💾 Archived View for tanelorn.city › ~vidak › apropos-earthling › chapter-three.gemini captured on 2020-09-24 at 01:44:41. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content

View Raw

More Information

-=-=-=-=-=-=-

APROPOS EARTHLING

BACK TO BOOK INDEX

CHAPTER THREE

============= 
= Chapter 3 = 
============= 

Drago spent some time knocking on the doors of houses that all proved empty,

Stephanie sitting in the car the whole time.

"Do you need me to get out?" Stephanie stuck her head out of the car passenger

window.

"Oh! No. You stay there, it will only take a moment. I just need to---you

know---" Drago performed a split-finger salute, grinning.

Stephanie rolled her eyes and shook her head, but could not help from laughing.

Drago turned a street corner and disappeared from sight.

After some moments, he returned from around the street corner, looking very

serious, pacing somewhat quickly, in his old faded jeans in the beautiful

penetrating Perth summer sunlight. He gave Stephanie a quick forced grin and a

slight thumbs up in the distance, and got back in the car driver's seat.

"You did it, didn't you."

"Yes I did."

"Are you alright?"

"Yes, I'm fine, the missions is actually completed now, but I sae some things

that nobody should ever have to see."

"I bet---if you read his mind and all."

"Yes. That man is a murderer. He has commited many war crimes both with his own

hands, and through his instructions to others."

"I'm so sorry Drago."

"It is to be expected, really---many of our rulers are doing the same thing at

the moment, we also developed a state apparatus with a military some centuries

ago.

"Do you want to go home now, or would you like to come complete the next phase

of the operating with me in the colony?"

"Are you asking me to come to the next dimension with you?"

"Well you are not really leaving the third dimension, you're just leaving the

natural one, and entering the one we have simulated. But you are surely leaving

Earth."

"Will I still be in no danger?"

"Oh yes of course, none of our weapons or methods of violence would affect you.

The only danger would be that we run out of time for the results of the mission

we just completed to bear fruit. We need to carry out the revolution necessary

for my people to survive. It has to happen before my colony's corridor in space

and time collapses."

"A revolution you say---what would happen then?"

"Oh, well, _you_ would fall out of the broom cupboard which is the entry to the

colony. You'd be safe, and would be returned back to Earth, but my people would

be destroyed."

Drago looked especially morose.

"How long should it take to know how fast the ... results of your mission will

present themselves?"

"Oh, if I have sufficiently manipulated the core beliefs of your SAS Commander,

then we should be seeing some changes in a day or two, but if he is especially

unintelligent, or strong willed, it may take some weeks, or even a month or so."

"Could you tell anything by looking into hsi mind? Could you make a prediction?"

"Well, these things are never certain, but he is a man of alarmingly weak will,

so my attempt to plant an idea in his mind took the form of an order, or a very

strong suggestion from someone with authority over him. He many even feel

fearful if he does not do what I suggested to him."

"What did you suggest to him?"

"Oh, he is going to make a pathetic attempt at a coup d'etat in Perth tomorrow.

Maybe even this afternoon. What time is it?" Drago leaned over to look at his

mobile phone inside the car dashboard. "Gosh, it's midday. It might happen

today."

Stephanie was, again, lost for words.

"Why did you convince him to do that? I thought you were communists, you space

people! Peaceful people!"

"Oh it will surely fail. The WA masses will rise up and will begin to establish

a communist society. That is the point of the mission." Drago started the car,

and started driving inland. "The point of my time here on Earthw as to attempt

ot raise the consciousness of humanity to a higher level, to riase the amount

of

residual transcendental apperceptive power of the human race, so that my people

will be able to draw on it and health the sickness and rejuvenate the strength

of our own masses so we may draw upon it, anduse it to inspire ourselves to

overthrow our own oppressor class."

"Are you saying a revolution is due to kick off in Perth sometime today?"

"Hopefully." Drago grinned a little.

