A Noble Heart Must Answer (Part Two) Background Chatter by D.X. Machina

“…And so by reverse engineering the virus designed to target Titans, but not humans, we were able to synthesize a vaccine to counter-act the related plague that was designed to affect humans but not Titans. Are there any questions?”

Dr. Nick Archer was currently in Melbourne, Australia in order to give a lecture on the treatments developed during the Avalonian Pandemic and the challenges of maintaining the health of a society that had been frozen at roughly the same technological level as medieval Europe. Sophia was also with him to tour the campus of the University of Melbourne, one of Australia’s oldest colleges and compare notes with the various department heads.

The slide projector shut down and Nick turned to face the packed lecture hall. While not every hand in the room was raised, at least three quarters of them were.

Nick sighed. He rather doubted that all of the people in front of him were there to discuss the artificial pathogen that had been unleashed on Avalon (and the one that almost had.) Unfortunately, this second lecture tour hadn’t been nearly as positive as the one he and Sophia had undertaken in the months after First Contact. The general public’s opinions on Titans had soured considerably, and the release of that accursed video to the entirety of the Earth’s population certainly had not helped.

In fact, outside of the lecture hall, Nick could still hear the angry chants of the gathered protestors who were objecting to the presence of… ahem… a “Titan Fucker.”

Nick braced himself for the inevitable, but pointed to one man in the second row.

The selected person moved down the center aisle and towards a microphone that had been set up near the stage. “Dr. Archer, I was wondering if you’ve seen the ‘Faces of Death video?” The asker appeared to be a student in his mid-twenties. Nick held down his anger at the rather sarcastic tone the man had used with his title.

That was also a new obstacle that Nick and Sophia had found themselves facing. Various academic bodies had begun to question whether their titles were actually legitimate. The fact that Nick had been practicing medicine, and Sophia teaching, for longer than any of their detractors had been alive or that they had each built their disciplines from practically nothing, was apparently moot.

They didn’t get their degrees from Earth, so they didn’t “count.” Or so the argument went.

“Yes I have.” Nick answered. “Next question.”

“Dr. Archer,” The undergraduate continued relentlessly. “Given what was in the video, the horrific acts committed by the Titans, how can you possibly suggest that we, that humanity trust them?”

Nick sighed and leaned against the lectern in front of him. He really was getting too old for this sort of thing. He glanced to the side of the auditorium stage where Sophia was waiting for him just beyond the curtain. She shrugged helplessly and he could see how exhausted she was over all this as well.

“I am not and have never advocated for blind trust of Titans or their government. But I certainly do feel there is an avenue through which mutual cooperation can be achieved. My own life is proof of that.”

“That seems a little naïve.”

Nick’s jaw twitched and he gripped the edge of the lectern until his knuckles turned white.

“Naïve?” He chuckled mirthlessly. “Okay. Then allow me to ask you a question. The Titan depicted swallowing a man alive; do you know what her name is?”

The student blinked and scratched the back of his neck in confusion. “I think she said her name was… Trell? Something like that?”

“Yes. Something like that.” Nick snapped. “Her name is Trell Pria. So what else do you know about her? Where does she live? Does she have a family? Have you any idea what happened to her after that video was filmed? Do you think her to be an example of an ordinary Titan? A woman living in luxury, perhaps?”

“I… I don’t know any of that…” The man muttered. “How could I poss-”

“Do you know what the inside of her stomach looks like?” Nick interrupted bluntly.

“God no!”

“I do.” Nick’s voice cut across the room and everything seemed to quiet, even the constant shouts of the protestors seemed to mute. This was, understandably, not a chapter of his life he talked about much. Certainly not with anyone on Earth.

“Trell Pria swallowed me, whole and alive. It is thanks to Titans that I am here today to tell you that. She’s dead now, her stomach blown out by a young man who she also swallowed, along with several explosive devices. Before that, though, she was arrested by the Archavian government and imprisoned. Why? Because they, like you, saw what she did to that man, and me, as horrifying beyond belief. She was not considered an ‘ordinary Titan’ but a criminal.

“Young man, while you- and your parents, and your grandparents- were all living safe on this planet, I and others like me have been working tirelessly to prove to Titans that humanity was worthwhile. And the funny thing is? For the most part, we succeeded. I won’t deny that Titans have done horrible things. I also won’t deny that Titans are still doing horrible things. But the truth of the matter is: they were not doing those things to Earth.

“You haven’t the slightest inkling of which you speak.” Nick continued acidly. “Nor do those blasted protesters outside. Yes, Titans owe a great deal of reparations to humans, but they owe that to the humans who have lived within the Empire itself. To Earth and the people living safe on this planet, they owe very little, if anything at all. You call me naïve, yet I’ve seen the very best and the very worst the Titan race has to offer. And what’s more, I’ve seen it in the same damn bloodline. Now sit down.”

The silence that followed after his final word stopped ringing through the air was palpable. The questioner muttered something indistinct and then quickly retreated to his seat. No one replaced him at the microphone.

Nick sighed and wiped his glasses on his jacket before putting them back on his face. “And that’s all that I will say on the matter of Titans. Now, do any of you have questions on the actual topic of this lecture?”

* * *

Alex had to fight the impulse not to fly his hovercraft into the side of the mountain. He had Asteria, and he had Rixie, and that was all that kept him from succumbing. He wanted desperately for this to be a nightmare. He wanted desperately to find out it was some sort of trick. He wanted, more than anything, to find some way to make it all right, and there wasn’t a way.

