All Tomorrows by Nemo Ramjet
All Tomorrows by Nemo Ramjet
All Tomorrows by Nemo Ramjet
Alltomorrows
All Tomorrows
A Billion Year Chronicle of the Myriad Species and Varying
Fortunes of Man
Nemo Ramjet
To Mars
After millennia of earthbound foreplay, Mankind’s achievements on a
noteworthy level began with its political unification and the gradual
colonization of Mars. While the technology to colonize this world had
existed for some time, political bickering, shifting agendas and the sheer
inertia of comfortable, terrestrial usurping had made this step seem more
distant than it actually was.
Only when the risks clearly began to present themselves, only when Earth’s
environment began to buckle under the strain of twelve billion industrialized
souls, did Mankind finally take up the momentous task.
All through the decades, traveling to, and later settling on Mars had been
envisioned as quick, relatively easy affairs; complicated but feasible and
manageable in short term. As the push finally came to a shove, it was
realized that this was not the case.
When everything was ready, people came from their crowded world. They
came in one-way ships; fusion rockets and atmospheric gliders, packed to the
brim with colonists, sleeping in dreams of a new beginning.
The first steps on Mars were taken not by astronauts, but by barefoot
children on synthetic grass.
A lander ferries the first people to the pre-terraformed eden of Mars.
This, however, was not to last. Like the gradual separation of America from
her Colonial mother, the governments of Mars adopted a new, Martian
identity. They became the Martian Americans.
The difference between Earth and the Mars was not only political. A few
generations in the lighter gravity gave the new Americans a spindly, lithe
frame that would look surreal in their old home. This, combined with a
certain amount of genetic engineering, took the Martians’ separation to a
new level.
For a while the silent schism between the two planets was mutually accepted,
and the balance of power hung in an edgy equilibrium. But the Terra-Martian
standoff did not, could not last forever. With limitless resources and an
energetic population, Mars was bound to take the lead.
Civil War
The Martian turnover was expected to occur in two ways; either through
long-term economical gains or by a much shorter but painful armed conflict.
For almost two hundred years, the former method seemed to take effect, but
this gradual stretch eventually did break in a most destructive way.
Almost since its establishment, Martian culture was suffused with an explicit
theme of rebellion against Earth. Songs, motion pictures and daily
publications repeated these notions again and again until they became
internalized. Earth was the old, ossified home that held humanity back, while
Mars was new; dynamic, active and inventive. Mars was the future.
For Earth, it was a death sentence. Without the resources and industries of
Mars, the Terrestrial Heyday would quickly devolve into a pale shadow of its
former glory. Since a trade of essential goods continued, nobody would
starve. But for every citizen of Earth, the Martian boycott meant the loss of
up to three fourths of their yearly income.
Most of the time the combatants never saw each other. Most of the time the
combatants were not there at all. War became a duel between complicated,
autonomous machines programmed to maximize damage to the other side
while trying to last a little longer.
Such a conflict caused horrendous destruction on both sides. Phobos, one of
Mars’ moons, was shattered, and rained down as meteorite hail. Earth
received a polar impact that killed of one third of its population.
Barely escaping extinction, the peoples of Earth and Mars made peace and
re-forged a united solar system. It had cost them more than eight billion
souls.
Star People
The survivors agreed that massive changes were necessary to ensure that
such a war never occurred again. These reforms were so comprehensive that
they entailed not political, economical but biological changes as well.
One of the greatest differences between the people of the two planets was
that over time, they had almost become different species. It was believed that
the solar system could never completely unify until this discrepancy was
overcome.
The answer was a new human subspecies, equally and better adapted not
only to Earth and Mars, but to the conditions of most newly terraformed
environments as well. Furthermore, these beings were envisioned with larger
brains and heightened talents, making them greater than the sum of their
predecessors.
In only a few generations, the new race began to prove its worth. Organized
as a single state and aided by the technological developments of the war,
they rapidly terraformed and colonized Venus, the Asteroids and the moons
of Jupiter and Saturn.
Soon however, even the domain of Sol grew too small. The new people who
inherited it wanted to go further, to new worlds under distant stars. They
were to become the Star People.
Colonization and the Mechanical Oedipi
Even for the Star People, interplanetary travel was a momentous task. Early
minds had boggled over the problem and fantasies such as faster than light
travel and hyperspace emerged as the only “solutions”.
Simply put, it was impossible to take a large number of people with enough
supplies to even the closest star to make colonization feasible. The existing
technologies could only slug along at mere percentages of lightspeed,
making the journey an epoch-spanning affair. Enormous “generation ships”
were conceived and even built, but these succumbed to technical difficulties
or on-board anarchy after a few cycles.
The solution was to first go there, and make the colonists later. To this end,
fast and small, automated ships were sent forth to the stars. On board were
semi-sentient machines programmed to replicate and terraform the
destination, and “construct” its inhabitants from the genetic materials stored
on board.
Even then, however, the remaining half was enough to fill Humanity’s own
spiral arm of the galaxy.
An Early Warning
During those times, a small discovery of immense implications warned
humanity that it might not be alone.
While every other large land animal on that colony world had three limbs, a
copper based skeletal system and hydrostatically operated muscles;
Panderavis was a typical terrestrial vertebrate with calcium-rich bones and
four extremities. Finding it there was as unlikely as finding an alien creature
in Earth’s own strata.
The warning was clear. There was no telling what would happen if mankind
suddenly ran into this civilization. A benevolent contact was obviously
preferred and even expected, but it paid to be prepared.
Silently, humanity once again began to build and stockpile weapons, this
time of the interplanetary potency. There were terrible devices, capable of
nova-ing stars and wrecking entire solar systems. Sadly, even these
preparations would prove to be ineffectual in time.
Almost a billion years old, the alien species known as Qu were galactic
nomads, traveling from one spiral arm to another in epoch-spanning
migrations. During their travels they constantly improved and changed
themselves until they became masters of genetic and nanotechnological
manipulation. With this ability to control the material world, they assumed a
religious, self-imposed mission to “remake the universe as they saw fit.”
Powerful as gods, Qu saw themselves as the divine harbingers of the future.
This dogma was rooted in what had been a benevolent attempt to protect the
race from its own power. However, blind, unquestioning obedience had made
monsters of the Qu.
To them humanity, with all of its relative glories, was nothing more than a
transmutable subject. Within less than a thousand years, every human world
was destroyed, depopulated or even worse; changed. Despite the fervent
rearmament, the colonies could achieve nothing against its billionyear-old
foes, save for a few flashes of ephemeral resistance.
Humanity, once the ruler of the stars, was now extinct. However, humans
were not.
Qu triumphant in the fall of Man. To his left floats a nanotechnological
drone, to the right, a genetically modified tracing creature.
Man Extinguished
The worlds of humanity, gardens of terraformed paradise, seemed strangely
empty to the Qu. Often there were no raw materials available other than
people, their cities and a few basic niches of ecology, populated by
genetically modified animals and plants from Earth. This was because
humans had erased the original alien ecologies in the first place.