"Well I'm not sure if I want to stay on Earth, or go with you to your simulated

dimension! Id' like to see both things unfold!"

"You can easily do both. If all goes well, our revolution should be completed

much more quickly than humanity's, and you will be able to either see the

spectacular destruction of an extra-dimensional civilisation, or both Earth and

my people's ascension toa much more natural and civilised mode of being.

"Well, if you say so."

"It's your choice---" Drago leaned over and looked a little sheepishly at

Stephanie.

"No no! I want to go! Besides, you clearly need my help. You know _some_ things

about the third dimension, but quite often you are completely clueless about

how

to exist and move about 3D space and time."

Drago grew a broad smile. "I was hoping you would say that."

"The red Toyota entered onto Stirling Highway and, after some time, the

enormous

clock tower of the University of Western Australia edged steadily into clear

view. Stephanie caught Drago peering through the car's windscreen looking for

it, as though he wasn't sure about where he was going. When it peered over the

highway, between some trees in the distance, he became very visibily more

relaxed.

"Ah! There's the university."

"Is the entrance to the colony inside UWA?"

"Yes."

"Oh wow---where?"

"The philosophy department, very definitely. Well, inside the cleaner's locker

room in the philosophy department. I rather like the offices there. They will

become an excellent community centre for learning after the revolution."

"Is there really a cleaner's room in the philosophy department?"

"Well it is a cupboard of some sort," Drago laughed. "There is a mop in there,

but perhaps you are right, the cleaner works out of someplace else."

---

Stephanie awoke on a bed lying on a hard dirt floor. Her vision was blurry, and

after some seconds, luckily, the tunnel-vision she experienced at first

receded,

and she once again had a full field of vision. Light poured into the room where

she lay through a window adjacent to her bed. A slight breeze not dissimilar to

the one being carried through the University of Western Australia passed over

her, and after yet another few moments, she leaned over, and realised there was

no glass in the window at all.

The sky outside was a wonderous blue, cloudless picture, and she was certain

she could hear some voices speaking outside, somewhere in the distance. By now,

the migrane was gone, and she sat up. The room she was in was made from mud

bricks---she spied them through some of the flaking whitewash rendering on the

walls. By her feet were some cut vegetables, some bread, and what looked like

an enamelled clay jusg of wine with a matching cup.

"Oh, good. You're awake." Drago stood leaning against the doorway on the

opposite side of the room, in true, unmistakable confirmation that the person

Stephanie could in fact see was Drago.

"Drago..." Stephanie croaked. "We're in the colony now aren't we."

"Yes." Drago smiled, and drank from an earthenware cup in his hand matching the

one by Stephanie's bed. He looked very healthy. Not older, not younger, but

somehow as if he had been on a long holiday that had refreshed him greatly.

Either that or a three day long sleep or some such.

"So we're really here. I can't remember anything... I was expecting to see

incredible lights, or an incredible starfield, why is it that I do not remember

arriving here?"

"I suppressed your memory of the transit, but I can release the hold on it in a

little while. Come. Let us go for a walk, and I will show you around the colony

and introduce you to my friends and comrades."

All of a sudden, Stephanie's lethargy lifted, and she felt completely

invigorated.

"Alright." She looked a little closer at Drago, now, and could see he was not

wearing anything she could recognise as clothes someone would wear in Perth at

all. "Drago?"

"Yes?" Drago had spun on his feet and left the room momentarily.

"What are you wearing?"

"Oh. Yes. You're probably wanting to change clothes too." He returned with some

very lightly dyed cloth. "I am wearing what Earth people in a particular period

of your history awould refer to as a 'chiton'. We were rather enthralled by

some parts of Earth history and decided to model our three dimensional

appearance on the ancient Hellenistic world you would know from history books

of the Mediterranean. But we do not possess a political system like those

people. There are also many differences so do not be fooled into thinking you

have actually travelled back in time!"

"I have one suggestion before you leave the house, however."