More than anything, he wanted to avoid the conversation he was about to have.

He’d told Rixie. Called her from the office of the president. It had been awful, but an acceptable sort of awful. She felt like him, he knew, but Rixie was a soldier. Her training from her days in the Space Exploration and Imperators Corps was always a part of her, and while she hated Ryan being in harm’s way…he was a soldier, too. And so she had borne the news stoically, and told him that all they could do is hope that somehow, he’d survive the battle, and come home safe to them, and if not…well, if not, she knew he’d die giving the last full measure of his devotion.

Alex knew that too, but he had a very different perspective than his wife’s. She had been a fighter. He remembered how hollow it was to hear your loved one had died fighting.

His dad had saved others during the Fall of Kandahar. He received a Silver Star for his bravery. He’d been lauded as a hero, and there’d been an outpouring of grief in his hometown when he’d died. Alex had heard at least once a week, for the rest of his time on Earth, that his old man was a hero.

SSG Ryan Carey, his son’s namesake, had indeed died a hero, and Alex was proud of him. But Alex had been a 14-year-old kid, and as much as he’d wanted to celebrate his father’s heroism…all he’d ever really felt was the void of not having him anymore. The sacrifice was noble, and necessary, and he was proud of his father for making it. But he had always wished that someone else’s father could have gone instead.

The hovercraft touched down on its pad, just outside their apartment. He hesitated, but forced himself to open the door. Delay wouldn’t make this better. He knew that all too well.

Thyllia sat up from the couch where she’d fallen asleep and rubbed her eyes. “Oh.” She yawned. “Hello Alex. Yuri stole your daughter; she came over to help, Asteria woke up, and then she just took her home. Brinn encouraged it, if you want to blame someone.”

“That’s…fine. She does that.”

“She reminds me of me and Ryan,” Thyllia said with a grin. “I had a tendency to swipe him when he was little. I don’t think you have to worry about them getting married someday, though.”

When Alex didn’t immediately follow that up with a one-liner, Thyllia sat up straight. That wasn’t like him. Not at all. “Uh…so…did your errand in the city go alright?”

Alex swallowed and tried to decide the best way to go about this. He wouldn’t hide this from Thyllia. Technically, he was supposed to – he didn’t officially know this, of course – but she deserved to know the truth just as much as he and Rixie had. “Oh, um, yeah, it’s….Thyllia would… would you….”

What had started as a mild concern suddenly became near-panic. She’d never seen Alex like this. He’d always been strong. Stronger than Thyllia’s mother-in-law, even.

“Is everything okay?” she asked, hoping against hope that she was reading the man standing on the windowsill wrong.

Alex found he couldn’t talk right away. He shook his head. This was hard enough. The size difference wasn’t helping.

“Just… wait a moment,” he finally spat out. He bounded to the small replica of their apartment, and a moment later a Titan sized hologram appeared. Alex crossed the room and sat down next to Thyllia.

“Okay, now I know something is wrong.” Thyllia observed.

Alex nodded. He took a deep breath and let it out slowly. “Thyllia… It’s about Ryan.”

“What’s the matter? Is he okay? Is he hurt?” Thyllia’s hand gripped the edge of the cushion on which she sat.

“I don’t know.” Alex reached out and placed his hand over hers. “You know he’s been away working with JEADI.”

“Yeah, on Earth.”

“Not on Earth,” Alex said. “He’s been on Tau Ceti conducting experimental tests on some new weapon that Avalon and Earth have been developing. They put the project on Tau Ceti because they figured it would be out of the way, and no one would be looking there.”

“Well, they’re probably right.” Thyllia muttered. She wasn’t necessarily happy that she’d been lied to, but Ryan was military, it was part of the job. If that was all, it wouldn’t matter, but it that was all, Alex wouldn’t be this upset.

“Alex… what’s the bad news?” The young woman whispered nervously.

“Insectoids have entered Imperial space.” Alex choked on the words. “And it appears…that they are in the Tau Ceti system.”

Thyllia’s hand gripped his tightly and for a moment Alex was afraid she might just pass out. “We…the military…how?”

“Rixie said Vanser contacted Aerti. He was on his way, along with Gama Fleet.”

“Well, good. They’ll stop them, right?”

Alex took another deep breath. The desperation in Thyllia’s voice cut him right to the core, probably because it cut right where his desperation already had. “I don’t know… from what I’ve been told the insectoids’ numbers are…they’re overwhelming. It…it doesn’t look good, Kiddo. Not for Tau Ceti. Maybe not for Earth and Avalon.”

The last remaining vestiges of Thyllia’s composure cracked. The Titan woman let out an anguished sob and collapsed onto Alex’s shoulder. Her entire body wracked with grief and Alex held her close, even as his own emotions threatened to overwhelm him.

For a long, long moment, Thyllia felt nothing but anguish and horror. But as she became aware of her thoughts again, she realized they were racing, orbiting around a single phrase that echoed sickeningly in her memory.

“But when your precious human husband is being eaten by an Insectoid, remember that I warned you.”

She could sneak in a weapon, but that would be difficult. Could she convince the Emperor to look the other way? Maybe. She could talk to Pryvani….

Alex felt the woman tighten, and her anguished cries ceased. She pulled back, and her face was no longer much like that of the pleasant girl she had always been. This face…it looked familiar, but not on her.

