Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    All Tomorrows:

    Page 7
    Prev Next


      During this age of reconstruction, which lasted for another two million years, many

      Asteromorph world-builders emerged as true Gods, creating inhabited worlds almost out

      of scratch. Their Subjects, meanwhile, became the inheritors of a truly new, war-torn

      Phoenix of a Galaxy.

      98

      99

      The Post-War Galaxy:

      When replenishing lost worlds, the Asteromorph gods also took measures to

      ensure the continued safety of their creations. The abrupt rise of the Machines had shown

      that unless carefully regulated, the wealth of the stars could always host a race of pan-

      galactic usurpers.

      The Asteromorphs, watchful but ever transparent, did not want to interfere

      directly. Instead, they produced terrestrial versions of their own kind to regulate the

      galaxy. They adapted their delicate, ethereal fingers into spidery limbs, and shrunk their

      brains considerably to re-adjust to the rigors of gravity. The resulting sideline was

      stunted by Asteromorph standards, but still it produced demigods in every sense of the

      word.

      These beings, known often as the Terrestrial Spacers or simply the Terrestrials,

      nurtured and controlled the development of the post-war civilizations on many planets.

      They acted as caretakers, prophets, kings and emperors, but also as grim reapers as the

      occasion dictated.

      The endeavor did not always proceed as smoothly as planned, of course. Most of

      the time the newborn races refused to heed their mentors and in several cases even

      rebelled against them. Needless to say, this crime was always punished with a swift

      extinction. Furthermore, even the Terrestrials grew corrupted. Instead of offering

      guidance, Terrestrials on many planets simply played god, weaving contrived religions

      around themselves to shamelessly exploit their subjects. It was not ethical or even

      productive, but this method seemed to guarantee more stability than actually trying to

      bring up the new races.

      This way or another, organic sentience reclaimed its dominance in the galaxy. The

      New Empire; managed by Terrestrials, populated by a myriad descendants of the

      Subjects, and overseen ultimately by the omniscient Asteromorphs, achieved greater

      progress and a longer-lasting calm in the galaxy than all of its predecessors combined.

      100

      A nude Terrestrial shows the highly divergent, yet still bizarrely human anatomy that is

      the characteristic of this species. These particular Terrestrials maintain a religious

      hegemony over their clueless subjects; dressing up in elaborate veils and headgear to

      assert their ‘divine’ inheritance.

      101

      The New Machines:

      Long after their fall from grace, the Machines still clung on to existence. During

      the initial aftermath of the war, the Asteromorphs had planned to exterminate every last

      one of them, only to discover that the Machines were simply too useful to destroy. For

      millions of years they had perfected the interface between mind and machine to such an

      extent that they could live and operate in the most inhospitable conditions. Such beings,

      deprived of their galaxy-straddling power, would make invaluable contributions to

      research and exploration in the New Empire.

      There was a sense of poetic justice in all of this. The Machines, who once distorted

      biological life forms to their whim, were finally treated to a similar fate. To begin with,

      the Asteromorphs completely scrapped their ability of self-contained gravitational

      manipulation; the very force that had rendered them invulnerable in the first place. They

      were given finite life spans and slightly numbed imaginations, so that history would not

      repeat itself. The degradatory nature of these changes, however, did not imply an overall

      regression.

      Unlike their ancestors, the New Machines were endowed with nanotechnological

      bodies that could remodel themselves continuously, which meant that they could come in

      every shape and size imaginable, and then some that could not. A machine citizen could

      live for some time in the void of the space, conducting research, and then transform into

      a completely different body plan for a holiday on a cometary halo, tropical jungle or a

      methane ocean. He or she would also make the trip personally by growing temporary

      hyperdrives and ramjet engines!

      Despite their breathtaking versatility, the Machines were never as common or

      prominent, even after completely accepting their role as lowly citizens of the New Empire.

      The greatest wars in conceivable history had ingrained the organics with too deep a

      mistrust of their mechanical neighbors, and the New Machines were always treated with a

      degree of discrimination. The sins of their fathers had come to shackle this most

      splendorous of all human species.

      102

      A machine citizen of the New Empire. She sports a dazzling pair of branching arms that

      suit both the latest fashion trends and her job as an artisan. Machines following fashion

      might seem unusual to a reader of this era, but never forget that these beings are human

      intelligences, only in different bodies.

      103

      Second Contact:

      With successive waves of machine-aided discovery and colonization, the New

      Empire grew exponentially. Such was the growth of wealth and progress that its

      description would need the use of concepts that remain unexplored today. To talk with a

      man of today about the comings and goings of the New Empire would be akin to giving

      lectures of 20th century geopolitics to a hunter-gatherer.

      This magnificent entity was not blind to the universe around it. It tuned in its

      eyes, ears and sensors, and probed the events of the surrounding galaxies. The New

      Galactics suspected that the surrounding nebulae might also have their indigenous folk,

      and it was wise to contact them before a misunderstanding, or conflict could occur. On a

      darker side, these observations also served as lookouts for potential invaders. Even then,

      the memory of the Qu was not forgotten.

