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    All Tomorrows:

    Page 2
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      they passed through.

      18

      Worms

      Their world lay under a scorching sun, its intensity made monstrous through the

      interventions of the bygone Qu. The surface lay littered with husks of dead cities, baking

      endlessly like shattered statues in a derelict oven.

      Yet life remained on this unforgiving place. Forests of crystalline “plants”

      blanketed the surface, recycling oxygen for the animal life that teemed underground. One

      such species, barely longer than the arms of their ancestors, was the sole surviving

      vertebrate. Furthermore, it was that planet’s last heir of the star people.

      Distorted beyond recognition by genetic modification, they looked for all the word

      like pale, overgrown worms. Tiny, feeble feet and hands modified for digging were all

      that betrayed their noble heritage. Aside from these organs, all was simplified for the life

      underground. Their eyes were pinpricks, they lacked teeth, external ears and the better

      half of their nervous system.

      The lives of these ersatz people did not extend beyond digging aimlessly. If they

      encountered food, they devoured it. If they encountered others of their kind, they

      sometimes devoured them too. But mostly they mated and multiplied, and managed to

      preserve a single shred of their humanity in their genes. In time, it would do them good.

      19

      Two Worm parents with their young.

      20

      Titans

      On the endless savannah of a long-extinguished colonial outpost, enormous beasts

      roamed supreme. More than forty meters long by terrestrial measurements, these

      behemoths were actually the transmuted offspring of the Star People.

      Several features betrayed their human ancestry. They still retained stubby thumbs

      on their elephantine front feet, now useless for any sort of precise manipulation except

      for uprooting trees. They compensated this loss by developing their lower lip into a

      muscular, trunk like organ that echoed the elephants of Earth’s past.

      As bestial as they seemed, the Titans were among the smartest of the reduced

      sub-men that remained in the galaxy. Their hulking stance allowed for a developed brain

      and gradually, sentience re-emerged. With their lip-trunks they fashioned ornate wood

      carvings, erected hangar-like dwellings and even began a form of primitive agriculture.

      With settled life came the inevitable flood of language and literature; myths and legends

      of the bygone, half-remembered past were told in booming voices across the vast plains.

      It was easy to see that, within a few hundred thousand years, Humanity could

      start again with these titanic primitives. Sadly, as a catastrophic ice-age took over the

      Titans’ homeworld the gentle giants disappeared, never to return.

      21

      22

      Predators and Prey

      Devolved predators were common among humanity’s feral worlds. Most of the

      time they resembled the vampires, werewolves and goblins of bygone lore; hunting

      equally sub-human prey with a combination of derived weaponry. Some had enormous

      heads with large, killing teeth. Others tore their victims apart with talon-like feet. But the

      most common kinds bore modified fingers and thumbs, bristling with razor-sharp claws.

      The most efficient of these predators lived on one of mankind’s first off-world

      colonies. In addition to paw-like hands with switchblade thumbs they also had gaping,

      tooth studded jaws on disproportionate heads with large, sensitive ears. All of these

      served to make them the dominant predators on their home planet.

      They ran the prairies, stalked the forests and ranged through the mountains in

      pursuit of different people; herbivorous saltators with bird-like legs. While their prey

      lapsed into complete animosity, the hunters managed to keep the spark of intelligence

      alive in their evolutionary honing.

      23

      24

      25

      Mantelopes

      Not all devolved people lapsed into complete bestiality. Some held on to their

      minds, while losing all of their physiological advantages to the genetic meddling of the

      Qu.

      A singular species was a prime exemplar. They had been bred as singers and

      memory-retainers, acting much like living recorders during the reign of Qu. When their

      masters left they barely survived, reverting into a quadrupedal stance and occupying a

      niche as grazing herd animals. This change was so abrupt that the newly evolved

      Mantelopes endured only due to the forgiving sterility of their artificial biosphere.

      The Mantelopes, equipped with full (if slightly numbed) Human minds and

      completely disabled animal bodies, lived agonizing lives. They could see and understand

      the world around them, but due to their bodies they could do nothing to change it. For

      centuries, mournful herds roamed the plains, singing songs of desperation and loss.

      Entire religions and oral traditions were woven around this crippling racial disability, as

      dramatic and detailed as any on bygone Earth.

      Fortunately, the selective forces of evolution made their agony a short-lived one.

      Simply put, a brain was not advantageous to develop if it could not be put into good use.

