Disclaimer:
This is a work of fiction. All characters are legal adults and over 18.
Foreword:
My hope is to entertain and learn about stories, and I am grateful for all who have shared their time. Thank you.
A note on tech: There's been some different feedback on tech, as used in the story, and I promise irritating the reader was not my intention. Chalk it up to inexperience and incompetence. I've tried to balance things out more, we'll see how I did. I wanted to make the story close to current technology, that is why there are no laser guns, for example. I hope that's not too disappointing. I was trying to imagine what it would be like to go to Proxima b with what we had, only fixing the problem of distance and travel time.
I wondered about whether to make Proxima b tidally locked or not. It's fascinating to imagine a world where there is a thin line of longitude where anything could live, the border between the night/day side -- but the weather seemed like it would be crazy with all the superheating and storms, so I decided against that. I also wondered how well a species could evolve without easy and regular timekeeping -- the notion of a 'day'. What would you use for time on a tidally locked world if you were just a beginning life form?
There is some sex suggested in this installment, but the remaining two sex scenes are toward the end of the story, and they aren't human on human.
A recap from Chapters 12-14:
Crippled in orbit around Proxima b, the crew of Maxwell's Demon assessed what the ship's status meant for their mission. An investigation was launched into the cause of the navigation failure, with sabotage being one of the possibilities. The problems they faced were a hole in the reactor wall, and a loss of cooling fluid from the unplanned tumble through the violent flare of Proxima.
They decided to attempt repair of the breach in the reactor wall using the repair crawler, despite the fact it required the reactors to be shut down -- and that was not possible. Jennifer volunteered for EVA to the Drive-Ring; the repair partially succeeded, and the crew started their scientific studies in orbit of Proxima b. They discover a habitable planet, and sentient life, pre-radio.
The dedicated thought models that controlled the reactor plasma began issuing complaints that their control schemes were not operating correctly. Shortly afterwards, temperature warnings arrived for the reactor, though they didn't make sense when considered with other system data.
While investigating the system malfunctions, Kassy discovers the Drive-Ring Telemetry has been tampered with and confronts Jennifer. Having eavesdropped earlier on a secret message Jennifer listened to, Kassy surmises Jennifer has taken advantage of a real reactor malfunction, to orchestrate another false emergency, one designed to convince the crew to abandon ship for certain, allowing her to marshal their assistance in a search for her Father. Jennifer believes he is on the planet below. There is no guarantee the reactor wall repair will hold, nevertheless, the two women reach an agreement: Jennifer signs all her corporate funding over to Kassy, to give her anything she wants if she makes it back to Sol, notably, a human avatar, in exchange for not revealing to the crew the hacked reactor readings.
The crew attempts to verify the reactor emergency by sending external probes outside the ship to take hull temperature readings; however, Kassy doctors the readings up to continue the illusion of the reactor temperature creep. With no better data available, the crew concludes they're losing fluid, and calculates their survival chances for a trip home. The scenarios are grim, with the only real chance of success being if one person alone returns. Jennifer tells them of an atmospheric reentry craft under development by CoreX, and that they will not be marooned on Proxima b forever. The crew decides the adventure of trying to survive planetside is preferable to dying, asleep in a stasis chamber. They send Kassy back for help, to let Earth know they made it, and at least return the science data they did collect.
They take The Raphael down to the planet, a primitive life boat, capable of winged flight. Their landing does not go as planned, and they come up short, forcing them to hike through mountainous terrain to reach what they hoped was alien civilization, and their best chance to survive. They are attacked by hyena like predators that seem intelligent and stalk them the entire way. After a near deadly battle, they detect a techno signature for an alien vehicle coming up the ravine. They holster their weapons and prepare for first contact.
** Chapter 15: First Contact **
At the edge of vision, in the twilight before Proxima's night, a haloed and pale yellow beam struggled through the moist air to paint the alien terrain. A tinny internal combustion engine echoed from rocks in the valley walls. An agricultural tractor of Earth's past, traveling on large circular wheels with a cylindrical forward section and a rectangular open-air cabin crested a hill. Midway between the axles, and past the rear of the vehicle's frame rested a flat cargo area with rails -- and aliens.
"Look at the thermal signature on that thing; whatever they're running burns hotter than a hydrocarbon, a powdered metal, maybe," William said.
Four figures stood on the vehicle, two on the front cabin, and two in the back deck. Two held sighting glasses; all wore heavy furs. They were bipeds as the crude infrared images retrieved from orbit suggested, constructed in a five node structure as a human was: two arms, two legs, and a head. If the furs were clothing, they didn't care for the cold.
The aliens carried weapons, and they looked uncannily like Earth crossbows. Jennifer would be the first to get killed, she owed the crew that.
"Stay here," Jennifer said.
The vehicle stopped. Two at the rear exited, one armed, and both taller than Jennifer, perhaps 1.8 meters in height. One stood near the vehicle, its weapon aimed at Jennifer. The second wore cold weather headgear, and its approach was casual, until it was three meters away. It made a sound she could hear, more than a grunt or a growl. "I hue ko ui," was the best she could make out.
She took her headgear off, a gesture of vulnerability another sentient creature would recognize, she hoped. The alien in front of her turned to its armed companion. "Kiamo!" it said.
"Kiamo niu e kau," its companion replied.
Jennifer thought she heard the same utterance twice; surely this meant Greg's software could make progress.
"Hello," Jennifer said.