The name of the ship, properly translated, could not be fully understood.
There was too much meaning in that name, too much historical and religious significance, tied to emotions and colors of thought that would be too alien to easily translate. It was a name, too, that shifted over the long decades of its construction in the deepest core regions of the galaxy.
Madness? Yes. But a necessary madness, with the Abomination flowering at their doorstep.
The name of the ship, once she was completed and launched, could only be understood by human minds with a short phrase, originating from the pre-rocket era of the species.
The
Long Shot
.
It took nearly three centuries -- far past the final extinction of her builders and the last gasp of their long ranged tachyon and sublight transmitters -- for the
Long Shot
to hit her maximum cruising speed. A ludicrous excess for sublight travel, attained by continual ramship acceleration through vast banks of interstellar hydrogen. The power of a sun, concentrated and burning for many centuries, controlled by automation and self controlled systems rather than sentient beings. Greater, more complex forms of self-repair could have been constructed in the habitable zones of the galaxy, but such devices were impossible to maintain in the Core and so the
Long Shot
flew with nothing but the brute endurance of simple, Core-hardened engineering.
The design of pyramid builders, not nanotechnicians.
The
Long Shot
emerged from the halo stars of her home galaxy at ninety nine percent the speed of light.
If the Abomination had been a true singularitarian intelligence and not the twisted, malformed thing that it was, it would have foreseen the
Long Shot
. No mortal mind could out think a true SI. But the Abomination was caught entirely unaware and unguarded as the
Long Shot
blazed through its interdiction fields and kill drones and autonomous swarm-navies. Those long defunct defenses would have stopped -- had stopped -- refugees fleeing the galaxy by the billions, dragging them from E-space and destroying them.
They awoke with the bow-wave of a million kilometer wide magnetic screen smashing into their sensors, and fired their first killing shots microseconds after the
Long Shot
had passed through their effective range.
And there, within the habitable halo that shrouded her home galaxy, the
Long Shot
activated her long buried core. Beyond the artificial interdiction fields and the all too natural haze of radiation and background heat of the galaxy, the core of the
Long Shot
activated and dropped her directly into a shallow realm of E-Space. She went from below the speed of light to several times faster. Glacially slow by the standards of interstellar travel, and impossibly slow by the standards of intergalactic travel, but still...
It was the best that could be done.
Even hardened, a more complex jump-drive would never have survived the Core.
And so, the Abomination fumed, until it realized that nothing living could have been aboard the
Long Shot
. With the criminal lack of imagination endemic of such beings, the Abomination returned to its great and terrible work, ignoring the
Long Shot
and the tachyon burst communications, and laser-light beams that had been sent outwards, tracing the path ahead of and behind the
Long Shot
. Her creators had done all that they could to bring her mission eventual success, and they had died hoping that that effort had not been in vain.
The
Long Shot
did as she had been designed.
She arrived in the neighbor galaxy, the one most immediately threatened by the Abomination.
Alas.
She arrived four and a half billion years too early.
In the end, the Abomination might have had the last laugh, after all.
***
Tulon stepped from her narrow hulled slipbot and shaded her eyes with a hand. The island really was brand new -- she saw no sign of reef markers, village-sites, or castles upon it. The only thing was the column of smoke, rising from the center of the islands thick jungles, that had drawn her and her husband across almost a hundred miles of ocean.
"We're well off course, you know that?" Xan asked, enfolding his wife as she paused to grab her best spears from the boat. Most of them were the short, quick, stabbing spears for fishing, which she was able to quiver at her hip with a leather and wood-twine container. The last, though, was one that she held with a grim sense of determination. It had been her mother's spear, which had shed blood in the Two Tooth War between her Queen and the One Who Would Be Emperor. During that war, her mother had taken an Imperial arrow to the thigh and chest, but had lived long enough to get her wife and her husband home -- dying in the harbor, her boat half full of her own blood.