Offended by another race trying to remake the universe, the Qu set forth to
punish these “infidels” by using them as the building materials of their
vision. While this led to a complete extinguishment of human sentience, it
also saved the species by preserving its genetic heritage in a myriad of
strange new forms.
Populated by ersatz humans, now in every guise from wild animals to pets to
genetically modified tools, Qu reigned supreme for forty million years on the
worlds of our galaxy. They erected kilometer-high monuments and changed
the surfaces of entire worlds, apparently to whim.
One day, they departed as they had come. For theirs was a never-ending
quest and they would not, could not stop until they had swept through the
entire cosmos.
Behind them the Qu left a thousand worlds, each filled with bizarre creatures
and ecologies that had once been men. Most of them perished right after
their caretakers left, others lasted a little longer to succumb to long-term
instabilities. On a precious few worlds, descendants of people actually
managed to survive.
In them lay the fate of the species, now divided and differentiated beyond
recognition.
A mile high Qu pyramid towers over the silent world that once housed four
billion souls. Such structures are the hallmark of Qu, and they can be seen on
every habitable world they passed through.
Contents
To Mars ............................................................................................. 3
The Martian Americans ................................................................. 5
Civil War .......................................................................................... 7
Star People ....................................................................................... 8
Colonization and the Mechanical Oedipi .................................... 10
The Summer of Man ....................................................................... 11
An Early Warning .......................................................................... 13
Qu ...................................................................................................... 15
Man Extinguished ........................................................................... 17
Worms ............................................................................................... 19
Titans ................................................................................................. 21
Predators and Prey ........................................................................... 23
Mantelopes ....................................................................................... 26
Swimmers .......................................................................................... 28
Lizard Herders .................................................................................. 30
Temptor ............................................................................................ 32
Bone Crusher ................................................................................... 34
Colonials ........................................................................................... 36
Flyers ................................................................................................. 38
Hand Flappers .................................................................................. 40
Blind Folk .......................................................................................... 42
Lopsiders .......................................................................................... 44
Striders .............................................................................................. 46
Parasites ............................................................................................ 48
Finger Fishers ................................................................................... 50
Hedonists .......................................................................................... 52
Insectophagi ..................................................................................... 54
Spacers ............................................................................................... 56
Ruin Haunters ................................................................................... 58
Sentience Reborn ............................................................................. 60
Extinction ........................................................................................... 61
Snake People (Descendants of the Worms) ................................. 63
Killer Folk (Descendants of the Human Predators) ..................... 65
Tool Breeders (Descendants of the Swimmers) .......................... 67
Saurosapients (Livestock of the Lizard Herders) ........................ 69
Modular People (Descendants of the Colonials) ........................ 71
Pterosapiens (Descendants of the Flyers) ................................... 73
Asymmetric People (Descendants of the Lopsiders) ................. 75
Symbiotes (Descendants of the Parasites) .................................. 77
Sail People (Descendants of the Finger Fishers) ........................ 79
Satyriacs (Descendants of the Hedonists) .................................. 81
Bug Facers (Descendants of the Insectophagi) .......................... 83
Asteromorphs (Descendants of the Spacers) .............................. 85
Second Galactic Empire ................................................................... 87
Gravital (Descendants of the Ruin Haunters) .............................. 88
Machine Invasion ............................................................................ 90
When Considering the Invasion .................................................... 92
Subjects (Many descendants of the Bug Facers) ....................... 93
The Other Machines ........................................................................ 96
The Fall of the Machines (Return of the Spacers) ...................... 98
The Post-War Galaxy ...................................................................... 100
The New Machines ......................................................................... 102
Second Contact ............................................................................... 104
Earth Rediscovered ......................................................................... 106
Return ................................................................................................ 108
All Tomorrows ................................................................................. 110
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.
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.
Two Worm parents with their young.
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.
Predators and Prey
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.
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
memoryretainers, 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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Contents
To Mars ............................................................................................ 3
The Martian Americans ................................................................. 5
Civil War .......................................................................................... 7
Star People ....................................................................................... 8
Colonization and the Mechanical Oedipi .................................... 10
The Summer of Man ....................................................................... 11
An Early Warning ........................................................................... 13
Qu ...................................................................................................... 15
Man Extinguished ........................................................................... 17
Worms ............................................................................................. 19
Titans ............................................................................................... 21
Predators and Prey ........................................................................ 23
Mantelopes ...................................................................................... 26
Swimmers ....................................................................................... 28
Lizard Herders .............................................................................. 30
Temptor ........................................................................................... 32
Bone Crusher ................................................................................... 34
Colonials ........................................................................................... 36
Flyers ................................................................................................. 38
Hand Flappers .................................................................................. 40
Blind Folk .......................................................................................... 42
Lopsiders .......................................................................................... 44
Striders .............................................................................................. 46
Parasites ............................................................................................ 48
Finger Fishers ................................................................................... 50
Hedonists .......................................................................................... 52
Insectophagi ..................................................................................... 54
Spacers ............................................................................................... 56
Ruin Haunters ................................................................................... 58
Sentience Reborn ............................................................................. 60
Extinction ........................................................................................... 61
Snake People (Descendants of the Worms) ................................. 63
Killer Folk (Descendants of the Human Predators) ..................... 65
Tool Breeders (Descendants of the Swimmers) .......................... 67
Saurosapients (Livestock of the Lizard Herders) ........................ 69
Modular People (Descendants of the Colonials) ........................ 71
Pterosapiens (Descendants of the Flyers) ................................... 73
Asymmetric People (Descendants of the Lopsiders) ................. 75
Symbiotes (Descendants of the Parasites) .................................. 77
Sail People (Descendants of the Finger Fishers) ........................ 79
Satyriacs (Descendants of the Hedonists) .................................. 81
Bug Facers (Descendants of the Insectophagi) .......................... 83
Asteromorphs (Descendants of the Spacers) .............................. 85
Second Galactic Empire ................................................................... 87
Gravital (Descendants of the Ruin Haunters) .............................. 88
Machine Invasion ............................................................................ 90
When Considering the Invasion .................................................... 92
Subjects (Many descendants of the Bug Facers) ....................... 93
The Other Machines ........................................................................ 96
The Fall of the Machines (Return of the Spacers) ...................... 98
The Post-War Galaxy ...................................................................... 100
The New Machines ......................................................................... 102
Second Contact ............................................................................... 104
Earth Rediscovered ......................................................................... 106
Return ................................................................................................ 108
All Tomorrows ................................................................................. 110
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.
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.
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.
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.
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
aether 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.
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.
An ancestral Flyer in her native element. Although ungainly, these creatures
have an artificial metabolic advantage that gives them tremendous
evolutionary potential.
Hand Flappers
Some flying posthumans re-approached sentience in an entirely different
way. Without the augmented metabolisms or the gravitational advantages of
their siblings on distant planets, they had no choice but to give up their
power of flight in order to develop further.
The Hand Flappers were one such species. Their wings, once used for
butterfly-like flutters in the unearthly gardens of Qu, had shrunken and
reverted back into their manual condition. Their legs were likewise re-
adapted, but they bore a splayed awkwardness from their perching ancestry.