“If…if Ryan dies from this,” Thyllia growled, “I am going to kill my mother. She threatened me with this. She has something to do with this. If he dies, then I will kill Syon Fand myself, and I will make it as painful and awful as she deserves.”

Alex looked at her carefully, wiping his own tears with one hand while he held on to her with the other. “I don’t want to tell you not to kill Syon,” Alex said, “but Tee, you don’t want to give up your future to do it.”

“The frak I don’t!” Thyllia said, wrenching away. “My future. My future? What the frak good is my future if Ryan isn’t a part of it!?”

Alex looked at her, and sighed. He knew how he would feel, if Rixie’s life was in danger. He’d felt it far too much.

“For one thing,” Alex said, “Pryvani and Zhan would miss you. Your nieces and nephews would miss you. Asteria would miss you. Rixie would miss you. I would miss you, you think about that?” He threw his arms wide. “Thyllia, I’m the idiot who failed here, don’t you dare.”

“You failed?” Thyllia said. “Syon told me she would hurt Ryan. She told me the insectoids would eat him. I thought she was bluffing….”

“His mom – his birth mom – she died, to save him, Tee,” Alex said, slumping backward. “She died so Rixie and I could take him and keep him safe. And we didn’t. It was my job, and I failed.”

Alex’s words broke through the shell of anger that had momentarily encased Lady Fand. She stopped, and walked over to the couch, and slumped down on it herself. “Alex,” she said, gently, “you shouldn’t use that hologram so much.”

“Huh? Why?”

She smiled, just a tiny bit. “It’s got you thinking like a Titan.”

Alex blinked, and he laughed through his tears. “I know,” he said. “Ryan always has thought his mom worried too much. But really it was me. I just….”

“His birth mom gave her life so he could live,” Thyllia said. “Then he went and lived with you and Rixie, and you both have risked your lives to keep others safe. He…he’s the person I love…because you let him become someone who would put himself between a bullet and an innocent person. Because you let him be Ryan, no matter the risk.”

She blinked back tears, until she couldn’t hold them back. She stammered out, barely, “Thank you, Alex. For making him who he is. And maybe, just maybe, you and Rixie…you’ve pulled through some close calls.”

“You don’t know the half of it, kid,” Alex said.

“Well. He’s your son. He got a sense of honor, and duty, and humor from you. I’m just going to hope that maybe…he got a bit of your luck, too.”

Alex smiled. “He married you, Tee.”

“Not officially,” Thyllia said. “Not yet.”

“Sure, just like Rixie and I weren’t married before it was ‘official.’ He married you, Thyllia. Gorram right no way he managed that without some of our luck. So,” he said, walking over and grabbing a set of glasses, and two bottles, one blue, one red, “let’s toast my son and your husband, and hope like hell we get to tell him how you almost killed Syon Fand.”

Thyllia took the drink, and raised her glass, and drank deep. “Just that one,” she said. “I’m going to go talk to Pryvani. Not about killing Syon. About what has to be done next.”

Alex nodded. “And I should get my daughter.”

“Like hell,” Thyllia said, repeating one of her fiancé’s – husband’s – Ryan’s favorite epithets. “Yurea will watch Asteria, and so will Brinn.”

“Not gonna make her,” Alex said. “Joseph is on Tau Ceti, Thyllia. Nick and Sophia are on Earth. Ryan’s what hurts most for me….”

“And me,” Thyllia said. “But you’re right.” She stood up. “I’m going to talk to Pryvani. I’ll tell Brinn and Zara and Taron – maybe with Pryvani for backup. But you’re not going to be watching Asteria alone, Alex.”

“I’m her father, I can manage.”

“No,” said Thyllia, finding the core of resolve that was her birthright as a daughter of Syon Fand. “Everyone on Tayas Mons is connected. We’re all a family. We’re going to face this as a family.”

Alex smiled, and raised his glass. “You’re a lot smarter than I am, Thyllia.”

“Not remotely,” she said. “Alex…I don’t even know what my relationship is with you. But you’ve always been there for me. Like an uncle, maybe. Or a bonus dad.”

“I’ll take father-in-law,” Alex said. “Whether it’s official or not. Whatever happens in the next few hours. You’ll always be my daughter-in-law, Tee, and Rixie’s too.”

“Like I said,” Thyllia said, embracing Alex. “Family.”

* * *

Lali Berisen leaned forward as his guest arrived. He wondered if he should give them credit for this. They didn’t really know how he would react, or how the Empire would react. They might expect him to kill this envoy. Then again, he didn’t think they’d care much. All the time he’d dealt with their kind, he’d come to believe they viewed individuals like he’d view an avatar in a hologame – uttlerly expendable.

Still, he rose as protocol demanded, and said, “Ambassador Ksnxkkt, thank you for coming. Please sit down.”

The mantid bowed slightly. “Minister of State Berisen,” its translator chirruped. “We have come as you demanded.”

“Indeed. Ambassador…the Empire demands to know why you have invaded our sovereign space.”

The Mantid twitched briefly. “System 998 is of the Hive.”

“Tau Ceti does not belong to the Hive. You may claim it, but it lies behind the agreed treaty line, a treaty you said you would abide by. Your decision to violate that line breaks our treaty.”

“Your species is not [untranslatable] System 998. It is a colony of creatures of System 1006.”

Berisen glanced down at his pad briefly, then back up. “Earth didn’t found that colony. The Empire did.”

“It is a colony of System 1006. They have told you [untranslatable] not protect them. You have no [untranslatable] System 1006 or System 998 or System 39,742, or any other system that is of the small bipedal mammals.”

