392 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
392 lines
19 KiB
Plaintext
;
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; Sid Meier's ALPHA CENTAURI
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;
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; Backstory Interludes
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;
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; Copyright (c) 1997, 1998 by Firaxis Games, Inc.
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;
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#INTERLUDE
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#xs 400
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^^
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^^INTERLUDE
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^
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^^from
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^
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^^The Book of Planet
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^
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^^M.Y. $NUM0
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^
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^
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#EPILOGUE
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#xs 400
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^^
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^^EPILOGUE
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^
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^^from
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^
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^^The Book of Planet
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^
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^^M.Y. 1,027,823
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^
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^
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#EPILOGUE2
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#xs 400
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^^
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^^EPILOGUE
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^
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^^from
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^
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^^The Book of Planet
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^
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^^M.Y. $NUM2 (Seed Year 1)
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^
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^
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#EPILOGUE3
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#xs 400
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^^
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^^EPILOGUE
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^
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^^from
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^
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^^The Book of Planet
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^
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^^M.Y. $NUM2
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^
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^
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#INTERLUDE0
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#xs 500
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#caption Interlude: Victory is Sweet
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^ You wonder if, in your subconscious mind, you ever really thought you'd
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see this day. Then you put that thought aside, for the last disc is spun.
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The last rivet is in place. The last steel veneer has been polished. It is
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time.
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^ "Leader." Your assistant's head is bowed, waiting dutifully. Her emanations
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are formal and rich with meaning. "Will you
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add the power and deliver us from exile?"
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^ You shake your neck in assent, and close the connection. The Subspace
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Generators grab hold of the string resonance fields, and quantum levels of
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power begin to course through the individual parts. Soon their beams will arc
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high above your nation, and there a hole will be driven into subspace. Through
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that hole, across distances immeasurable to any brain, a message will fly. The
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Resonance Communicator will sends its distress beacon to the homeworld, and they
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will know your voice.
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^ Green light begins to glow. Soon. Soon,
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you will see your beloved Kenal K'esh again. Soon you will find your brethren. And
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when you find them, they will come to your aid with ships and soldiers, and
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every other living being on Manifold Six will know your power. It has been
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so long in coming.
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^ Green light arcs up into the sky, and the world is forever changed.
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#INTERLUDE1
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#xs500
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#caption None Can Stop Us Now
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^ You ride the howling needlejet and land back in the capital in record time.
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The pilot was obviously trying to impress you, and he's succeeded. You hurry
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into the command room and savor the waves of resonance as they show you the
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surface of Manifold Six: everywhere you look, you see your own forces. There
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are a few shattered remnants of enemy resistance, but they are mere pockets
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of color in an otherwise clean wash of the Progenitor tide.
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^ When all else fails, you reflect, simply remove all opposition. Then there
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is time enough for any plan. You're not sure if you want to contact the
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homeworld right away, or further your own power a bit first--but it doesn't
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matter, does it? There's nothing to stop you no matter what you decide to do.
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^ It's a very, very good feeling.
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#INTERLUDE2
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#xs 500
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#caption Interlude: Shrunken Heads
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^ The field tanks resonate with spectral pictures of the alien intruders, captured
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during that first encounter. If you
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squinted, you might mistake them for Progenitor younglings--but with diseased,
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shrunken heads. They look like the entertainment story conjurations of primitive
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tribal feeders in the dark parts of the homeworld. They look disgusting.
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^ Their primitive nature is nowhere so apparent as in their inability to
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communicate--they can make noise, but they cannot alter it properly.
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This is bad, because you have no idea how in the Six Manifolds they
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got here, and you'd desperately like to know.
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^ "Tell me your theories," you alter. The steady resonant hum of the room hangs
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empty for several circulatory pulses. Then, the junior stochastic resonates.
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^ "They are a creation of the Manifold," she vibrates hesitantly. There is general
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scoffing. You try to be more gentle.
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^ "No, Canla, this cannot be," you alter. "Their biology is DNA-incompatible. They
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must be from off-world." There is a general alteration of assent.
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^ "But how can a race sophisticated enough to traverse the stars be in such a
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primitive state?" resonates the general.
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^ There is more empty humming. Then Canla, undaunted, speaks again.
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^ "Perhaps they suffered a fate similar to ours," she alters. "After all, look
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at the state we're in."
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^ The pain of that is incontrovertible. And somewhere out there is the hated $OTHERALIENS6.
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You wonder if you can make these offworlders your allies, before the enemy does. Your
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first task, then, is to learn how their minds work so you can communicate with them. You
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wonder how difficult it could be to think like an alien.