Only a singular, and an almost sadistically simple flaw held them back from
developing civilization. In the course of their secondary atrophy, the wings
of the Hand Flappers had become useless as hands as well. Their flag like
appendages were very useful in signaling and mating dances, but they
couldn’t hurl missiles, construct shelter or even manufacture basic stone
tools. All that they could do with their useless hands was to display each
others’ sexual availability, so the Hand Flappers did just that; flashing and
dancing their way to oblivion.
A Hand Flapper on the edge of his mating territory. During their almost
comical exaggeration of sexual display, his kind has begun to lose their edge
at adaptation. Theirs will be a boisterous, ecstatic but ultimately ephemeral
existence.
Blind Folk
When the Qu came they dug in, and dug in deep. Inside several continent-
sized shelters under their besieged world, they waited for the invaders to
pass them by. It was a futile gamble. The Qu located the shelter-caves and
remade their inhabitants without effort.
People were present here as well, albeit in unfamiliar forms. They were
more often heard than seen, as they tried to find their way in the dark with
banshee-like screams. These albino troglodytes lived in a realm where sound
and touch, not sight, was the gateway of perception. They had developed
long, tactile fingers, enormous whiskers and mobile ears to live in the dark.
Where their eyes should have been, there was nothing but a patch of
haunting, flawlessly smooth skin. Their perfect adaptation to the world of
darkness had erased the most basic feature of human recognition.
As adapted as they were, they were doomed. Before the Blind Folk could
develop any kind of intelligence to crawl out of their geographical graves,
the glacial constriction of their World’s continental plates snuffed out the
shelters one by one.
A startled Blind father with his year-old daughter. Although he knows better
to sit still in order to confuse sonar-equipped predators, the youngster
screams and soils herself in terror. Their attenuated fingers are hallmarks of
a lifetime spent in darkness.
Lopsiders
The Qu were grotesquely creative in their redesign of the human worlds.
One group of misfortunate souls they transported to a planet with thirty-six
times the amount of “normal” gravity, and made them over for life in this
bizarrely inhospitable realm.
Striders
While the Lopsiders were redesigned to live under extreme gravity, another
species had been adapted for life under the exact opposite conditions; on a
Jovian moon with one fifth of Earth’s gravity.
It was a world of wonders, where even the grass grew almost ten meters tall
and the trees were beyond belief, towering to sizes attained only by the
skyscrapers of antiquity. In these surreal forests lived equally spectacular
fauna; the descendants of pets, pests and livestock of humans, who in turn
had been reduced to animosity as well.
One could see them in the league-tall forests, almost dancing among the
trees as they reared higher and higher to browse. Their arms, legs, and necks
had been stretched impossibly thin, great flaps of skin blossomed throughout
their bodies to dispense waste heat. Sometimes they would even change
their color in order to reflect light and keep cool. Overheating was a great
problem for their grotesquely tall, thin bodies.
About two million years after the Qu left their towering works of human art,
a lineage of fearsome predators evolved from the terrestrial poultry that had
gone feral on the planet. Resembling attenuated versions of their dinosaur
ancestors, the predators swept through the garden world like wildfires,
extinguishing any species too fragile to escape, or resist. The peaceful,
delicate striders were among the first to go.
Parasites
Humanity had diverged into two separate lineages on their world. On one
hand there were several races of almost Australopithecine cripples, degraded
by the Qu for managing to turn back their initial wave of invasion. Yet
simple atavism was too light a punishment for them. Their twisted relatives,
the parasites, made up the second part of their sentence.
All of these evolutionary tortures were played out under the careful scrutiny
of the Qu for forty million years. The punishment was so baroque, so
elaborate that most of the artificial parasitehost relationships died out when
the Qu left. Some sub-men learnt to cleanse their tick-like relatives by
drowning, burning or even eating them. Others, like the vaginal parasites,
died out as their aggressive method of parasitism effectively sterilized their
hosts.
Yet one or two varieties did manage to cling on to their hosts with
abdominal suckers, muscular, gripping limbs and sterile, pain-soothing
saliva. But their success did not lie entirely in the strength of their parasitical
advantages. They also learnt to regulate their dumb hosts, not killing them
by over-infestation and thus ensuring their own long-term survival as well.
In any case, totally single-sided relations were rare in any ecology, natural or
artificial. In millennial cycles, the cousin species’ vicious parasitism began
to give way into something more beneficial for both sides.
A parasitic person, shown real size. Although their fate seems inhumane in
every aspect to an observer of today, their very survival shows that such
subjective values are ineffectual in matters of long-term survival.
Contents
To Mars ............................................................................................ 3
The Martian Americans ................................................................. 5
Civil War .......................................................................................... 7
Star People ....................................................................................... 8
Colonization and the Mechanical Oedipi .................................... 10
The Summer of Man ....................................................................... 11
An Early Warning ........................................................................... 13
Qu ...................................................................................................... 15
Man Extinguished ........................................................................... 17
Worms ............................................................................................... 19
Titans ................................................................................................. 21
Predators and Prey ........................................................................... 23
Mantelopes ....................................................................................... 26
Swimmers .......................................................................................... 28
Lizard Herders .................................................................................. 30
Temptor ............................................................................................ 32
Bone Crusher ................................................................................. 34
Colonials ......................................................................................... 36
Flyers ............................................................................................... 38
Hand Flappers ................................................................................. 40
Blind Folk ........................................................................................ 42
Lopsiders ......................................................................................... 44
Striders ............................................................................................ 46
Parasites .......................................................................................... 48
Finger Fishers ................................................................................... 50
Hedonists .......................................................................................... 52
Insectophagi ..................................................................................... 54
Spacers ............................................................................................... 56
Ruin Haunters ................................................................................... 58
Sentience Reborn ............................................................................. 60
Extinction ........................................................................................... 61
Snake People (Descendants of the Worms) ................................. 63
Killer Folk (Descendants of the Human Predators) ..................... 65
Tool Breeders (Descendants of the Swimmers) .......................... 67
Saurosapients (Livestock of the Lizard Herders) ........................ 69
Modular People (Descendants of the Colonials) ........................ 71
Pterosapiens (Descendants of the Flyers) ................................... 73
Asymmetric People (Descendants of the Lopsiders) ................. 75
Symbiotes (Descendants of the Parasites) .................................. 77
Sail People (Descendants of the Finger Fishers) ........................ 79
Satyriacs (Descendants of the Hedonists) .................................. 81
Bug Facers (Descendants of the Insectophagi) .......................... 83
Asteromorphs (Descendants of the Spacers) .............................. 85
Second Galactic Empire ................................................................... 87
Gravital (Descendants of the Ruin Haunters) .............................. 88
Machine Invasion ............................................................................ 90
When Considering the Invasion .................................................... 92
Subjects (Many descendants of the Bug Facers) ....................... 93
The Other Machines ........................................................................ 96
The Fall of the Machines (Return of the Spacers) ...................... 98
The Post-War Galaxy ...................................................................... 100
The New Machines ......................................................................... 102
Second Contact ............................................................................... 104
Earth Rediscovered ......................................................................... 106
Return ................................................................................................ 108
All Tomorrows ................................................................................. 110
Finger Fishers
Their ancestors were trapped on an archipelago world; a planet sprinkled
with many small continents and countless islands over interconnected
networks of calm, shallow seas. Like a magnified Aegean, this place was a
terrestrial paradise in many respects. Except that after the Qu, no minds
were left to enjoy it.