"Sure, what's that?" Stephanie found herself after moving into Drago's kitchen,

eating the plate of vegetables left for her later consciousness quite

ravenously.

"Try not to look up at much of the sky, yet. You may become quite

disorientated."

"I suppose I shouldn't ask."

"Oh, I'll tell you now. Earthlings live on the outside of a sphere, but we live

on the inside of one. We walk on the surface of a sphere with the sky above us,

like humans do, but the sky and atmosphere are suspended in the middle of the

world, unlike on Earth. When you look up, you will undoubtedly be looking at

people and buildings that are on the otherside of our rather titanic concave

planet, and, to be quite honest, I am sure you will find it very jarring."

Stephanie had a small conception of what Drago was talking about.

"I think I experienced something similar while swimming underwater once."

Drago paused for a second. "Ah, yes. Well, feel free to look up if you feel. It

will be quite an odd experience, much the same as living on Earth was for me. I

had no conception of living on the surface of a planet. It wook me quite a

while to adjust."

Stephanie dropped a small cloth onto the dirt floor. "The gravity seems the

same."

"Yes, yes, it is. Come now, I am excited to introduce you to my comrades."

Stephanie put on her Hellenistic robes and stepped out into an olive garden.

There was running water nearby, and the people she heard talking were in fact

the comrades to whom Drago had been referring.

"Ah! Rayan! There you are. That must be Stephanie!"

Drago and Stephanie travelled some short distance over to a group of three

people sitting in a small grove at the end of the yard. By their feet was a

small white dog, which was the first to greet the Earthling. When the two

presented themselves to the three, Drago turned to Stephanie rather seriously,

and said, with great gravity: "I have something to tell you."

"Oh, it is about your name isn't it."

"How did you know!"

"Drago, please, I knew you had taken on a pseudonym on Earth, please!"

The three lounging on cushions in the grove laughed raucously, and one erupted

into a shout: "See? I told you Rayan, you were fooling nobody!"

"Yes, Drago, Rayan---whatever your name is---if your name is Rayan, then I

shall call you Rayan from now on---but I assumed the whole time after you

revealed to me you were an extraterrestrial that you were not telling me your

real name. I supposed maybe Earth rulers or police or whoever were following

you or looking for you, at least until you told me you could dupe people into

doing whatever you told them."

"Look! Look how defeated he looks!" The same one laughed.

"Yes he does look quite crestfallen." Stephanie agreed.

"But you never learned my real name, though, did you." Drago sought to try anfd

excuplate himself from looking like a complete idiot.

Stephanie thought hard. "No, I don't think I ever knew your real name. Until

now at least."

The group of three groaned very audibly. The same one, the shouting man, let

out a sigh. "I suppose that bet is definitely decided them..."

"Yes." the third one laid back down onto her cushion. "Palm-Frond wins this

one." The second turned to the first: "It's just a little wine, for goodness

sake, Goh, I'll go get you some tomorrow."

"Anyway." Rayan sought to try and bring some order to the auspicious meeting.

"Everyone, this is Stephanie. Stephanie, meet Palm-Frond, Goh, and Lutrin."

Goh was a loud young man with an enormous mop of jet-black hair. He was quite

tall, and smelled quite sweaty. Stephanie suspected he had been out working, or

had at least not bathed properly in several days. To his immediate right was

Palm-Frond. She was very jovial-looking, but somewhat reserved in demeanour at

the present moment, and had been eating some grapes, and reading what looked

like some parchment, and had been making notes in the margins with a writing

implement that Stephanie could not recognise. Finally, there was Lutrin, a very

slightly built woman with tremendously white silver hair uch the same as Rayan.

She was most likely the oldest out of everyone here, at least in appearance, by

human standards. But Stephanie could tell something was different about the way

people appeared in the colony. There was a niggling feeling that their phsycial

appearance had absolutely no connection to how old they were, or indeed how old

or how long they were ever going to live.