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#INTERLUDE3
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#xs 500
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#caption Interlude: Ancient Ones
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^ The council might as well be dipped in a vat of flaming vegetable matter--
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the resonations of fear are as intense. You try to remain calm, to show a cool
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leadership you do not feel. Somehow, from somewhere, offworlders are occupying
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the precious Manifold!
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^ "The key is continued communication," you alter. "Their ability to make
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wave-forms in the atmosphere is useful, but their understanding of the alteration
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process is key. If they can be reasoned with, they can be made ally. If they can
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be made ally, they can aid us against our enemy."
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^ The general nods, and resonates an aura of confidence for the first time. "True,"
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he alters. "But I fear; though they look like ancient, feeble members of our race, they are
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totally alien. What if their cause and our cause do not coincide?"
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^ "Then we must find out their cause," you alter, "and appeal to it. Become what they
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want us to become. All the while, we must continue to further our own aims."
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^ The xenobiologist--the closest thing you've got to a xenopsychologist--flutters
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his mandibles. "But they claim they are here as colonists! Our aims do not and cannot
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coincide with this! Sooner or later, we must destroy them in order to $EXPLOITORPRISTINE7!"
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^ You alter the biologist's words with smooth calm. "I hope that this can come later--far later.
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We must use them first if we can...and if we cannot, then we must destroy them swiftly,
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and without mercy."
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^ The alterations to [that] are [very] positive.
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#INTERLUDE4
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#xs500
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#caption Interlude: Monkey See, Monkey Do...What?
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^ "Look carefully," the biologist alters so softly you can barely distinguish the
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change. "Watch what it does."
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^ You find that difficult--the captured human is as ugly as a new hatchling, but
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without the pleasing sliminess. You force yourself to observe, however, for
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observation--and understanding--are one of the keys to survival on Manifold Six.
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^ The human has been starved for several days. Now, food is placed at the top
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of the room, hanging from a hook. Several boxes have been scattered about the
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room as well. Presumably it will build some sort of tower to gain access to the
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food.
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^ "What will this prove?" you alter, bored.
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^ "Watch! Watch!" the biologist alters excitedly.
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^ The human looks around the room a while, then sits motionless. It makes
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sound waves with its breathing apparatus. It sits and stares about the room.
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^ "Is it stupid?" you alter.
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^ "No!" alters the biologist triumphantly. "It's defiant! The sound waves are its
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language--it's saying something along the lines of "Put a sporeflower up your chlo!
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I'm not eating for your entertainment!" It knows we're watching it."
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^ So the human would rather starve than be treated like a lab animal, eh?
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Interesting ... very interesting. You're not sure whether this is very very good--
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or very very dangerous. "Learn its language immediately!" you snap. "We must
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communicate as soon as possible!"
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#INTERLUDE5
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#xs 500
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#caption Interlude: Flight of the Razorwings
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^ It gives you no particular pleasure to kill. You almost wish you could
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communicate directly with the humans, explain to them the necessity of the forced
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relocation--explain to them the necessity of their deaths.
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^ "Reporting, $TITLE0 $NAME1," resonates the Force Commander of the occupation
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army. "Human colonists are fleeing now from the base they call '$BASENAME5.'
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Those that chose to remain behind
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have been assimilated and reconstituted."
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^ It gives you no particular pleasure to kill. But it is the way of
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the Human and Progenitor mind. They cannot coexist under one government;
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they cannot eat each other's food, nor use each other's facilities.
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^ It gives you no particular pleasure to kill. But they are the enemy,
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and it is the only way.
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#INTERLUDE6
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#xs 500
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#caption Interlude: So Near and So Far
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^ With your own hand, you spin the last disc into place on the first of the
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Resonance Communicators. It has been a long, difficult trek to get to this point--
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to recapture that which was lost. But slowly, like primitives (but accelerated
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by tens of thousands of years), you've managed to recreate the discoveries
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of your ancestors, and hammer out the materials on this strangely hostile
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world, and now the time has come.
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^ "You don't look happy, Leader," resonates your assistant. "Isn't this a
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great day?"
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^ "I suppose so," you alter, feeling at that moment a strange lack of elation.
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After a moment's thought you realize why: for all these years you have been
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supreme leader of your own world ... your own people. Now it will end, with the
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summoning of the home world fleet. Greater leaders than you will come and destroy
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what's left of the opposition; they'll come and claim your triumph for their
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own. You almost wish it could go on, but you know that your duty is to
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$EXPLOITORPRISTINE7, and you must be true to that mission. "I suppose so," you
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alter again. "We have triumphed, all of us. It's just a matter of time."