“A threat to these systems is a threat to us. We will not allow you to take them. We have told you that.”

“The small bipedal mammals have told told you [untranslatable] not protect them. We will harvest them, and take these worlds. If you do not interfere, we will not attack you.”

“Until you’re ready,” Berisen said. “Until you believe you can take other systems of ours.”

“We will not attack you,” the mantid repeated, “if you will not interfere.”

“For how long?”

The mantid tilted its head. “Until we do.”

Berisen shook his head. That had always been their response, since the treaty that followed the First Insectoid War. They had never pretended the peace was forever. They had always told the Empire that they would invade again, and take what was theirs, when the time was right. When they assumed the Empire would or could not fight back.

“You need to understand,” Berisen said, coolly, “that while Earth has reacted angrily to parts of our history – and reasonably so, given their perspective – this disagreement does not mean we have lessened our commitment to defend the Sol Earth system, or the borders of the Empire. If you do not cease hostilities and return to Hive Space, we will be forced to attack you. If you continue toward Earth, we will be forced to attack you. We demand that you lift the communications blackout on the Tau Ceti System, and allow us to talk to our people there, immediately.”

The mantid would have chuckled if it were a Titan – and if Insectoids understood humor. “We will not lift our blackout. We are taking what we have said we would take. We will not attack your species if you do not attack ours. This will be [untranslatable] until there is a change. You do not have enough warriors to stop us and deal with your [untranslatable] hive. You will make the rational choice to allow us to take these systems.”

“The rational choice? Is that what you think?” Berisen said. “Ambassador…your people truly do not understand mine.”

* * *

“We have to assume that the Secretary-General is dead,” said Saburo Matsumoto, the Japanese Prime Minister and Japan-Korea representative.

“Even if she isn’t,” Noah Morgan, the European president added, “we can’t reach her.”

“But if she’s alive, the actions we take would be void,” said Ellanorah Sheridan. Undersecretary Sheridan was Ridgemont’s Chef de Cabinet. She’d been her Chief of Staff when she was Vice President, and managed her presidential and secretarial campaigns. They weren’t best friends, but only because the sort of friendship they had didn’t fit neatly into a “best friends” frame. Short of losing her family, no loss would have hurt her more than Elaine’s. It was only because she knew that this is where Elaine would want her – looking out for her interests – that she was here.

“Possibly so,” Undersecretary Bachchan, the legal counsel to the Secretariat, said. “If we did so in good faith….”

“Enough!” a voice roared over the speakers from an irate African first minister. “Yes, we know, Secretary-General Ridgemont is lost, as is Sasha Bogomolov, and Premier Phạm, and President Cabello, and Undersecretary Xylander…and Admiral Xú,” Tatenda said. “These are our friends, our colleagues, our leaders. We all are terrified for them. But we cannot allow their absence to paralyze us. Not now.”

“There is no precedent….” Bachchan began, but Tatenda cut through him.

“Yes, yes Rajender, we all know there is no line of succession for Secretary-General! We all know the if’s and but’s that we could face if we act without one! But we also know that in a few hours, an army of monsters may be on its way here. We do not have time to worry about legality. Now, I do not always agree with Chancellor Batari, but she is the only one of us other than the Secretary-General who has been elected to lead one of the UN organs. I suggest that Chancellor Batari be allowed to exercise the duties of Secretary-General until, God willing, Secretary-General Ridgemont is able to. And unless there are objections, let us stop handwringing and get going!”

“I concur,” said Aygün Talibova, who was serving as representative for the Commonwealth of Independent States. “We must move quickly. There was a plan in place for invasion, bəli?”

“Yes,” said Elsa Stefánsdottir, the Undersecretary for Peacekeeping Operations, who was standing in for Esmée Xylander. “We have command procedures in place in the event of a threat to Earth as a whole. Defense Plan Omega was agreed to by the Security Council, however…this will require the Secretary-General’s approval.”

It took Batari just a moment to realize Elsa was referring to her. “Of…of course. Yes, I approve this,” she said, wondering why she had ever aspired to lead anything.

“Initial defense will come through the JTSA,” Elsa continued. “Dr. Chandrasekhar, are you the current acting Flight Director?”

Mukta, listening in from Houston, shook her head. “Under ordinary circumstances, yes, but I am not really a command line officer. I am remaining as an advisor, but for now I’ve passed command over to Counter-Admiral Nejem.”

“Thank you. Admiral Nejem, you are there with her?”

“Yes, I am,” Hala said. “And let me just say, thank you so very much for kicking the Titans out of this system! I have contacted Centurium Starati on Titan Station, and she has seven shuttlecraft with field-clearing lasers that she has graciously agreed to use in our defense. And I’m currently debating whether I should ask fourteen Titan pilots to engage in a suicide mission or tell them to save themselves, because while they will be not even a speed bump, they’re the only asset I can lay hands on that has any defensive capability whatsoever.”

There was a momentary silence, before Hala’s former superior officer quietly said, “Admiral Nejem, frustration will not save us.”

“No, First Minister Marechera. I’m sorry, sir,” she said, quietly. “We will do all we can. We are currently prepping the Orion for launch; it’s a year away from being ready, but it has basic life support up and running, its engines are online, and it does have a rail gun. It’s the only ship in our inventory with offensive capabilities. We do have plans for suicide runs, and all crews of Alcubierre class ships are prepared for them. Our best guess, based on what we know, is that we can maybe take out a few fighters. But realistically, unless the Empire can stop them before they get here, they will be able to breach the atmosphere.”