      The discovery was eventually made. One of the neighboring galaxies was showing

      patterns of activity that were the unmistakable signs of a sentient organization. Some

      thinkers reviled in the discovery of a new civilization, while others feared a return of the

      Qu. Fortunately, this second encounter with an alien species proved to be a peaceful one.

      Perhaps the intelligences of both galaxies were finally mature enough to meet without

      quarreling.

      The other Galaxy was dominated by connected unions of different beings, presided

      over by various kinds of Amphicephali; bizarre creatures that resembled giant snakes

      with heads on both ends, one of which bore a secondary, retractile body that they would

      use to interact with the world. Apparently, they had undergone alternating series of

      regressions, evolutionary radiations and self-imposed genetic makeovers, just as

      humanity had.

      With all of their wild difference, the Amphicephali were welcome. They were the

      first, but surely not the last.

      104

      An Amphicephalus ambassador with spaceships typical of their kind. Her strange body

      plan betrays an evolutionary history as complicated as that of humanity.

      105

      Earth Rediscovered:


      The purpose of this work is not to describe the limitless progress that followed the

      cross-galactic contact. One could go indefinitely, chronicling how the united galaxies re-

      encountered and subdued the Qu, how they cradled their suns with artificial shells,

      multiplying their inhabitable zones a billion-fold, how they criss-crossed interstellar space

      with wormholes and made travel a thing of the past. Ultimately, descendants of those

      beings even conquered Time itself, prolonging the existence of their minds indefinitely via

      rejuvenating technologies.

      For a time, all men were gods.

      But from (y)our vantage point, one discovery truly stood out in this orgy of

      advance. Compared with gargantuan achievements like the taming of space and the

      construction of the star-shells, it was a mere blip, a revelation of long-forgotten trivia.

      This was the re-discovery of Earth; the birthplace of humanity, where the omnipresent

      Asteromorph, the star-gliding Machine, and the millions of humble resident races could

      all trace their origins.

      It was made quietly, by a singular researcher combing the vestiges of forgotten

      history, decade after decade. Millions of years of wars, invasions and extinctions had

      buried the evidence thoroughly and comprehensively. When she finally came across

      irrefutable evidence, nobody was around to celebrate. That would come later.

      106

      By the time of Earth’s rediscovery, humans have diverged considerably from their

      ancestral forms.

      107

      Return:

      The discovery sparked a certain amount of interest, though nowhere as much as

      other breakthroughs had. To most humans of the cosmos, their ancestral birthplace was

      simply an interesting piece of information, a piece of trivia with which they had lost all

      ties.

      Still, a ship was sent forth, and it landed without ceremony, for now there was no

      intelligence left on Earth. Too far away from the main centers of population, it had been

      completely ignored, gone stagnant and feral. But still, it was Home.

      When the explorers stepped out, human feet trod on old Earth once more; after an

      absence of 560 million years. Mankind was back home.

      108

      109

      All Tomorrows:

      I must conclude my words with a confession. Mankind, the very species which I’ve

      been chronicling from its terrestrial infancy to its domination of the galaxies, is extinct.

      All of the beings which you saw on the preceding pages; from the lowly Worm to the

      wind-riding Sail People, from the megalomaniac Gravital to the ultimate Galactic citizens,

      lie a billion years dead. We are only beginning to piece the story together. What you read

      was our best approximation of the truth.

      Why did they disappear? Perhaps it was a final, unimaginable war of annihilation,

      one that transcended the very meaning of “conflict”. Perhaps it was a gradual break-up of

      the united galaxies, and every race facing their private end slowly afterwards. Or

      perhaps, the wildest theories suggest, it was a mass migration to another plane of

      existence. A journey into somewhere, sometime , something else. But the bottom line is;

      we honestly don’t know.

      Ultimately, however, what happened to Humanity does not matter. Like every

      other story, it was a temporary one; indeed long but ultimately ephemeral. It did not

      have a coherent ending, but then again it did not need to. The tale of Humanity was

      never its ultimate domination of a thousand galaxies, or its mysterious exit into the

      unknown. The essence of being human was none of that. Instead, it lay in the radio

      conversations of the still-human Machines, in the daily lives of the bizarrely twisted Bug

      Facers, in the endless love-songs of the carefree Hedonists, the rebellious demonstrations

      of the first true Martians, and in a way, the very life you lead at the moment.

      Many throughout history were unaware of this most basic fact. The Qu, in dreams

      of an ideal future, distorted the worlds they came across. Later on the Gravital, with their

      insane desire to recreate the past, caused the ugliest massacres in the history of the

      galaxy. Even now, it is sickeningly easy for beings to get lost in false grand narratives,

      living out completely driven lives in pursuit of non-existent codes, ideals, climaxes and

      golden ages. In blindly thinking that their stories serve absolute ends, such creatures

      almost always end up harming themselves, if not those around them.

      To those like the misguided; look at the story of Man, and come to your senses! It

      is not the destination, but the trip that matters. What you do today influences tomorrow,

      not the other way around. Love Today, and seize All Tomorrows!

      110

      The Author, with a billion-year old human skull.

      111

     

     

     



    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2026