"We have been so excited to meet you, Stephanie." Palm-Frond grinned her way.

"Rayan tells us that you were instrumental in the success of the mission we

Universalists undertook. It is because of you that we are quite certain that

the revolution will succeed and we will be able to prevent the extinction of

our kind. Also, because of us, and Rayan we gifted humans a little kickstart

into the journey into leaving the third dimension as well." With that last

sentence, Palm-Frond took a little sip of wine and gave a sly smile towards

Rayan.

Rayan looked away a little sheepishly, as if he had performed an act he really

should not have. "Yes, I believe some fictional Earth multimedia refers to an

ethical code called the 'prime directive', but in our culture we do not

practice the caution or hesitation from interacting with or, as the media says,

'interfering' with other species, especially if they are sentient.

Goh piped up: "Yes, living as extradimensional beings for so long makes it very

easy for us to influence the way entropy operates in the third dimension, so

for our poeple to exist in a many multiplicity of modes of universal being, we

move with, through, and for other objects in lower dimensions. We are, in some

manner of speaking, a part of everything, the entire cosmos as any

non-corporeal being only knows how."

"Look at you all... You're confusing her. Poor thing. Shut up about this

nonsense, you two. Let us have light and pleasant conversation, you idiots."

Lutrin scoffed loudly. She shook her head and put down the vegetable she had

been eating.

"No, not at all, Lutrin---Rayan and I had a long discussion about some of this

while we were on the mission back on Earth. How long have I been sleeping,

though? Rayan was very pessimistic about the odds of the success of the

mission, he said it was just as likely as not that the mission would fail, and

that Earthlings as well as your peoplewould all be plunged into a dystopia, or

worse---complete destruction."

Rayan sat down opposite Lutrin. He seat was a wooden chair.

"We have been very lucky. I am in fact immensely relieved about the outcome of

the mission you helped me with, Stephanie. It sounds ridiculous, but because of

the five people here, and obviously the with the great yearning for freedom of

the masses, we have saved both humanity and our people and have ushered in a

tremendous age of freedom and peace for many many sentient beings."

"Well, the revolution has yet to be completed here in the colony." Lutrin

cautioned. "But to answer your question, Stephanie, you have been resting on

and off for perhaps a month. Your consciousness has been adjusting to simulated

three dimensional space and time for quite a while, but it has gone will, I

would say that, as the first human to ever knowingly enter our society, and be

welcomed and accepted---"

"Invited, really," Goh interjected.

"---yes, invited---you have adjusted very quickly. Unfortunately, you will

never be able to remember your first month here in the colony. That is just how

it works. It is like being in a fever-like sickness where you are in a

delirium, that time you lost will never be experienced at all."

"Oh, believe me, I do not mind," Stephanie felt the need to apologise a little.

"But, I do believe Rayan says I will be able to remember my transit here to

the colony."

"Oh yes!" Goh exclaimed. "Yes, we are all going to share it together later, it

is going to be an incredible show, from what Rayan told me. Apparently you two

were down walking around an Earth academy, and decided to put off the

transmission to the colony for some hours. So you spent some time by the river

near the academy, and by the time you decided to transmit, it was very late in

the evening. What a spectacular trip we are going to see!"

"I do seem to remember a little of it now, but certainly not the transit."

Stephanie closed her eyes and touched her temple lightly.

"But yes, you must certainly be excited to hear that there has been a

successful communist revolution on Earth."

"I haven't heard any of this..." Stephanie looked a little breathlessly at

Rayan. "What do you mean by all of this?"

"Well, the coup d'etat attempted by the Australian military against the

bourgeoisie of your country failed as spectacularly as we could ever have

hoped." Lutrin informed. "The masses of people who occupied Perth and the towns

and the big estates of land brought a complete halt to capitalist production,

and, as we hoped, the people seized control of the capitalist means of

production and proceeded to organise and restart production along communist

lines.

... CONTINUED

- EOF -