“Who will command the Orion?” Elsa asked.

“I will,” Hala replied. “Once the Orion is destroyed, so is the JTSA. At least our space operations. From there…Dr. Chandrasekhar will be the best leader you have for what’s left. And she does have a few tricks up her sleeve.”

Mukta nodded. “There is a power source,” she said. “I…I will need to have permission to discuss this freely, Chancellor.”

“This will be a fight for our lives, doctor,” Batari said. “I think I know what you’re referring to. Please continue.”

“We have developed a weapon. Unfortunately, it is on Tau Ceti. Fortunately, that means our forces are engaged in the defensive battle there.”

“What kind of weapon?” asked Morgan.

“They are air/space fighters, code named Acolyte. We worked with the Avalonians, they had materials science capabilities we did not. They use a power source that is based on a novel physics discovery, one that returns more energy than the mass equivalent of light squared.”

“That is…not possible,” Tatenda said.

“It is,” Mukta said. “I was actually working on publishing…it was Dr. Freeman’s discovery. He held it close, because there is an obvious danger inherent in this. The fighters are very powerful and quick. Together, they have…well, significant power at their disposal. Potentially enough to take on a capital ship.”

“Can we utilize this tech here?” Tatenda asked.

“No,” Mukta said, “not the way we have with the Acolytes. Controlling it is very difficult. It will take years to perfect it, even knowing what we know. But if worst comes to worst, controlling it will not be our problem.”

“An explosive,” Morgan said. “But an uncontrolled one, more powerful than an antimatter bomb….you could destroy a planet.”

There was a very grave silence, for a very long moment. “Let us save that,” Batari finally said, “for the point at which no hope remains. And I say the same about nanomachines. So as hope remains, what is our plan?”

“General Akimoto has been in charge of our planning for an insectoid invasion,” Elsa said. “General?”

From Japan, the Chief of Staff, Joint Staff of the Japan Self Defense Forces spoke up. “We have some good intelligence on the capabilities of the Insectoids,” Akimoto said. “They are dangerous, but mortal. If there is good news…it is that they wish to invade Earth so they can eat us. That means that they will not bomb us from the skies – they want as many humans alive as they can secure. Also, they will be using gravity compensators, which creates a vulnerability. That does not mean that they are easy prey; based on the information we have, they will send up to half a billion warriors against us, each the size of a six-story building, with phase cannons that have the power of a guided missile. Those that land will be dangerous. And many will land. But it is on land that we have our best chance of striking back. Once on land, they will cause a great deal of damage, as will we trying to fight them off. But we are not doomed. From simulations, we feel that there is a fifty percent chance that Earth will survive.”

“What are the casualty rates in those simulations?”

Akimoto sighed. “I said survive, President Marechera, not win. Our best-case scenario is 87 percent.”

“We would lose 13 percent of the population of Earth?” Batari asked, horrified.

“No…no….13 percent of the population of Earth would survive. Under our best-case scenario…about nine billion humans will perish.”

Batari swallowed hard. “And the worst case?”

Akimoto grunted. “There might be more survivors under the worst-case, at least for a time…but I wouldn’t trade with them. I have had the honor of talking with Secretary Xanthopolous; I do not intend to be eaten alive.”

“Is there any point to surrendering?” asked the American president, Tony Woods.

“You have heard of the Titan colony at Sperikos?” Tatenda asked. “They sterilized the planet because of what they faced if they surrendered. Like General Akimoto…I would rather die fighting that feed our children to them.”

“Do we have any word from the Empire?” Chancellor Batari asked, after a long moment.

“Not yet,” Hala said. “With luck…they will hold their line. They will contact us as soon as they know more.”

“Well,” Batari Iman said, quietly, “I do not believe we can wait. General Akimoto, under the plan, you are the high commander of Earth forces, correct?”

“I am, Chancellor. If you believe me fit for it.”

“I do,” Batari said, “I authorize you to prepare our defenses. Fight them with everything we have, to the last person. To all the leaders on this call, place all your troops at General Akimoto’s disposal, based on the Defense Plan Omega guidelines. Begin preparing plans to evacuate the cities, beginning in six hours. I will be addressing the people of Earth within the hour,” she said. “Fi Aman Allah. Authu-Billah,” she muttered, then paused. “I am sorry, I know that religion….”

“If my gool is translating right, that’s a prayer for Allah to protect us, right?” Noah Morgan said.

“Yes, President Morgan,” Batari replied.

“Well, you know, I’m an atheist…but frankly…right now, this planet can use all the protection it can get.”

40 comments

  1. Nitestarr says:

    Hmmm …Bugz… *hmmm coffee*

    Hey did anyone (in the story) offer the bugs like um….uh…. alternative?

    How about a hug? Well wishes? Perhaps some positive thoughts….. I think if you endeavor to understand them then some type of accommodation could be reached. They are simply misunderstood

    • Genguidanos says:

      Actually they did. But the bugs didn’t go for it. Too scared of the Titans. But I think the Bugz just don’t understand the Titans all that well.

      The Titans aren’t all bad.

      The Titans just need somebody to believe in them.

      Well I’m gonna be that someone! I’m gonna believe in the Titans even when everyone else counted them out!

      And we’re gonna work hard, and we’re gonna strengthen our core, and when they see the Titans again there gonna be all like, “We were wrong about the Titans! You Titans are actually pretty cool! You Titans maybe wanna hang out sometime after class? Go get a soda?”