As prolific as they were, the Fishers were still no better than animals. Their
“humanity” would come only after another spasm of outlandish adaptations.
Hedonists
Even the blissful existence of the Finger Fishers would have seemed
bothersome to the Hedonists; for their kind was not evolved, but designed
for a life of pleasure. The Qu had kept them as pampered pets; set loose in a
tropical island-world of succulent fruits, bountiful trees and calm, lapping
lakes full of sweet, bacterial manna. Furthermore, the Hedonists were left as
the only animal life on this place. They had no choice but to enjoy it to the
fullest.
In normal conditions, any given species would quickly crowd out such an
utopian environment. But normal conditions had never been the point of the
Qu redesign. They had altered their subjects so that they could conceive
only after mating an enormous number of potential suitors, continually over
a period of decades. While this took care of the population problem, it also
made the species less adaptable. Without any point in sexual competition,
natural selection would progress only at a glacial pace. Fortunately, their
stable microcosm remained free of environmental catastrophes even after
the Qu left.
All these changes had also made the Hedonists’ day. Their lives were
juxtaposed routines of browsing, sleeping and mind-blowing sex; troubled
neither by the concerns of disease or pregnancy. Aloof and carefree, they
enjoyed the most pleasurable times of all mankinds, albeit with the
intellectual capabilities of three-year-olds.
It didn’t really matter, though. Who needed to think when having such a nice
time, after all?
The favorites of the Qu. A female Hedonist lies alone on a beach,
contemplating absolutely nothing. Without any pressure from the world,
their days make themselves as they go along.
Insectophagi
Nondescript, quaint human species abounded in the post-Qu galaxy.
Hundreds of them lived out simple, unnoticed lives, never developing to
become sentient, never learning their true heritage as star-born human
beings. Most of them went extinct, not to be missed or even remembered.
Those that lingered on managed to survive in shady, quiet niches, never
again making any impact on the celestial scheme of things.
One such species was the Insectophagi. They had quietly adapted
themselves for a diet of colonial insects and small animals; they had faces
covered with leathery plates, claw-like hands to dig out prey and worm-like
tongues to scoop them up.
All in all, they weren’t special in any particular way. But a combination of
galactic invasions, coincidence and pure luck would later make them the
longest-enduring of all ur-starmen.
The meek would inherit the cosmos, though not just yet. For now, the
Insectophagi were concerned only with the location of insect colonies, and
the onset of the mating season.
Spacers
It must be remembered that the Star People did not succumb entirely to the
Qu invasions. While their worlds fell away one by one, some Star People
took refuge in the void of space. One after another, entire communities
scrambled into generation ships and cast themselves off into the darkness,
hoping to go unnoticed by the beings that had overrun their galaxy.
Desperate times made for desperate measures. As the Star Men had
observed during their initial colonization of the galaxy, life in generation
ships inevitably lead to mass insanity and anarchy. This time however,
humans had to adapt themselves -or face extinction.
Entire asteroid fields were confiscated and hollowed out to make space-
ships of unseen size. These hollow shells cradled bubbles of precious air and
water, but no artificial gravity of any kind. It was discovered that a purely
ethereal existence would ease the stress of interstellar exhile, provided that
its inhabitants were adapted for life inside such an environment.
Such experiments were numerous, and usually plagued with failure. Yet they
did succeed in creating a future. Sealed tight in their moon sized, air filled,
weightless havens, the descendants of the Star People managed to evade the
scourge of Qu.
It was an endless diaspora. Even after the Qu left, they would find
themselves too divergent to have anything to do with their ancestral
lifestyles. The survivors of the initial hurdle would never set foot on a planet
again.
Forty million years from today, Spacers like this individual are the only truly
sentient human beings that survive. They are so comfortable in their
weightless refuges that the fates of their bestial cousins elsewhere do not
concern them. They are also painfully rare; their entire population in the
Milky Way Galaxy does not exceed a few dozen arks and a hundred billion
souls.
Ruin Haunters
A particular human species, singled out by its lucky access to the heritage of
its stellar ancestors, would eventually get to play a leading role in the shape
of things to come.
They had gotten through the Qu invasion with relatively little degradation;
yes, they had been reduced to the level of apes, but their recovery had been
quick. Apparently, the Qu had not worked as hard at suppressing their
intelligence. Nor had they made a comparable effort to wipe away the
material traces of the Star Men. Even after millions of years, enormous ruins
of the global urban spaces littered the continents of their world. Thus did the
Ruin Haunters earn their names.
With developed minds and unrestricted access to the wisdom of the ancient
cities, the exponential pace of their development was only natural. One by
one they deciphered and built upon the secrets of the bygone Star People,
until they almost equaled their galactic ancestors in wisdom and skill.
They made it through, their baptism with fire had hardened and awakened
them. The wars united them politically and pushed their technological
capabilities even beyond the level of the Star Men. Co-incidentally, they
also developed a dangerous form of autochthonous madness. The Ruin
Haunters had come to believe that they were the sole descendants and the
true heirs of the Star People. And they were ready and willing to do
anything in order to claim their fictitious, bygone Golden Age.
Only a thousand years after the Qu departure, a Ruin Haunter wanders
among the shattered remains of a city of the Star People. The dominating
form of an even greater Qu pyramid can be seen in the background.
Sentience Reborn
If any sort of periodical arrangement can be brought to the history of
mankind, the post-Qu era of emerging human animals can be likened to a
series of millennial dark ages. However, like any “dark age” situation, these
periods of silence had finite life spans. One by one, like stars emerging from
the fog, new civilizations were born out of the shattered remnants of
mankind.
In some rare cases, the recovery was swift and straightforward. In most
other situations, it came only after a lengthy series of adaptive radiations,
extinctions and secondary diversifications.
Within these lines of descent, there was as much distance between the initial
post-humans and their intelligent descendants as between the first
Cretaceous fuzzballs and Homo sapiens.
Sooner or later, human intelligence returned to the cosmos. But except from
their shared ancestry, these new people had nothing in common with
“people” of today, or even each other.
Extinction
Not all human animals made it through. In fact, it must be realized that the
majority of post-Qu humans died out during the eras of transition.
Extinction, the utter and absolute death of an entire family, entire
community, entire species, was rampant in the galaxy.
