Part 2: New Earth
The Story of Abner Dune
Abner Dune blinked as he suddenly became aware of strong illumination all around him.
He slowly, painfully open his eyes, squinting in the bright light.
White
. Everything was white here. The walls, the floors, even the table he was on.
Where was he?
He struggled to sit up.
A hand gently pressed down on his chest. "Take it easy. Go slow. You've been in suspension for a long time."
Suspension?
A woman came into view. A morbidly obese blonde woman with very heavy breasts.
"Welcome," she said, giving him a smile. "My name is Bessie, though around here most people call me First One. What is your name?"
Abner struggled to speak, but all that came out was a rasp.
"Easy!" said Bessie. She handed him a white cup. "Drink." She saw his hesitation. "Go on, it's only water."
Abner drank. He coughed slightly as it went down. "T-thank you," he finally managed to say. His voice sounded odd in his ears, as if it hadn't been used in a long time.
"Now what is your name, Dear?"
"Ab-Abner," Abner stammered. "Abner Dune.... Where... where am I? What's happening to me?"
Bessie licked her lips. "Relax. You're safe now."
"Safe... from what?"
"There's no easy way to tell you this, Abner, so I'm just going to come out and say it," said Bessie. She licked her lips again. "The Earth is gone."
"Gone?"
"Destroyed," said Bessie. "The colony planets too. It was Galactic Man Made Temperature Change."
"What? I don't remember any of that!" said Abner. He struggled to sit up, and this time was successful.
"Of course you don't. It's a side effect of prolonged cellular suspension. Abner, you've been in a state of suspension for nearly 500 years."
"500 years?" Abner looked around the empty white room. "Where am I? What am I doing here?"
"You were rescued by a race of beings who want to help the human race survive."
"There are others?"
Bessie nodded. "A few lucky ones. We're all in this together."
"All in what together?"
Bessie gripped his hand. "You, Abner, are going to help us to recreate the human race." She smiled down encouragingly at him as she squeezed his hand tightly. "The Earth is gone, but humanity will survive... with your help."
********
"WHAT?" Abner looked around the bright white room. "The Earth, it can't be gone. It can't be!"
"It is," said Bessie.
Abner sat up slowly. He was dressed all in white, a tight clingy material, just as she was. Abner looked around the bright, white room. "It can't be." He started to get off the table, but felt dizzy.
Bessie took him by the arm. "Easy, easy. You haven't stood up in 500 years. If it weren't for the cryogenic suspension, your muscles would have atrophied-"
"500 years?" said Abner, shaking his head. "What is this place?" The sterile whiteness of the room felt blinding.
"This is the Space Station," said Bessie. "Frog will show you around. Once you've gotten your orientation, we'll talk again."
Frog?
As Bessie waddled out of the room Abner noticed a green creature standing in the corner. It looked like a six foot tall grasshopper or preying mantis standing erect on two slender legs. It had giant green eyes, antenna, and a large crystal hanging from its neck.
"Hello, Abner Dune," came a soft, feminine voice. As Frog spoke, the crystal flashed.
"Who... what are you?"
"I am Frog," said Frog.
"You don't look like a Frog," said Abner.
"I am not. But that's what your people call me. It makes them comfortable, so I do not mind."
"My people?" Abner tried to concentrate. His head was pounding.
"Other survivors we have gathered here. Are you in pain?"
"A little"
Frog handed Abner two pills. "Take them."
"What is it?"
"It will make you feel better."
Abner looked at Frog, and then back at the pills. He swallowed, coughing as they went down.
"Easy," said Frog. "You haven't drunk in 500 years."
"You keep saying that. I can't believe that 500 years have passed."
"You have been preserved in cryogenic suspension for 502 of your years."
"Why so long?"
"That was the length of time it took to get you from your galaxy to this one."
"Rescued by whom?"
"We of the Federation."
"The... Federation.... you're a race of frog people.... who just decided to help us?"
"Yes. We are actually not one species but a whole host of different species, come together by our shared purpose. One of our prime directive is to help species on the brink of extinction survive. When your Earth was on the verge of destruction due to Man Made Temperature Change, we sent ships there to rescue who we could. For the past six and a half years ships have been arriving from your planet with survivors such as yourself in cryogenic suspension. You are the last survivors of the human race."
"What about all the colony planets? What about Vega?"
"Destroyed by Man Made Temperature Change."
"Turner 5?"
"Man Made Temperature Change."
"Wayfaira-"
"All destroyed by Man Made Temperature Change."
Abner frowned, grabbing his head. The throbbing only seemed to intensify. "How can that be? As a kid I learned about Man Made Temperature Change.... but that only should have affected the Earth. How could it affect other planets?"
"Your temperature science was in its infancy. Planets are all linked together by subspace heating corridors."
"They are?"
"Very much so," said Frog. "What affects one planet slowly affects them all. Mankind destroyed itself most efficiently."
"I... I still have trouble believing this."
"I know. Come."
********
They walked down a curving corridor of the Space Station. "Why don't I remember any of this? Why don't I remember the Earth being destroyed by Temperature Change?" Abner asked.
"It's a side effect of the cryogenic suspension. Much of your near term memory is erased. What is the last thing you remember?"
Abner frowned, trying to think. "I'm not sure. I, I was an agricultural technician on a farm in Witchita. That's in the United States of America, one of the territories of the World Government. I remember fixing some of the robotic harvesting units, but I don't have a specific last memory."
"On average subjects lose anywhere between one to three months of their memory from the cryogenic process. It is one of the lesser side effects of cryogenic suspension on your race."
One of the lesser effects? What were the major ones?
Abner put a hand over his face. "I feel different."
"Mirror."
A holographic mirror appeared in front of him. Abner realized he suddenly looked older. His hair was all white!
"How old am I now?"
"You are 523 years old chronologically," said Frog. "But in cellular terms you have only aged a few weeks since you were put into cryogenic suspension."
"But my hair...."
"A cosmetic change. Nothing to be concerned about. Please follow me."
Abner followed Frog into an enormous four level room, filled with transparent freezer tubes. And inside each one of them was a naked human being. Frozen. And their hair was all white.
"It's true," Abner whispered, looking at a woman with curly orange hair with large breasts which pointed downwards. "It's all true." Abner tilted his neck upwards. "How many?"
"Currently 154 Test Subjects are in cryogenic suspension," said Frog, his crystal flashing with every spoken word.
"Why are they all still frozen?" Abner asked, slowly walking by the bodies.
"The Space Station has a limited capacity. We revive a specimen every time a body experiences cellular failure."
"What do you mean, cellular failure?" Abner asked, as he stared at the body of a handsome man with a broad, hairy chest.
"An unfortunate side effect of the cryogenic suspension. Freezing works quite well on most species of the Federation, but your species has been found to be unfortunately fragile. So far those who have been revived have experienced cellular failure within a matter of 20 cycles... what you call weeks."
"Weeks? I only have 20 weeks to live?" Abner felt his heart hammering in his chest.
"That's a mean figure, not an absolute. The observed range within three standard deviations has been between 12 and 26 cycles, though there have of course been exceptions. But yes, you can expect to have a lifespan of three to six of your months," said Frog.
"What?" Abner collapsed against a wall. "I'm going to die!"
"I am so sorry," said Frog.
"Why? Why did you do this to me?" He ran a hand over his face and white hair.