      But we never did get that soda…

      because the Bugz ate everyone…..

  2. Rapscallion says:

    O screw Nick, seriously. Nick was kidnapped from Earth, made property, declared an animal, lost all rights, purchased, and all but the first was done by those he now calls family, and was legally allowed by the Titan government. He married a fellow kidnapee, who was taken in an officially sanctioned abduction for study of “wild” humans. He got lucky that eventually those same people saw through this and realized he was intelligent. What about the many others Sophia was taken with? How many of those people died after spending decades sitting in a terrarium? What about the thousands of others who were taken from Earth in other similarly sanctioned abductions? What about the fact that the reason there are humans at all in the Empire is that they were taken from Earth? At first contact several of them tried to kill Earthlings and many others didn’t care what their fate was. Their head of state thinks they should be pets.

    Oh, and “horrifying beyond belief”? Maximum sentence for intentionally torturing or killing a human is what, 5 years? Sentence isn’t really reflecting the gravity of the crime, because Titans don’t think its that big of a deal, just like I’m sure smuggling humans from Earth isn’t considered a big deal, and that’s what half of them think about humanity at the moment of this story. Let alone that has been true for thousands of years. Nick got lucky and has carved out a home in a hostile state, but Earth has every reason to fear and want some sort of accounting, because it has happened to its denizens and half of the Titan Empire wants those conditions to return. They’ve done plenty to Earth. So screw Nick’s sanctimonious tirade because he is one of the lucky few to build something from the ashes that was his life that Titans took away.

    • sketch says:

      “At first contact several of them tried to kill Earthlings and many others didn’t care what their fate was. Their head of state thinks they should be pets.”

      The ironic thing, while the average Titan might not have plans for Earth, those elements from first contact have initiated the extermination of Earth using the insectoids to do the dirty work. Nick probably doesn’t even know about the Jeadi military project because human worlds have been left out in the cold for defense for the most part.

      Even if things politically went back Qoorni’s way, that would still hamper Earth’s ability to develop and travel out of the fish bowl territory the empire has them in.

    • Johnny Scribe says:

      Where the hell are you getting the maximum sentence is 5 years, exactly? Trust me the penalty is a lot more serious than that. Also, did you even read the first story? Smuggling humans from Earth is very illegal.

      Everything you mention has happened to humans who live IN THE EMPIRE. Which, shockingly, Nick agrees are owed quite a bit from Titans. None of it has happened to those who have been living on Earth. That’s the point. Nick says that Earth is right to not blindly trust The Empire, but he also says they don’t have a right to self-righteously appropriate the suffering of the humans in the Empire as their own.

      What, in the last several thousand years has the empire actually done to EARTH? Left it alone, for the most part. Allowed humans to develop on their own. How horrible for that twenty-something kid to live in such oppressive conditions.

      • Barrowman says:

        Agreed, but the abducted(wild) humans are treated the same as the pet humans. They are put on sale in the same way as trained pet humans. Those humans should have got a little special treatment. They were lucky that most of the friend titans like Naskia, Pryvani, etc had brains and empathy.

      • Rapscallion says:

        @ JS

        I could spend a couple of hours combing through the stories, but I was throwing out a number because the series has consistently treated harm to humans as cruelty to animals in the real world, which is generally 6 months to 5 years max. I’m also basing it on the reaction of Titan authorities to every instance where harm is done to humans. In Nomad the police didn’t want to have to deal with the kidnapping of over 100 human beings. They took breaking and entering, a misdemeanor usually, equally as seriously. In Physics they think about calling the police to report the theft (kidnapping) of two humans but know the authorities won’t bother, which sounds like the penalty isn’t very serious. They treat the near rape of a character more seriously than attempted murder of two humans. Kidnapping of Charolette/Molly cannot get official police resources because no one cares, again not indicative of a serious crime. Reported cruelty to humans by Vasha isn’t good enough to conduct an official investigation, its done unofficially and only results in an arrest because they find evidence of treason.

        As for the smuggling, how serious can it be if the proceeds (ie people) from that smuggling are sold on the open market later? Can’t be too illegal because the Titan government occasionally sanctions that smuggling in the name of science. The average Titan doesn’t care at all, we’ve even heard statements like “Why would we need more pets” and other stuff along those lines.

        And as for it happening only to the humans in the Empire, Darren, Izzy, Alex, Pierce, Niall, Nick, Sophia, Charollette, and Molly are all from…EARTH. Many of them were 20 something kids who were taken from their homes and lives, on Earth. The 20 something Earth kid has a right to be nervous.

          • Johnny Scribe says:

            Yeah and he lived on Earth 100 years before anybody on that lecture hall had been born. So what gives any of them the right to demand reparations for things none of them experienced?

            You want to talk about things Nick or Tapp or Scroof are owed, fine. But if you’re trying to tell me a bunch people who have likely never met a Titan in their lives have been personally harmed by what Darren or Zhan or Molly went through and therefore are owed something because of it, then I’m calling bullshit

          • Arbon says:

            “But if you’re trying to tell me a bunch people who have likely never met a Titan in their lives have been personally harmed by what Darren or Zhan or Molly went through and therefore are owed something because of it, then I’m calling bullshit”

            ^ This right here, probably exemplifies where most gripes about Titan behavior tend to come from. The fact the narrative itself treats a complete lack of empathy to the degree of a sociopath as normal, where more than half of the main characters have to be babied through kindergarten lessons and are still hailed as wonderfully good people. And this strange assumption that a human has no sense of solidarity, that something happening to our ancestors without our knowledge doesn’t matter.