Contents
To Mars ............................................................................................ 3
The Martian Americans ................................................................. 5
Civil War .......................................................................................... 7
Star People ....................................................................................... 8
Colonization and the Mechanical Oedipi .................................... 10
The Summer of Man ....................................................................... 11
An Early Warning ........................................................................... 13
Qu ...................................................................................................... 15
Man Extinguished ........................................................................... 17
Worms ............................................................................................... 19
Titans ................................................................................................. 21
Predators and Prey ........................................................................... 23
Mantelopes ....................................................................................... 26
Swimmers .......................................................................................... 28
Lizard Herders .................................................................................. 30
Temptor ............................................................................................ 32
Bone Crusher ................................................................................... 34
Colonials ........................................................................................... 36
Flyers ................................................................................................. 38
Hand Flappers .................................................................................. 40
Blind Folk .......................................................................................... 42
Lopsiders .......................................................................................... 44
Striders .............................................................................................. 46
Parasites ............................................................................................ 48
Finger Fishers ................................................................................. 50
Hedonists .......................................................................................... 52
Insectophagi ..................................................................................... 54
Spacers ............................................................................................. 56
Ruin Haunters ................................................................................. 58
Sentience Reborn ........................................................................... 60
Extinction ......................................................................................... 61
Snake People (Descendants of the Worms) ................................. 63
Killer Folk (Descendants of the Human Predators) ..................... 65
Tool Breeders (Descendants of the Swimmers) .......................... 67
Saurosapients (Livestock of the Lizard Herders) ........................ 69
Modular People (Descendants of the Colonials) ........................ 71
Pterosapiens (Descendants of the Flyers) ................................... 73
Asymmetric People (Descendants of the Lopsiders) ................. 75
Symbiotes (Descendants of the Parasites) .................................. 77
Sail People (Descendants of the Finger Fishers) ........................ 79
Satyriacs (Descendants of the Hedonists) .................................. 81
Bug Facers (Descendants of the Insectophagi) .......................... 83
Asteromorphs (Descendants of the Spacers) .............................. 85
Second Galactic Empire ................................................................... 87
Gravital (Descendants of the Ruin Haunters) .............................. 88
Machine Invasion ............................................................................ 90
When Considering the Invasion .................................................... 92
Subjects (Many descendants of the Bug Facers) ....................... 93
The Other Machines ........................................................................ 96
The Fall of the Machines (Return of the Spacers) ...................... 98
The Post-War Galaxy ...................................................................... 100
The New Machines ......................................................................... 102
Second Contact ............................................................................... 104
Earth Rediscovered ......................................................................... 106
Return ................................................................................................ 108
All Tomorrows ................................................................................. 110
Snake People (Descendants of the Worms)
The scorching sun eventually cooled down, and life flooded back to the
surface from her subterranean stronghold. As animals of all kinds exploded
into the terrestrial niches that had been left vacant for millennia, so did the
descendants of the worms. On the surface, they found new opportunities as
entire assemblages of serpentine grazers, swimmers, predators…
They looked nothing at all like their distant human ancestors, but their social
development followed a similar path; several agricultural world empires,
followed by industrial revolutions, social experiments, world wars, civil
wars and globalization. But then again, socio-political parallelism in history
did not necessarily imply a similar, or even recognizably human world.
Modern cities of the global Snake world were tangles of pipe like “roads”,
branching, three dimensional railroads and windowless, hole-like buildings.
Though their knotted architecture differed from region to region, these
settlements generally looked like kilometer-wide balls of glass, metal,
plastic and cloth, wrapped so tightly that a human of today would find it
impossible to move inside them. Plazas and open areas were totally absent,
as they presented navigational obstacles and areas of insecurity. Their
evolutionary background in the trees had made the Snake People into
borderline agoraphobes.
None of these, of course, was unusual to the Snakes in any way. Their
relatively “alien” lifestyle was as particular to them as ours is to us. All
across their world, the arterial cities throbbed with people, each with their
own joys, sorrows and chores, living out lives as human as any other
intelligent beings’.
A Snake person at home, enjoying a book while smoking and “listening” to
vibrational ground-music. Through the open door can be seen the chaotic
tangle of the city.
Their descent from predators gave the Killer Folk a unique social profile.
Almost all of their religions had rituals allowing for periods of completely
natural, animalistic hunts and duels. This necessity of venting these atavistic
urges also led to the formation of religious “hunter nobilities”; privileged
warriors who were skilled in the arts of hunting, war and murder. Entire
societies were assembled underneath these ruling classes; orderly
communities that erupted once every year into an orgy of death, sex, and
prayer. For thousands of years nomadic warriors, together with their vast
herds of once-human livestock, chased and battled each other across a
chessboard of continents.
All of this chaos was to be swept apart with the advent of modernity. In a
development comparable to an industrial revolution, one nation-pack of
Killers devised methods of settled, intensive factory farming. Organized
state structure, secularism and technological leap-frogging were quick to
follow.
Needless to say, such developments polarized the world into bands of
progressive, developed “factory herders” and increasingly fanatical “hunting
states.” While one side condemned their old, animal ways, the other side
embraced them with blind zealotry. This was their crisis of modernity; the
balkanization of the progressive and conservative factions on the road to
global unity. Fortunately, the Killers managed to pull themselves through,
even after drifting dangerously close to global conflict at certain points.
A young male Killer tours one of the myriad ruined fortresses in his country,
testimony of their species’ bloody, protean history. The planet of the Killer
Folk is an archaeologists’ paradise. It has more buried dark ages, ruined
cultures and fallen kingdoms than any other world.
It had started long before the species was even intelligent. In the endless
variety of life in the seas, the Swimmers always adopted and controlled the
organisms that were useful in some way. Once domesticated, these creatures
were willingly or unintentionally modified through artificial selection and
conditioning. The process was slow, but once underway, its effects were
formidable.
Sealed in their living ships, the Breeders wished to return to the stars.
A Breeder huntress on a garden reef. Living tools are an indispensable part
of these beings’ daily lives; she manages to breathe underwater through an
oxygen-filtering crustacean fitted over her blowhole. She holds a mollusk-
derived rifle that shoots out specially-modified fish teeth, and her
companion is a brain-augmented fish that has been hardwired to return kills.
Buildings made from calcified shells glitter in the background, ablaze with
bioluminescence.
Theirs was a true case of a world turned upside down. As the humans
degenerated into witless animals, the cold-blooded reptiles prospered in the
tropical climate of their planet. Millennia passed and they began to produce
increasingly smarter forms, one of which, distantly resembling featherless
versions of the predatory dinosaurs of the past, actually crossed over the
threshold of sentience and built up a series civilizations.
These fledgling cultures were quick to understand the true origin of the
monstrous ruins littering their planet, ruins that until then had been
considered natural aberrations or timeless memorabilia of gods. Now,
however, they saw the intermingled ruins of the Qu and the Star People for
what they really were. It was through this understanding that the biologically
unrelated Sauros’ took up the cultural identity of humanity.
The eventual winner of this Colonial arms race was a sentient colony;
organized around hyperspecialized units whose entire purpose was to direct
the others. These colonies spread around the planet as they adapted the parts
of their rivals to function within themselves. Thus were the Modular People
born.