      A dim-witted, half minded Mantelope grew up faster than a smart one, and grazed just as

      efficiently. The Mantelopes’ animal children overtook them in less than a hundred

      thousand years, and their melancholic world fell silent for good. Nothing was sacred in

      the evolutionary process.

      26

      27

      Swimmers

      Perhaps because their life cycle involved an aquatic larval stage, the Qu had

      transmuted a large number of their human subjects into a bewildering array of aquatic

      creatures. Taken care of by specially-bred attendants, these post-human water babies

      came in every shape and size imaginable. There were limbless, ribbon like varieties of

      eel-people, huge, whale like behemoths, decorative people who swam by squirting water

      out of their hypertrophied mouths and horrifying multitudes of brainless wallowers that

      served as food stock.

      All of them were perfectly domesticated. All of them went extinct when their

      masters left. All save a few lightly mutated, generalized forms. These swimmers still

      resembled their human ancestors to a large degree; they had no artificial gills, their

      hands were still visible through their front flippers, their feet were splayed affairs that

      functioned like a pair of tail flukes. Recognizably human eyes peeked through their

      blubbery eyelids and they spoke to each other, though not in words and never in sentient

      understanding.

      For millennia they swam the oceans of their ecologically stunted world, feeding on

      diversifying kinds of fish and crustaceans; survivors of the food stock originally imported

      from Earth. With the intervention of the Qu gone, natural selection resumed. The

      swimmers became more streamlined to better catch their fast prey. The prey responded

      by getting even faster, or evolving defensive countermeasures such as armor, spikes or

      poison. Their evolution back on track, the swimmers drifted further and further away

      from their sentient ancestry. They would wait for a long time indeed to taste that

      blessing again.

      28

      29

      Lizard Herders


      They were the lucky ones. Instead of unrecognizably distorting them as they had

      done to most of their subjects, the Qu had merely erased their sentience and stunted the

      development of their brains.

      Distantly resembling their ancient forebears on Earth, the primitives led feral lives

      for an unnaturally long time. They never regained sentience after the Qu left, despite

      having every incentive to do so. This was partially due to the total absence of predators

      on their garden world, resulting in no advantage for intelligence. Furthermore, the Qu

      had made some small but integral changes to their brains, tweaking with the structure of

      cerebellum so that certain features associated with heuristic learning could never emerge

      again. Once again, the reasons for these baffling changes remained known only to the

      Qu.

      The dumb people eventually settled in a symbiosis with some of the other

      creatures that inhabited their planet. They began to instinctively “farm” some of the

      large, herbivorous reptiles, ancestors of which were brought from Earth as pets.

      Soon the balance of this mutualism began to tip in the reptiles’ favor. The tropical

      climate of the planet gave them an inherent advantage, and they underwent a

      spectacular radiation of different species. They encountered no competition from the only

      large mammals on the planet; the brain-neutered descendants of the starfarers. Faced

      with a reptilian turnover, the only adaptation the sub-men could muster was to slip

      quietly into bestial oblivion.

      30

      A lizard herder scans the world with blank eyes as his stock grow stronger and smarter.

      The future does not seem to belong to him.

      31

      Temptor

      In the Temptors’ case, the remodeling was done with an almost artistic

      enthusiasm. How they managed to survive in their bizarre form was not clear; their

      ancestors were used as sessile decoration and through some miracle of adaptation they

      had endured.

      No human would have recognized them as their descendants. The females were

      beaked cones of flesh some two meters tall, rooted in soil like grotesque carnivorous

      plants. The males on the other hand, resembled contorted, bipedal monkeys. Unlike their

      mates they were perfectly ambulatory; dozens of them ran around the females’ mounds

      like so many imps. Some would gather food, others would clean the females while others

      would stand on guard for danger. Although their actions looked purposeful, the males

      had no will of their own.

      In Temptor society, females controlled everything. Using a combination of vocal

      and phermonal signals, they guided the masculine hordes into any number of menial

      tasks, while mating with the strongest, the most obedient and the dumbest to produce

      even better drones. On certain periods they would also give birth to a few precious

      females, who would be carried away by subservient males to root themselves.

      It was a terribly efficient hegemony that would certainly give rise to civilization in

      a matter of centuries had fate not intervened. As a stray comet obliterated the Temptors’

      mound forests, one of Humanity’s best chances for re-emergence was cruelly swept

      away.

      32

      A male and female Temptor illustrate the sexual discrepancy that is characteristic to their

      species. Note the female’s elongated, pit-like vagina. When mating, the males descend

      into it like subway commuters.