            Even if the people from earth harmed by these ancient practices are no longer around, the Titans who did the harm are still there. Still alive. It’s not ancient history from generations past for them, its a thing they did and that they can still point to and remember. To say nothing of the fact Titans OPENED FIRE on an unarmed research vessel, with no provocation, and no communication.

            The fact their very laws are going to cause this exact same problem with humans again somewhere else, with some other species, because their only requirements for a species to be considered sentient is: “Does it have anything to steal, can it punch me in the face if I steel from it, and can it chase me down if I steal from it and run” … and failure to meet all three of these indicates said species is to be afforded less protection, fewer rights, and anything it possess can be freely stolen.

            Neil is an amazing scientific mind who could have done amazing things on earth, and his kidnapping still resounds throughout history. There’s still millions of dollars worth of old Nasa equipment, destroyed by Titans and left to be burried in dust on mars, because they got too close to a military installation and rather than treating it as first contact (like any rational species would do) they just disabled the drone.

            What we see with Nick seems far more indicative of stockholm syndrome than anything else, the very fact that it’s 20 years later, an ENTIRE GENERATION LATER, and people are still curious of basic details and still asking simple questions, and the response isn’t a more sensible: “Go buy my video where I detail the whole story, next question” just raises so many uncomfortable points about who these people are, and what the expected interaction with earth is. Humans are a species that can and will empathize with the emotional trauma of a toaster left behind during a move, and in 2015 there are people marrying their AI holograms, granting official property to trees, and going out of their way to rescue endangered mosquitoes.

            To say: “This didn’t harm you, just someone else you’ve never met. Why would that be a problem?” sounds more like the line of reasoning from an insectoid or a deranged criminal than someone we’re supposed to agree with.

          • Rapscallion says:

            JS the problem is Nick shuts down a conversation about trusting Titans by saying the people in the audience aren’t owed anything and cannot possibly understand what he and other humans in the Empire went through because they were safely and ignorantly tucked away. Well first off the kids grandparents weren’t safe, they could have been plucked off the planet any time by Titan researchers and almost no one in the Empire would care. It would have been legal and socially acceptable to destroy those peoples lives and leave their families devastated as was done to him. Until a very recent time, within the lifetime of the people in that room that was true. They aren’t owed anything but skepticism and fear of an entity that declared you property in your lifetime and was hostile in first contact even if you didn’t know it seems healthy.

            Arbon is also on point here. Most people empathize with the plights of others, and a crime visited upon your ancestors carries over through generations often, especially when those that committed are still alive OR still believe in the same thinking that led to such a disastrous outcome for humanity. Its easy to empathize with the fear towards Titans for what they have done because they practiced slavery/petification for thousands of years, stopping only 3 Earth years ago, and half of them still wish to. Earth citizens were directly harmed throughout history by that species believing in that barbaric way. If a person came forward and advocated for slavery I can hate and fear them even if I wasn’t a victim of slavery or am likely to be.

        • Barrowman says:

          Very good points, Rapscallian.
          “As for the smuggling, how serious can it be if the proceeds (ie people) from that smuggling are sold on the open market later? Can’t be too illegal because the Titan government occasionally sanctions that smuggling in the name of science. The average Titan doesn’t care at all, we’ve even heard statements like “Why would we need more pets” and other stuff along those lines.”
          If most of them weren’t purchased by onwers with a little open mind and empathy or did not meet Pryvani, than you had a totally different outcome.
          I like most Titan main characters. But there is one question. Has Rixie apologized to Alex’s mom and sister for all those horrible years not knowing what happened to Alex? Not even know if he is dead or not.

          • Genguidanos says:

            Alex’s mom died nearly a century ago. Further more what does Rixie have to apologize for exactly? Rixie had no way of getting Alex back to earth or sending a message to earth. If anything I would think Alex’s sister would be thanking Rixie for saving Alex and keeping him alive all this time and giving him a wonderful life.

          • Barrowman says:

            @Genguidanos.
            Rixie is one of the most likeable characters, from the first story to the last. Has good self reflection and very fast knew how wrong her behaviour was the first time she met Alex. A very fun and exciting character. Alex was right when he said that Rixie was everything to him in Contact. I would feel the same in his situation.
            Alex’s mother must have suffered a lot. Of course his sister was happy about how Rixie took care of Alex, but that whole time not knowing. Terrible.

      • Angel Agent says:

        I don’t remember if they ever told the people of earth what Brinn told Nick when she first got him. it went like this “Brinn smiled, gently, reassuringly. “Yes. We do own your planet, after all… and everything on it. Including you. Your people… well, you make good pets.”

        Do the titans still own earth and every human on it if so, they can send papers to the bugs, see still belongs to us.

        • Barrowman says:

          The writers have done a good job with Brinn there. There is somethinh terrifying about hearing a normally intelligent nice young woman say these things in a friendly tone like it is the most normal thing in the world.

          Maybe that’s why Brinn felt bad about that video. It’s good that there are no recordings of Brinn’s, Naskia’s and Rixie’s first conversations with a human or Naskia’s darker actions against Nonah. If those were showed…. .