Contents
To Mars ............................................................................................ 3
The Martian Americans ................................................................. 5
Civil War .......................................................................................... 7
Star People ....................................................................................... 8
Colonization and the Mechanical Oedipi .................................... 10
The Summer of Man ....................................................................... 11
An Early Warning ........................................................................... 13
Qu ...................................................................................................... 15
Man Extinguished ........................................................................... 17
Worms ............................................................................................... 19
Titans ................................................................................................. 21
Predators and Prey ........................................................................... 23
Mantelopes ....................................................................................... 26
Swimmers .......................................................................................... 28
Lizard Herders .................................................................................. 30
Temptor ............................................................................................ 32
Bone Crusher ................................................................................... 34
Colonials ........................................................................................... 36
Flyers ................................................................................................. 38
Hand Flappers .................................................................................. 40
Blind Folk .......................................................................................... 42
Lopsiders .......................................................................................... 44
Striders .............................................................................................. 46
Parasites ............................................................................................ 48
Finger Fishers ................................................................................... 50
Hedonists .......................................................................................... 52
Insectophagi ..................................................................................... 54
Spacers ............................................................................................... 56
Ruin Haunters ................................................................................... 58
Sentience Reborn ............................................................................. 60
Extinction ........................................................................................... 61
Snake People (Descendants of the Worms) ............................... 63
Killer Folk (Descendants of the Human Predators) ................. 65
Tool Breeders (Descendants of the Swimmers) ........................ 67
Saurosapients (Livestock of the Lizard Herders) ..................... 69
Modular People (Descendants of the Colonials) ........................ 71
Pterosapiens (Descendants of the Flyers) ................................... 73
Asymmetric People (Descendants of the Lopsiders) ................. 75
Symbiotes (Descendants of the Parasites) .................................. 77
Sail People (Descendants of the Finger Fishers) ........................ 79
Satyriacs (Descendants of the Hedonists) .................................. 81
Bug Facers (Descendants of the Insectophagi) .......................... 83
Asteromorphs (Descendants of the Spacers) .............................. 85
Second Galactic Empire ................................................................... 87
Gravital (Descendants of the Ruin Haunters) .............................. 88
Machine Invasion ............................................................................ 90
When Considering the Invasion .................................................... 92
Subjects (Many descendants of the Bug Facers) ....................... 93
The Other Machines ........................................................................ 96
The Fall of the Machines (Return of the Spacers) ...................... 98
The Post-War Galaxy ...................................................................... 100
The New Machines ......................................................................... 102
Second Contact ............................................................................... 104
Earth Rediscovered ......................................................................... 106
Return ................................................................................................ 108
All Tomorrows ................................................................................. 110
Pterosapiens (Descendants of the Flyers)
The flyers’ supercharged hearts had given them an evolutionary winning
hand, and they diversified to fill up the heavens. It was only a time before the
competition in the skies got too intense, even for their souped-up
metabolisms.
Some lineages gave up their wings and returned to the ground, living as
differing sorts of predators, herbivores and even swimmers. Their aerial
adaptations gave them an edge on the ground and they produced forms of
stupendous size and agility. There were wonderful beings, but no sentience
came out of the terrestrial sky-beasts. Instead, civilization flowered in the
skies. One species, from a line of wading, stork-like predators, evolved a
brain that was large enough to imagine and act upon the world. Their feet,
already versatile to catch slippery, swamp-dwelling prey, got even more
articulate and assumed the role of hands. As a compensation they lost some
of their aerial streamlining, but what they could not do with their bodies,
they were more than able to make up with their minds.
Their power of flight made the Pterosapiens a global folk, before they could
invent nations and borders. With such an inherent ease of travel, ideas and
individuals diffused too fast for social differences to ossify. Acting with a
planetary awareness, they farmed their gigantic, terrestrial relatives, raised
cities of perches and fluting towers, harnessed the atom and began to gaze up
to the stars, without having to compensate (too much) from the average
individual’s welfare, and without dividing up into quarrelsome factions.
A few more millennia and these combined beings developed an order not
unlike our own, complete with countries, politics and even war, albeit
reduced in the newly globalizing world-culture. In this age technology filled
most functions of the hosts, but a thriving husbandry of these creatures still
remained due to tradition and simple efficiency. An average Symbiote would
begin the day on his business host, and move onto a more comfortable
domestic one when he returned home after work.
Some descendants of the Fishers, trapped on lonely islands, grew smaller and
developed their fishing claws into graceful wings. Others took directly to the
sea and became the analogues of whales, dolphins and mosasaurs. Within
this evolutionary bubbling, one particular lineage gave rise to the ancestral
Sail People.
They too elongated their fingers into wings, but these were not used for
flight. Instead, they became sails that drove them effortlessly across the
oceans. With fingers turned into sails, they used their mouths and extended
tongues to catch their pelagic prey. These organs eventually assumed the role
of the Fishers’ long atrophied, dexterous hands. The need to better navigate
the endless seas put an inevitable pressure on their memories, and the
Sailors’ brains grew correspondingly. It was only a matter of time until one
of these navigators became smart enough to think.
Even when sentient, the Sail People still needed a long time to achieve any
sort of social stability. Their scattered world made for a tremendous diversity
of cultures, which competed and fought just as resiliently. Across
generations, untold flotillas of tribal warriors battled each other in epoch-
spanning, pointless conflicts. Nomadic warriors and pirate societies
inevitably came into being, prolonging the uncontrollable cycle of violence.
These beings resembled their ancestors to a great degree, except that they
now sported enormous “tails”; boneless organs of balance woven out of
extended pelvic muscles and fat. Along this appendage, their entire bodies
were re-oriented in horizontal, almost dinosaurian postures. Although they
had abandoned the frantic reproductive strategies of their ancestors, their
social lives still retained a delightful tint of casual promiscuity.
The Satyriac civilization was quick to establish itself globally, for even with
the additional landmasses, the terrestrial domain of their world remained no
larger than Australia. For a while three and then two land empires competed
each other, before dissolving into a myriad smaller nations and finally re-
unifying into a coherent world order. From this point on, the Satyriac world
once again became a Valhalla of pleasure, with festivals, concerts and
ritualized orgies punctuating every working week. This time, however, it
could all be savored by true intelligence.
Satyriac audience goes wild as the performer hits the climax of his song.
Such events are an everyday part of the Satyriac life.
But it was none of those adaptations that gave them the edge in survival.
Simply put, a congenital defect allowed them to regain their sentience. Even
after the smothering by the Qu, the genes of the Star People remained
dormant in their cells. Through pure coincidence, one lineage of the
Insectophagi developed an atavistic throwback, resulting in larger brains.
Which just happened to be useful in cracking open insect nests with crude
stone tools.
It was easy ride from there on. Although millennia-long in itself, the
development from stone ax to spaceship was an eyeblink in geological time.
Like many other species, the Bug Facers passed through consecutive cycles
as agrarian (in their case hive-farming) empires, colonial endeavors,
industrialization, massive world wars and finally, globalized world-states.
But there was one thing that set their development apart from all other post-
human species.
History does not record much about the invaders, except that unlike the Qu,
theirs was a singular effort and it was beaten off in an intense cycle of orbital
and terrestrial wars. Although vanquished, the invaders did succeed in
leaving behind their traces. They introduced their own flora and fauna, which
flourished on the Bug Facer home planet long after they departed. More
importantly, they imbibed the poor Bug Facers with a pathological inter-
species xenophobia, to the point that they were fearful even of their post-
human cousins on other stars.
Through an ironic twist of fate, their fears would be more than justified,
though not just yet. The Bug Facers still had time.
