mattered. The pod was intended as an escape vessel only. Even an undamaged pod lacked the ability to resume flight.
"Scan for radio transmissions."
"None found," the implant informed him.
Sparr strode through a landscape at once familiar and alien. Trees unlike any he knew grew in erratic clusters. Bulbous trunks gave way to wispy branches, dripping with sap. Sparr quickly learned to avoid the sticky substance, which seemed to attract swarms of insects. Between the thickets, a banded grass grew heavy. Less frequently, Sparr came upon what he later named sentinel trees. These solo behemoths rose to improbable heights before breaking into a flat cluster of branches. If, thought Sparr, the planet was home to pterodactyls, these would certainly be their nesting sites.
His conjecture was more than idle thought; life on Kaybe was Sparr's mission. K2-136 Genetics, his employer, held limited rights to all forms of life native to the planet. Advisors such as Sparr were tasked with documenting and formalizing a claim before the rights expired. Everything Sparr needed for his work was still aboard the Odysseus, but that didn't dampen his interest in the abundance of plant and animal life about him.
The city he had spotted from the pod lay to the east. Scale had been difficult to determine from space, but the journey wouldn't be a short one. Sparr lengthened his stride. At well over six feet in height he covered ground quickly, weaving between the clusters of trees and leaping over exposed roots. Long periods of cryo-sleep generally left subjects sluggish, but aboard the Odysseus all occupants had been awoken at least twice to exercise, be briefed on mission progress, and visit with other members of the crew. Even during sleep, the ship's advanced cryo-beds provided neural stimulation of muscle tissues, keeping them as toned as possible. Sparr wasn't yet fully recovered, but would be before day's end.