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With a sigh, you pick up the spinner and turn away.
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#INTERLUDE7
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#xs 500
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#caption Interlude: Civil War
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^ "Yes, they are here."
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^ All assembled in the room expected this news. Yet it sends a ripple of
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alteration through the room as though you had announced the death of the
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entire Council of Overlords. Secretly, you and everyone else here had been
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hoping that the hated Usurpers died upon Planetary entry. Now you know this
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is not the case.
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^ "This changes nothing!" Smoothly you alter the entire hum of conversation,
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to lend emphasis to your meaning. "The plan goes forward as we agreed. The
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Usurpers must die, and we must continue our quest to contact the Homeworld,
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that Manifold Six may remain pristine. Are we committed unto the death of one or
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the other of us?"
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^ Many on the council look uncomfortable, their eyes blinking rapidly. You can
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understand their feelings--the Caretaker cause is dedicated to peace and the
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status quo. This destructive posture is not in keeping with your stated goals.
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Finally, Kaala L'mota articulates what the others are obviously thinking.
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^ "Can we not try once more to reach an accord with the Usurper leader, Marr?
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In such a dire circumstance, even he might see the wisdom of cooperation."
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^ "I am sorry, my friends," you alter sharply, expressing your regret and
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displeasure at the same time. "Think of the Usurper cause: they wish to gain
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Transcendence with Manifold Six. We know what happened at Tau Ceti when the
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Flowering was allowed to occur. Destruction. Death."
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^ You see the fear on all faces, their mandibles drawn tight to their mouths.
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"We all know this--including the Usurper, Marr," you continue. "And yet they
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continue on their quest for Transcendence. We cannot understand this. They move
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inexorably toward death! We have asked, begged, fought, and died to prevent
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this, and still they come. Surely, a small thing such as this shipwreck will
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not alter their plan. No, my friends, we must be firm in our resolve. Death,
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or freedom for Manifold Six. Do you agree?"
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^ Your words are altered, one by one, by each member of the council. They
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all assent.
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#INTERLUDE8
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#xs 500
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#caption Interlude: Civil War
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^ "Yes, they are here."
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^ All assembled in the room expected this news. Yet it sends a ripple of
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alteration through the room as though you had announced a sneak attack
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on the home world. You know many of them were convinced the Caretakers
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had been destroyed during the space battle. Now it's clear this
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is not the case.
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^ "This changes nothing!" Smoothly you alter the entire hum of conversation,
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to lend emphasis to your meaning. "The plan goes forward as we agreed. The
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Caretakers must die, and we must continue our quest to contact the Homeworld,
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or to reach the Flowering with ourselves in power over Manifold Six. Are we agreed?"
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^ One on the council looks uncomfortable, his eyes blinking rapidly. He stands
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and formally alters your words, requesting permission to speak. You shake your
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neck at him, and he proceeds.
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^ "You know me," he alters. "I am no coward, yet I counsel one last attempt
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to reason with the Caretakers and their leader H'minee. We are all Progenitor
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together here, trapped on Manifold Six until such time as we can re-implement
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our lost technologies. Until then, should we not attempt to live
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together under one skin?"
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^ Others alter his words in subtle ways, expressing doubt or tolerance for
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this idea. You step in quickly.
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^ "No, my friends!" you alter roughly. "Remember with whom we are dealing.
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H'minee and her followers have seen the incredible power of the Manifolds, and
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yet they reject them. They have read the ancient books, and the plans our
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ancestors made for the Manifold Experiments. Yet they reject those as well.
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They live in fear--and a Progenitor who lives in fear is one that may as well
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be dead. Our race has declined since the time of the ancestors, and it is
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because of the timidity and fear of the Caretaker faction. We must move forward
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boldly, and fulfill the destiny spelled out for us so many thousands of orbits
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ago. Do you agree?"
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^ Your words are altered, one by one, by each member of the council. They
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all assent.
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#INTERLUDE9
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#xs 500
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#caption Interlude: The Nexus
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^ Imagine six Progenitor in a room. They would alter the resonance of the room,
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and alter the alterations, in a smooth and free-flowing conversation. The sheer
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complexity of it gives you a pleasant feeling in the brain pan.
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^ As you gaze out on the weathered walls of the Manifold Nexus, you get that
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same feeling, magnified a million times. You imagine not six Progenitor, but six
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Planets--six minds almost godlike in their powers, but almost infantile in their
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knowledge of the world, and of Progenitor ways.
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^ "Almost like being a nursemaid to a god," you resonate softly. Your assistant,
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standing nearby, gives you a quizzical wave of the mandibles. "What did you alter,
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Leader?"