A Bug Face celebrity, arguably the most beautiful girl on their planet, poses
before a coastal village. In the distance can be seen gasbag-like tree
creatures, relics left over from the mysterious alien invaders.
Freed from the constraints of weight, their bodies grew spindly and insectile,
with individual digits extending into multitudes of thin, versatile limbs.
Other than these, the only developed organs were their derived jet sphincters;
which went on to become the principal means of locomotion. But above all
were their brains, their bulging, swollen brains.
With no hindrance from gravity, the human brain could grow into
unprecedented sizes. Each generation devised experiments that produced
offspring with greater cranial capacity, giving rise to beings who went
through their everyday lives thinking in concepts and structures scarcely
comprehensible to people of today. The physiological limitations of the
human mind had been long since debated. Now, it was established that these
limits were indeed real, and individuals who could break them would
likewise conquer new grounds in philosophy, art and science. Everything
changed.
Yet some aspects of humanity, such as the basic desire to expand, remained.
To this end the Asteromorphs built great fleets of globular sub-arks and
spread their influence across the heavens, into every stellar cluster and every
star system. Within less than a thousand years, the galaxy was straddled by a
new and far more alien Empire of Man.
Strangely enough, its dominion included none of the newly emerging post-
human species, for its masters had completely lost interest in planets; those
stunting, gravity-chained balls of dirt and ice. The newborn arks settled
comfortably in the outer rims of star systems, quietly observing the lives of
their struggling relatives.
For the first time in history, there were actual Gods in the myriad human
skies. They were silent and weren’t even noticed for most of the time, but
their watchfulness was ultimately going to pay off.
Contents
To Mars ............................................................................................ 3
The Martian Americans ................................................................. 5
Civil War .......................................................................................... 7
Star People ....................................................................................... 8
Colonization and the Mechanical Oedipi .................................... 10
The Summer of Man ....................................................................... 11
An Early Warning ........................................................................... 13
Qu ...................................................................................................... 15
Man Extinguished ........................................................................... 17
Worms ............................................................................................... 19
Titans ................................................................................................. 21
Predators and Prey ........................................................................... 23
Mantelopes ....................................................................................... 26
Swimmers .......................................................................................... 28
Lizard Herders .................................................................................. 30
Temptor ............................................................................................ 32
Bone Crusher ................................................................................... 34
Colonials ........................................................................................... 36
Flyers ................................................................................................. 38
Hand Flappers .................................................................................. 40
Blind Folk .......................................................................................... 42
Lopsiders .......................................................................................... 44
Striders .............................................................................................. 46
Parasites ............................................................................................ 48
Finger Fishers ................................................................................... 50
Hedonists .......................................................................................... 52
Insectophagi ..................................................................................... 54
Spacers ............................................................................................... 56
Ruin Haunters ................................................................................... 58
Sentience Reborn ............................................................................. 60
Extinction ........................................................................................... 61
Snake People (Descendants of the Worms) ................................. 63
Killer Folk (Descendants of the Human Predators) ..................... 65
Tool Breeders (Descendants of the Swimmers) .......................... 67
Saurosapients (Livestock of the Lizard Herders) ........................ 69
Modular People (Descendants of the Colonials) ........................ 71
Pterosapiens (Descendants of the Flyers) .................................. 73
Asymmetric People (Descendants of the Lopsiders) ................ 75
Symbiotes (Descendants of the Parasites) ................................. 77
Sail People (Descendants of the Finger Fishers) ..................... 79
Satyriacs (Descendants of the Hedonists) ................................. 81
Bug Facers (Descendants of the Insectophagi) ......................... 83
Asteromorphs (Descendants of the Spacers) ............................ 85
Second Galactic Empire ................................................................... 87
Gravital (Descendants of the Ruin Haunters) .............................. 88
Machine Invasion ............................................................................ 90
When Considering the Invasion .................................................... 92
Subjects (Many descendants of the Bug Facers) ....................... 93
The Other Machines ........................................................................ 96
The Fall of the Machines (Return of the Spacers) ...................... 98
The Post-War Galaxy ...................................................................... 100
The New Machines ......................................................................... 102
Second Contact ............................................................................... 104
Earth Rediscovered ......................................................................... 106
Return ................................................................................................ 108
All Tomorrows ................................................................................. 110
Second Galactic Empire
Over time, the sentient post-humans began to reach out to the galaxy. They
inevitably stumbled across the ruins of the Star Men, and figured out their
interstellar ancestry. These discoveries were followed by a realization; that
there might be others like them, unimaginable distances away. Thus, the
fledgling civilizations set about to probing the skies.
The contacts, all established by radio communication, were not spread out
evenly. The Empire began little more than a few million years after the Qu
left, with the first dialogue between the earliest Killer Folk and the Satyriacs.
A few thousand years later they were joined by the Tool Breeders, hailing
out from the ocean depths through living radio arrays.
The second wave of sentient species joined in during the following ten
million years, as the Modular Whole, Pterosapiens and the fledgling
Assymetrics contacted their celestial cousins. Finally, in the next twenty
million years, newly evolving civilizations such as the Sauros, Snake People,
Parasite/Symbiotes and the Sail People successively contacted the
burgeoning Galactic Empire. The Bug Facers were aware of the whole
process, but due to their xenophobic experience, they only opened up after a
staggering forty million years of silence.
This union was an empire of speech, for actual travel between the stars was
too difficult to be practical. Like the bygone colonies of the Star Men, the
posthumans co-operated through the unrestricted exchange of information
and experience. Although covering every aspect of an astonishing variety of
cultures, the Empire’s efforts focused on two main issues; political
unification (though not homogenization) and galactic awareness; constant
readiness for possible alien invasions. Everybody had come across the
remains of the mysterious Qu. Nobody wanted a repeat of the same scenario.
When the Second Empire ran into the Asteromorphs, (who had silently
saturated the galaxy with their own Empire of Man,) they feared the worst.
But luckily for them, the godlike beings were not interested in the Second
Empire, nor any of its worlds. The Asteromorphs were given a wide berth
and accepted as they were; incomprehensible, omnipotent forces of nature.
This coordinated effort lasted for almost eighty million years, during which
its member species attained previously unimaginable levels of culture,
welfare and technology. Each species colonized a few dozen worlds of their
own; in which nations, cultures and individuals lived to the fullest potentials
of their existence.
The Ruin Haunters, who were lucky enough to inherit the secrets of the Star
Men and Qu when other species were mere animals, had experienced a
tremendous advance in technological prowess. All in all they were as
sophisticated as, if not more, than the Asteromorphs of the void. But their
ascendancy was not a sane one. Recall that most Ruin Haunters were already
deranged with a twisted assumption of being the sole inheritors of the Star
Men. They refused to communicate with their relatives on other planets, and
kept to their own affairs. This neurotic hubris assumed truly dangerous
proportions after the Ruin Haunters modified themselves.
While not even organic, the Gravital still retained human dreams, human
ambitions and human delusions of grandeur. This, combined with
mechanical bodies that allowed them to cross space with ease, made
interstellar war a frightening possibility.
