Thirty-two

Dakota awoke naked between cool sheets.


She sat up with a start and looked around. Tall windows looked out over an azure sky.


There was no sign of the derelict, of Ikaria…


After staring about herself for a while, convinced she’d gone mad, she stepped over to the window and looked up to where the sun should be. Instead there was only a black dot surrounded by a visibly expanding ring of fire.


She looked down, at the empty city below her, and crumpled to her knees.


Below the window lay a chasm of such magnitude that it made the valley on Ikaria look like a crack in the pavement. Lights burned all the way down as far as she could see, illuminating windows and verandas all the way down into an apparently bottomless pit.


On the other side of the chasm, a vast alien metropolis spread out yet further.


Without knowing quite how, she became aware she was now the only living thing on this entire world.


She moved away from the windows, and from the sight of the pitiless chasm below, and noticed a door at the far end of the room. She raced over and tugged it open, finding a corridor stretching beyond. Everything-the shape of the corridor itself, of the doors, of the windows-suggested this place had been designed for creatures larger than humans, and of entirely different proportions.


Dakota wandered down steps not designed for human legs and constantly peered about her. When she reached ground level, she saw that a street stretched away into the distance.


Something about her surroundings made her sure this city had been abandoned for a long, long time. She wandered about, naked and still in shock, then turned back for fear of losing her way. Eventually she found her way back up to the room she had woken in.


The bed was of entirely human proportions, as was the data book that stood on a plinth to one side of it. She had no idea if it had been there or not when she’d woken.


She picked up the book and began to read the words there.


Some hours later, she wandered back into the empty streets in a daze. She was still naked, so clothes appeared to be a concept alien to whoever or whatever had brought her here. She didn’t feel cold, however. And though she felt hungry, the actual need to eat, just in order to stay alive, appeared to be absent.


This entire world was a library: the book had told her that. The library obligingly shaped itself to her memories of human libraries, giving her information in the form of words on electronic pages. It had also told her she was still inside the derelict, and still on the surface of Ikaria.


This, then, was how the derelict chose to communicate with her. Corso’s interface chair seemed laughably primitive by comparison.


As months passed, she learned how to summon the ghosts of the dead Magi Librarians and quiz them about their history. In turn, they taught Dakota her true purpose: the one they believed she had been brought to Nova Arctis to fulfil.


After a few years, she began to understand just how much was required of her, and just how much would be at stake throughout the galaxy if she failed.


* * * *

Corso listened to the desperate sound of his own breath, as he counted down the seconds to his death. He was sufficiently preoccupied, and it took a moment before he realized a comms light on the command console was blinking.


Someone was trying to communicate with him.


He lurched upright. Information was scrolling across a screen, too rapidly for him to follow.


It appeared something else had taken control of the Piri Reis.


‘Piri!’


No answer.


He hammered at the controls, but they failed to respond.


The ship lurched violently.


* * * *

For millennia, the three Magi vessels had lain in their silent graves, waiting for the arrival of a Pilot.


The first Pilots were older than dust, half-forgotten Magi who had flown these ships to this lost, lonely system even as the Shoal hunted down the last of their numbers. Those first Pilots had enjoyed countless virtual years within the memories of these three craft, but even that near-eternity of subjective experience eventually gave way to the gradual pace of external time and entropy.


In the end, death had claimed even them.


Bright rivers of white-hot lava spat and flowed in the depths of Ikaria’s great chasm, sending searing light up towards the ridge on which the three derelicts lay. The one Dakota had entered finally rose from its resting place, bright energies flickering around its skeletal spines.


As the ground fell away from beneath it, pockets of gas detonated from deep within the chasm walls, sending boulders and debris tumbling down on the two remaining vessels.


Vast fissures began to tear through Ikaria’s crust, and the planet shifted in its orbit as it rapidly lost mass to the searing heat of the nova.


Above it all, the Piri Reis floated like a dragonfly above the open door of a furnace.


* * * *
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