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^ You flap your neck lightly, cupping the assistant's words, altering them, and
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sending them back. "That," you resonate, pointing at the Nexus. "During the First
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Era, it was built to be the control center for the Manifold Experiment."
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^ Your assistant looks in awe at this relic of the past. "Does it still function?"
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^ "Yes." You shake your neck at the report you've just been handed. "It still
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works perfectly. Our harmony with Manifold Six is even greater now than it was
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before." You look in silence at the temple, then turn away. You've gained a
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small measure of power over six gods. You must be careful.
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#INTERLUDE10
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#xs500
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#caption Interlude: A Change of Plan
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^ You can barely believe it. You insisted on joining the search parties sifting
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the wreckage of the last $OTHERALIENS6 base, not because you felt your minions
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were incompetent, but because you had to see for yourself that the final
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victory was at hand.
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^ And what glorious wreckage! The dead bodies of $OTHERALIENS6 followers litter
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the ground. Destroyed weaponry and the rubble of embattled buildings litter the
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streets. Even amid the death and destruction of your distant kinfolk, you feel
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an odd sense of elation. The hated enemy is destroyed!
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^ "Leader," the force commander alters the sounds of distant explosions coming
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to you, for extra emphasis to his words. "This is a great day. What do we do now?"
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^ You know that he means 'what steps shall we take at this time,' but his words
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do raise a deeper question: what is the fate of your own people, now that their
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primary goal is accomplished?
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^ "We build," you alter, surprising him. "We build toward the day of summoning
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of our allies, or toward ultimate conquest. The fate of Manifold Six is waving
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in our hands. We must not falter."
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#INTERLUDE11
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#xs 500
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#caption Interlude: Familiar Faces
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^ The reports of attacks, and deaths, are quite disturbing.
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^ "How can this be?" you alter, turning on the xenobiologist. "None of our
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records show such hostility from the native life-forms in the era of the
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beginnings of the experiment!"
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^ "The current records do not lie, though," she counters. "The mindworms and
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spore launchers are definitely out to kill us. In the past..." The hum of the
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thought hangs for a while, and you prompt gently. "In the past?"
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^ "Yes, leader." The biologist seems very unhappy. "In the past, we were
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the gardeners. We were here only to tend, and then to leave. Now we are here
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to live. Manifold Six--the whole planet--doesn't like that. It cares not for our politics. It just
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doesn't like us being here."
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^ "You realize the implications?" you alter, feeling but not showing a touch
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of fear. "We are at the mercy of an entire world. It is not intelligent enough to
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negotiate with ... it will simply try to kill us."
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^ "Yes, leader," the biologist alters.
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^ And, truly, there is nothing whatsoever you can do that you are not already doing.
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You put the problem from your brain, and stride from the room.
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#INTERLUDE12
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#xs 500
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#caption Interlude: Tower of Strength
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^ You stand at a goodly distance, examining the strange formation through
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a resonance-gathering device cobbled together by one of the techs. It's quite
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serviceable, and you're able to see the distant object as though it were
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just a few feet away.
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^ "It looks like a heat rash on the skin of Manifold Six," you say, and those
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gathered around you alter your resonance to show humor. "What is it?"
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^ The xenobiologist pulls back the flaps of his neck, and alters stiffly:
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"We don't know, Leader. There are no reports of these objects in the Manifold
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files handed down to us from the original creators. These seem to be something
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new."
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^ You clack your mandibles like a baby as you lower the gathering device.
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"That's bad. Very bad. The presence of the offworlders has caused this, hasn't
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it."
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^ The biologist shakes his neck again in assent. "Somehow the latent intellect
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of Manifold Six has created these ... towers ... in response to irritations
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caused by the ecological ravages of the offworlders; and, I hesitate to alter,
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our own presence as well. They generate the fungus at an increased rate, and may
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be a conduit for mindworm and sporerunner activity. Those tendrils you see--" here
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he waves one arm "--have a reach of several hundred yards. It's dangerous to get
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too close to the thing."
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^ You bug your eyes in a laugh as you alter his words to show humor. "Ho! Then
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I was right the first time. It [is] like a giant heat rash!"
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^ You only wish it was as funny as it resonated. The fact is, unchecked, these
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things would take over the Manifold. Would that bring the Flowering? Or would
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it bring instead another destruction, like that of Tau Ceti?
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^ "Keep an eye on it," you sigh. "We'll destroy it if we have to."
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^ If it doesn't destroy us first, you think--but don't dare to say.
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# ; This line must remain at end of file.
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