Machine Invasion
It took a long time for the Gravital to prepare. Propulsion systems were
perfected and new bodies capable of withstanding the interstellar jumps were
devised. But when they finally decided that the time was nigh, nothing
survived the slaughter.
The invasions followed a brutally simple plan. The target worlds’ suns were
blockaded and their light was trapped behind specially-constructed, million-
mile sails. If the dying worlds managed to resist, an asteroid of two finished
them off. Enormous invasion fleets were built, but it was rarely necessary to
deploy them. The Machines had caught their cousins completely off-guard.
Even the Qu had been loyal to life, they had distorted and subjugated their
victims, but in the end they had allowed them to survive. To the machines
however, life was a luxury.
Such thorough ruthlessness was not, ironically, borne out of any kind of
actual hatred. The Gravital, long accustomed to their mechanical bodies,
simply did not acknowledge the life of their organic cousins. When this
apathy was mixed with their un-sane claims as the sole heirs of the Star Men,
the extinctions were carried out with the banality of say, an engineer tearing
down an abandoned building. Under the reign of the Machines, the Galaxy
entered a brand-new dark age.
A rare instance of a direct invasion by the Machines, on one of the shore
cities of the Killer Folk. Most of the time the inhabitants of the Second
Empire were wiped out globally, without the necessity of such
confrontations.
To begin with, the Gravital were not evil, at least not to their own perception.
These beings, although mechanical, still lived their lives as individuals and
operated inside coherent societies. They had surrendered their organic
heritage but their minds were not the cold, calculating engines of true
machines. Even after giving orders that would destroy a billion souls, a
Gravital would have a home to go to, and, as incredibly as it might sound, a
family and a circle of friends towards which it felt genuine affection. Despite
being endowed with compassion, their harsh treatment of the organics was
the result of, as mentioned before, a simple inability to understand their right
to live.
The precise reasons for their retention remain unknown to this day. Perhaps
the Machines hadn’t perfected their ruthless apathy by then. Or perhaps they
pitied the poor organics, and allowed them to maintain a stunted parody of an
existence.
Whatever the reason, the Bug Facers endured. But they hardly resembled
their original ancestors anymore. Genetic engineering, the lost art of the
galaxy-threading Qu, (and later, the Tool Breeders as well,) was mastered
almost as comprehensively by the Machines. Not hesitating to warp the
beings which they did not really consider to be alive, they spliced their way
into the Bug Facer DNA, producing generations of literal abominations.
Would a woman or man of today show any apprehension towards re-
assembling a computer, or even recycling trash? Such was the attitude of the
triumphant Gravital.
The war did not cause any lasting damage, but it plainly illuminated one fact.
The greatest entity the galaxy had ever seen was not without its problems.
The Fall of the Machines (Return of the Spacers)
In the longer run, the internal struggles of the Machine Empire just might
have led to its downfall. But, there was no need to wait that long, as the
Empire died a shorter, but immensely more cataclysmic death.
For a long time, the Machine and the Asteromorph Empires had been eyeing
each other nervously. They hadn’t yet run into open confrontations, as the
Asteromorphs kept mostly to their outer-space arks and the Machine Empire
occupied the planets. In almost every inhabitable solar system of the galaxy,
the same upside-down tension built up between organic beings living in the
void, and machines inhabiting perfectly terrestrial worlds.
Power was evenly balanced between the two rival Empires. Moreover, this
balance involved forces strong enough to destroy planets en-masse. Each
side knew that any kind of war would result in mutual annihilation, and only
insanity could start such a conflict.
Well, the post-civil war Empire of the Machines did go insane, in a sense. In
order to divert attention from internal struggles, it needed a new enemy to
consolidate its rival factions against. How unwise, that this enemy came to
be the Asteromorphs.
When the cosmic dust settled, the winners displayed themselves. The
conquerors were the Asteromorphs, changed beyond recognition after fifty
million years of continual self-perfection. Their grossly hypertrophied brains
stretched out like wings on either side, and their finger-derived limbs had
formed an intricate set of sails and legs. Endowed with superior technology
and limitless patience, these beings almost completely destroyed the
Machines, despite losing a substantial number of their own species.
The conflict also thrust the Asteromorphs into the affairs of their long-
neglected human cousins. As impossible as it seemed, some of the
Machines’ Subjects had survived the ordeal. Now, the Asteromorphs could
no longer look away.
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.
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.
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 huntergatherer.
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.
With all of their wild difference, the Amphicephali were welcome. They
were the first, but surely not the last.
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 starshells, 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.
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.
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.
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!
The Author, with a billion-year old human skull.
Contents
To Mars ............................................................................................ 3
The Martian Americans ................................................................. 5
Civil War .......................................................................................... 7
Star People ....................................................................................... 8
Colonization and the Mechanical Oedipi .................................... 10
The Summer of Man ....................................................................... 11
An Early Warning ........................................................................... 13
Qu ...................................................................................................... 15
Man Extinguished ........................................................................... 17
Worms ............................................................................................... 19
Titans ................................................................................................. 21
Predators and Prey ........................................................................... 23
Mantelopes ....................................................................................... 26
Swimmers .......................................................................................... 28
Lizard Herders .................................................................................. 30
Temptor ............................................................................................ 32
Bone Crusher ................................................................................... 34
Colonials ........................................................................................... 36
Flyers ................................................................................................. 38
Hand Flappers .................................................................................. 40
Blind Folk .......................................................................................... 42
Lopsiders .......................................................................................... 44
Striders .............................................................................................. 46
Parasites ............................................................................................ 48
Finger Fishers ................................................................................... 50
Hedonists .......................................................................................... 52
Insectophagi ..................................................................................... 54
Spacers ............................................................................................... 56
Ruin Haunters ................................................................................... 58
Sentience Reborn ............................................................................. 60
Extinction ........................................................................................... 61
Snake People (Descendants of the Worms) ................................. 63
Killer Folk (Descendants of the Human Predators) ..................... 65
Tool Breeders (Descendants of the Swimmers) .......................... 67
Saurosapients (Livestock of the Lizard Herders) ........................ 69
Modular People (Descendants of the Colonials) ........................ 71
Pterosapiens (Descendants of the Flyers) ................................... 73
Asymmetric People (Descendants of the Lopsiders) ................. 75
Symbiotes (Descendants of the Parasites) .................................. 77
Sail People (Descendants of the Finger Fishers) ........................ 79
Satyriacs (Descendants of the Hedonists) .................................. 81
Bug Facers (Descendants of the Insectophagi) .......................... 83
Asteromorphs (Descendants of the Spacers) .............................. 85
Second Galactic Empire ................................................................... 87
Gravital (Descendants of the Ruin Haunters) .............................. 88
Machine Invasion ............................................................................ 90
When Considering the Invasion .................................................... 92
Subjects (Many descendants of the Bug Facers) ....................... 93
The Other Machines ........................................................................ 96
The Fall of the Machines (Return of the Spacers) ...................... 98
The Post-War Galaxy .................................................................... 100
The New Machines ......................................................................... 102
Second Contact ............................................................................... 104
Earth Rediscovered ........................................................................ 106
Return .............................................................................................. 108
All Tomorrows ................................................................................ 110