      33

      Bone Crusher

      Through the deliberate modifications of Qu and the blind molding of evolution, the

      heavens came to be populated with creatures that would put the myths of their ancestors

      to shame.

      Their ancestors were pint-sized pets of Qu that were bred for the dazzling colors of

      their tooth-derived beaks. When their masters left, most of these pampered creatures

      died, with no one or nothing left to take care of them.

      But some, belonging to the hardiest breeds, survived. In less than a geological

      eyeblink of a few million years, the descendants of such creatures radiated into the

      evolutionary vacuum of their garden world. One lineage led to a profusion of human

      herbivores. These were preyed upon by a variety of enamel-beaked raptors, each evolved

      to deal with a specific prey. Among these generalized niches were entire assemblages of

      specialized animals, resembling anything from ibis-billed swamp sifters to splendorous

      forms with bizarre crests that flared out of their toothy beaks.

      There were even secondarily sentient forms, in the shape of the ogre-like bone

      crushers. To an observer of today they would indeed be the stuff of nightmares; three

      meters tall and hairy, sporting vicious thumb claws and enormous beaks that suited their

      scavenging diet.

      Despite their shortcomings, these corpse eating primitives were one of the first

      species to attain intelligence, and although primitive, a level of civilization. All of this

      proved the fallacy of human prejudice in the posthuman galaxy. A creature could feed on

      putrefying meat, stink like a grave and express its affection by defecating on others, but

      it might as well be your own grandchild and the last hope of mankind.

      In eventuality, however, not even the bone crushers fulfilled this promise. Their

      dependency on carrion for food limited their population severely, and their mediaeval

      civilizations crumbled after a few uneventful millennia.

      34

      35

      Colonials

      Their world had given the toughest resistance against the Qu onslaught. So tough,

      in fact, that they had turned back two successive waves of the invaders, only to succumb

      to the third.

      The Qu, with their twisted sense of justice, wanted to make them pay. Even

      extinction would be too light a punishment for resisting the star gods. The humans of the

      rogue world needed a sentence that would remind them of their humiliation for

      generations to come.

      So they were made into disembodied cultures of skin and muscle, connected by a

      skimpy network of the most basic nerves. They were employed as living filtering devices,

      subsisting on the waste products of Qu civilization like mats of cancer cells. And just to

      witness and suffer their wretched fate, their eyes, together with their consciousness,

      were retained.

      For forty million years they suffered; generation after generation were born into

      the most miserable of lives while absorbing the pain of all that they were going through.

      When the Qu left, they hoped for a quick extinction. But their lowliness had also

      made them efficient survivors. Unchecked by the Qu, the colonials spread across the

      planet in quilt-like fields of human flesh. After an eternity of tortured lives, the human

      fields tasted something that could almost be described as hope.

      36

      A section from a Colonial field shows the misery that compromises their entire lives. Note

      that these disorganized creatures can reproduce through both asexual and more familiar

      methods.

      37

      Flyers

      They were not uncommon at all in the domain of Qu. At least a dozen worlds

      sported human-derived flying species of one kind or another. Most resembled the bats or

      the pterosaurs of the bygone past, dancing through the aeth
    er like angels. (Or demons,

      depending on the point of view.) There were a few bizarre kinds relied on swollen gas

      glands for floatation as well.

      Sadly, most of these creatures were already too specialized to be anything but

      flyers. They had forsaken their humanity for the conquest of the sky; they had little

      potential for further radiation beyond their limited roles.

      The only exception proved out to be a monkey-like species that flew on wing

      membranes stretched across the last two fingers. Their advantage was a unique, turbine

      like heart, artificially developed during the regime of Qu. No other human flyer in the

      galaxy had such an adaptation. The starfish shaped organ sat in the middle of their

      chests, directly funneling oxygen from the lungs to the bloodstream in a supremely

      efficient way. This meant that the Flyers could develop energy-consuming adaptations

      such as large brains without having to give up their power of flight.

      Not that the flyers were going to reclaim their sentience right away. Instead, they

      literally exploded into skies, filling the heavens with anything from bomber-sized sailors

      to impossibly fast predators that raced with sound. Their world was pristine and there

      were plenty of niches to play in. Intelligence could wait a little more.

      38

      An ancestral Flyer in her native element. Although ungainly, these creatures have an

      artificial metabolic advantage that gives them tremendous evolutionary potential.

      39

      Hand Flappers

      Some flying posthumans re-approached sentience in an entirely different way.

     


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