*RANDOM STORIES COLLECTION*
(A new idea of mine. let me know if you like it!)
Milo Maxwell sighed as he returned the entry column back to its original loading position and entered the command keys to engage the sequence again. He loaded another pod remotely into the chamber, locked the shield clamps down and slid the human sleep chamber into the firing bay. He powered the shields, engaged the heatsync and fired the single man unit off. Giving a small wave with one hand and a sarcastic salute with the other as the firing mechanism returned to it's starting position he repeated the steps. He still had over three hundred individual pods to fire into the ether and frankly wished he could change their course to send them directly into the nearest sun.
Milo loaded the next pod, another millionaire businessman named Franklin T. Custer, and fired the pod off. His salute was a more sarcastic middle finger this time. Frankly, Milo was pissed. He'd never got the breaks. All his life he'd worked hard to earn barely enough money to live. He was nearly thirty, and in this day and age, for the work he'd done, he should be in one of the pods he was currently shooting off into space, destined for the new world of prosperity.
The latest space program, codenamed New Dawn, was an open program sending anyone healthy who could afford it on a deep space journey across fifteen solar systems to rendezvous with a distant planet with a habitable atmosphere. The planet, nestled in a twin starred, sixteen planet solar system, was faithfully called Aandora, a mix of Pandora and a few other names from well known sci-fi series. The planet was a haven, a completely clean copy of Earth. Early space exploration teams had been there, sampled the rich ground and the pristine air. They had reported of endless crystal clear water and long, green grasses, blooming flowers and flourishing wildlife. And then, within hours of their arrival, they had gone offline.
Every deep space exploration vessel has systems built to guide it home in the case of catastrophic failure, so that even if the crew perish, their bodies can be returned, or at the very least, the ship can be analysed. Three months after they went offline the exploration crew's ship returned to home without any trace of the crew itself. Only samples, three tiny samples, rattling about abandoned in the cabin. With these, the scientists back home were able to determine that the planet was of optimal capacity for sustaining human life and as soon as the governments got hold of the information, multi-trillion dollar investments were made in programs. The most successful of these, developed in the vast empty space of the Utah desert, was a massive space gun approximately fifteen kilometers long. When done, it stretched high into the stratosphere and boasted five thousand specially designed cryogenic pods built to hold one person and exactly five kilograms of luggage. The pods, incredible feats of technology, would sustain their transport cargo for the three month deep space jig to the new world.
Everyone else would be left behind.
Each trip cost nearly fifty thousand dollars. A small fortune to anyone not a millionaire. On top of this, in depth physicals, mental checks, spacial training and orientation and preparation cost another packet. By the time you were ready, any millionaires making the journey were nearly likely to be bankrupt. It didn't matter. It was a one way journey. Leaving, as far as your finances and belongings that weren't going with you in the 5 Kg luggage hold, were left as per your will. You were, effectively, dead. But, so everyone thought, you were destined for a new life. You would be reborn on the new planet, a fresh start offered to you.
It was romantic, desirable, and downright heavenly. People attempted to steal the identities of those who publicly announced their departure. Mass stormings were held. But, throughout this, the facility was successfully defended from the public and within two months all the pods had been bought. And then they began firing.
Milo was another hundred pods down and, as far as he felt, lacked a hundred less brain cells as well for it. Politicians, businessmen, artists and public figures all shot out into the stars and each time Milo had a sarcastic comment for them. It was the least he deserved.
'And fuck you too, Margret H. Shitsville.' Shoom, off she went.
Milo wished beyond desires he could simply step off the platform, take one of the smarmy buggers out of their pod and climb in himself. Oh, if only. Any kind of tampering, however - even moving back on the mounted railing towards the shielded containment exit - would result in immediate expulsion. And, unfortunately, when handling people who had paid close to or over a million dollars for the trip, simple firing wasn't quite enough. He would likely be locked up, possibly executed. This shit counted as treason.
Milo unhappily pressed the same buttons over and over, loading, preparing, and firing living people across space at a thousand miles an hour. He worked through them, one after another, until there were fifty left. As he pulled the pin and depressed the trigger, all the buttons on the desk turning green, another pod shot off the mark and as the mechanism reset he turned and leaned against the console with his eyes closed. He knew the sounds by now and even knew it would be exactly 18 and a bit seconds to reset. He took some deep breaths, slightly happier that he was almost done. Six seconds in, he opened his eyes.
There was a woman standing before him, a flawlessly skinned, pristine-uniformed woman with straight dark red hair and glasses. She held a clipboard to her chest with one hand while the other hung by her side. Milo shot off the console, standing upright and hoping his shabby clothes were acceptable for duty. Behind him, in the launching cabin, the gears and system ground back to position and reset.
'Uh, hello, I was, um...' Milo stammered. He was flustered that she'd caught him at the one time he'd chosen to relax. He could be killed for this. She looked staffy, official, but what part of the staff she was he did not know. He didn't recognize the dark red jacket or black skirt. He noticed her features as he took this in and nearly mentally slapped himself for it. She smiled as he talked and held up her hand. He was almost mesmerized by it, though why, other than it's flawless, perfect, soft skin, he didn't not know.
'Please. I am not here to get you in trouble.' Get him in trouble? What did she mean? That didn't sound much like something a staff member would say...