|
"First Contact" and "Immortality". See how simple they
are to say? Eight simple syllables...and yet they changed everything. The Republic had been around for more than a thousand years. It was the
single most durable government Humanity had ever known and looked to last at
least another thousand years. A representative government providing a stable
standard of living for all its people, stabilized by a ruthless control of
science and communication. Education was granted to all, but subjects
furthering science were only taught by the Republic behind closed doors to
students that passed specific aptitude tests. They were an elite caste that
could not, upon penalty of death, fraternize with non-scientists. Eventually, the Republic stabilized into continued, controlled growth
without the masses having the knowledge or desire to forment
revolution...ever. The Military existed to control the Scientists, and theoretically to quell
the masses of Humanity should they ever revolt...although that was unlikely. But then came Auraxis. The moment the Warpgate was found, all information about the Contact was
sealed away and became "eyes only" information. The masses never
found out that Auraxis had even been discovered. But on Auraxis, there were no masses. Just Military and Scientists. And
they talked...a lot. First Contact could mean so many things. It could be a wonderful time of
opportunity as we meet technologically superior beings that raise us up to
their level so they can have comrades in the universe. It could also result
in us being squashed like cockroaches for having the temerity of touching the
toys they left behind on Auraxis. Either result was just as likely as the
other. The trouble was...no one really agreed on what the correct approach was in
dealing with this threat. But also, no one was naove enough to ignore the fact that these aliens
might very well be "bug eyed monsters that eat children" who would
come back one day and destroy us. Therefore, Humanity must be
prepared...even if it was just so they could be embarrassed at assuming
danger when there was none later on. But no one agreed on the Solutions and
the arguments were moving scientists and soldiers into different camps of
thought. And now, after all that...we had discovered Immortality? The Republic killed that pilot six more times before they gave up and
realized he wasn't going to stay dead. Everytime they destroyed him (and the
last time, they blew him to pieces to ensure there wasn't enough left to
scoop together into a pile), he would just reappear on a Warpgate platform a
few seconds later, stressed that he had been killed again, but none the worse
for wear. They examined him with every instrument they had. They psychoanalyzed him,
made him take IQ tests, checked his DNA structure, watched his bio systems
carefully, even put him through emotional and physical stress tests to see
how he did. He did no better, and no worse, than he had done before being
repeatedly killed. For all intents and purposes, it was exactly as if he had never died. He seemed to even be aging normally. He didn't revive at some pre-saved
state of being. He revived each time exactly as he had been just before he
was killed, but completely healthy, rested, and without aches, pains or
hungers. He remembered every thing that happened to him, except for a small
period of time just before his death, when it seemed that the trauma of dying
blocked memory. Why did he come back? Careful measurements at the base of the platform when
he revived revealed that a small amount of energy was used at that time, but
it was similar to the amount of energy used when an object was Gated through
from one continent to the other. So what was going on? Experiments with all sorts of domesticated and undomesticated animals
never resulted in a "revival". Non-sentient life forms seemed to
just stay dead. So eventually, a thought-crimer was selected and killed. And
he stayed dead. The obvious assumption was that the pilot's passage through the warpgate
had somehow attuned him to some planetary immortality scheme. So once again,
they shoved all sorts of animals through the gates, killing them on the other
side. They all died and stayed dead. Finally, they picked another thought-crimer (there seemed to be more of
them every day as the alien Contact discussions caused tempers to flare), and
made him step through the gate. Then they executed him on the other platform.
Moments later, he broadcast to them that he found himself in the center of a
swampish area. He had been revived and "warped" to another
location. Eventually, the Warpgates were just too attractive of an option. Even the
Republic sanctioned their use, since none of those people were ever coming
back through the wormhole anyway. They considered it a "test on a massive scale". The test was successful. The gates became highways for travel around the
world, and all those that went through them became free of the worry of
death. The military minds dreamed of unbeatable armies and scientists began
to realize that a "life's work" might be only one of many projects
and their minds soared. Pre-fab facilities sprang up around the globe as
Humanity devised ways of "shunting" the warpgate energy to directed
nodes at those facilities, allowing "revivals" to occur at the
facilities.
|