This spear was all that Tulon had of her. Her and memories of a time before Imperial sails darkened their horizons and her Queen had become so withdrawn and grave. It was long and tipped with a leaf shaped blade made of purest steel, the best that could be forged by island smiths. It took a special kind of smith to make a fire hot enough to smelt steel, as few had the temperament to marry such hot blooded males. And the kind of marriage that led someone to working the bellows on their mate? It always seemed to Tulon like such a thing would be rather...
Hard. On a marriage?
But she'd never been brave enough to ask the steel smiths or their spouses about it, so she let it be.
Instead, she let the shod tip of the spear crunch into the white sand near a gray foot and stood a bit taller. She flashed her husband her sharpest smile and let her gills lay flat and relaxed. "That just means we might find a ruin or two, eh?"
Her husband chuckled, his glow contracting around her shoulders like a cape made of sunlight. His voice whispered in her ear. "Ancient treasure from the Before, something to give your Queen a killing edge against the Imps? Wealth beyond imagining?"
"I'd take a new fun place to fuck, but yes, that works too," she said, cheerfully, as she began to drag her boat more securely off the beach and to the shore. The task got easier when Xan drifted from her and filled the air-sail. His glow was bright enough to illuminate a bit into the forest and provided enough updraft on the air-sail that her boat felt half the weight it normally was, and it barely dragged as she got it under the trees.
Tulon gave a little wicked grin and, before Xan could slip free of the sail, she tugged upon the ropes as hard as she could. The air-sail came down with a whistling
thump
and trapped him against the hull. His glow and his heat both caused the air-sail to ripple and squirm and his voice came, muffled and indigent. "Tuuuuloonnn!"
Tulon laughed, then lifted up a thin flap. With the light of the sun shining in, Xan was able to follow it out. His form coalesced enough that she was able to admire how handsome he was -- nearly two yards on each side, forming a kind of blobby rectangle, and all of it was her husband's light, shimmering and glowing around his largest parts, which just barely were visible as shimmering motes. Xan rippled and formed jagged edges of light and heat, which she could feel even over the pleasant breeze coming off the ocean.
Tulon laughed even more, then held out her arm -- and her husband, huffing, said: "For this, I shouldn't even make a single mote of light for you." He huffed again, playing up the role of stuff academic and librarian.
Which, to be fair...if she hadn't stolen him right out of the Queen's Crown library, he would have been.
Tulon pouted, mock pleading. "Aww. It's just a little playing...besides..." She leaned in close, purring. "I thought you
liked
being all wrapped up."
"Oh!" Xan gasped, mock outrage going to ludicrous extremes. His color actually shifted, from gold to red and the jagged heat became a furnace for just a second, before damping down. "Only when it's you, not a sail. I may be an academic, but I can still tell a sail from a shark!"
Tulon spread her arms and her husband came close, sweeping about her, enfolding her in a warm glow that concentrated right above her head, so that a bright light shone out around her. His eyes were now peering in all directions -- Xan had, in their time together, gotten quite good at imitating a marine's attentiveness, even if Tulon wasn't quite a navy girl. Tulon walked forward into the jungle with a casual confidence -- the kind only a long married couple could have.
The hike was long but far from unpleasant. The island hadn't been colonized by any of the more invasive, awful species that spread from the upper archipelago bit by bit despite the best that harbor inspectors could manage, so she didn't need to constantly help her husband shoo away the worst biters, suckers and stingers. Instead, she focused on hiking and left the few insects that were interested in her blue and white hide to her husband, who smashed them with cheerful little sing-song noises as he worked. She worked her way up a hill, checked for a trail, found one, and wound along the inner edge of the mountain that made up the center of the island. Here, the jungles grew thicker, and her way was slowed as she had to start picking her way past vines and heavy undergrowth until, at last...she came out onto a clearing that overlooked the column of smoke.
She had expected fire, and so, was not shocked by the smoldering ruins of trees here and there.
She had expected impact -- hell, she had felt the impact from her