    • Barrowman says:

      Thanks, Rapscallian. You always put it in good perspective. If you read how creepy Brinn behaved in the first Titan novel, that was sickening. It’s not the pet thing but their total lack off empathy that they abduct you from your friends and family. They even find it something to laugh at when they tell the human. How many families were devestated by not knowing what happened to their loved ones? Some of our friend titans at least feel bad about that, but not all of them.

    • Genguidanos says:

      “What about the many others Sophia was taken with? What about the thousands of others who were taken from Earth in other similarly sanctioned abductions? What about the fact that the reason there are humans at all in the Empire is that they were taken from Earth?”

      Okay … what about it?

  3. smoki1020 says:

    I don’t understand why earth and insectoid leaders are talking and where they’re talking? Are you guys talking to your hotdog?!!

    • Locutus of Boar says:

      <I don’t understand why earth and insectoid leaders are talking and where they’re talking? Are you guys talking to your hotdog?!!

      Sometimes Titan and Human names are too similar. Berison is the Titan Minister of State which means this conversation is on Tuaut.

  4. sketch says:

    It’s getting harder and harder to see what the magic bullet or way out is here short of a deus ex machina like the K’gapi showing up with a mega fleet to save the day or something.

    Yamu notwithstanding, so far all established characters from the prior series are alive, mostly well. I feel like at this point they are going to start being killed off.

    • Arbon says:

      Planet destroying bomb + Ship capable of speeding in = Entire hive ship destroyed. Rocks fall, everybody dies.

      • faeriehunter says:

        The problem with said bomb is that according to this chapter, Earth hasn’t yet mastered controlling the reaction. Basically, right now a superbomb would almost certainly go off as soon as it was built. And I’m pretty sure that building such a bomb isn’t something that can be done aboard a spaceship but needs to be done in a facility with specialized equipment.

  5. Kusanagi says:

    Could really use a light and fluffy JS chapter about now. 🙁

    Very good ‘sit down and shut up’ moment for Nick, and I like the hybrid families on Avalon coming together for support. Earth’s forces pretty much have said what I thought previously, they may fall but their going to be a piss poor food source. Both planet killing bombs, and nanos are on the table if it’s hopeless. Given the shock the Insectoids had with Sperikos, and the ambassador conversation this chapter, I doubt they’ve even considered Earth might destroy itself.

    • Greaterthan3 says:

      Why not use a planet destroying bomb on a hive ship the size of a moon instead if blowing up earth…?

      Then go blow up hive prime for good measure.

      • Locutus of Boar says:

        The most explosive thing in this chapter isn’t a supercritical Freeman Reactor be it on Earth or next to the Hive Ship.

        “It is a colony of System 1006. They have told you [untranslatable] not protect them. You have no [untranslatable] System 1006 or System 998 or System 39,742, or any other system that is of the small bipedal mammals.”

        The Titanverse just took a twist in a whole new direction.

        Meanwhile in the crisis at hand we now know how the Hive Ship will respond when Aerti challenges. Unless someone steps forward with an alternate solution Ridgemont and with her the human race is about to suffer the humiliation of appealing to the Empire.

        There is one new player in the game though, an Earth ship not quite ready to be put into operation but if she has the Freeman reactors on board she has about 1/4 of the Gyfjon’s top speed.

        • Barrowman says:

          That new Orion ship was expected to launch in this fight. The moment they mentioned the new class of ship.

          Yes, we don’t wich systems they mean. It could be Earth and Avalon. But you get a mystery feeling about system 39,742. That sounds very far away. Earth humans themselves have colonized nearby solar systems and expect rapid weapons built up and development on those planets.
          The writers probably want to put in a big secret revelation about Titans and humans. Not necessary to put in Hybrid. There is too much going on already.
          I find the titan history strange compared too humans. Humans have existed much longer then them.

          • faeriehunter says:

            In The Debate it was established that System 1006 is Sol Terra, System 992 is Sol Sperikos and System 1,739,414 is Sol Archavia. Judging from what the insectoid ambassador says here, System 998 is Tau Ceti. That leaves only System 39,742, which the ambassador claims is a human system like System 1006 and System 998. Since its number is way lower than that of Sol Archavia, I’m assuming that System 39,742 is much closer to Sol Hive Prime (and therefore Earth) than Archavia. Therefore I think that System 39,742 is simply what the insectoids call Sol Tarsuss.

          • sketch says:

            I was also thinking that referred to Avalon. If so, that dispels the notion the insectoids don’t see a difference beyond size between Titans and humans. On the contrary, they see species as the greater segmentation rather than the actual political boundaries.

        • Barrowman says:

          Thanks faerihunter. I forgot the number 992. I read the last one as a high number. My mistake.
          This is the coördinated attack to wipe out humans everywhere as planned.

          • Locutus of Boar says:

            Thanks faeriehunter. Assuming the Insectoids simply number systems as they find them progressing out from Hive Prime then the relative distance to each system is a function of the cube root of the system number so 39742 exists somewhere is a shell about 3.5 times the distance from Earth to Hive Prime or about 189 Earth light years from Hive Prime which means anywhere from a minimum of 133 LY to a maximum of 243 LY from Earth. I suspect a search of the extrasolar planet catalog might turn up some candidate planets with one holding a human occupied planet.

            The logical assumption is that there is a super Mu class planet somewhere in Hive space where the Bugs are raising a human colony for obvious reasons and perhaps where they are raising the rest of Myrell’s hybrid “family” too.

          • Ancient Relic says:

            It’s been mentioned before that the Insectoids have tried raising humans as livestock and never succeeded. Titan-Insectoid hybrids, however, are a likely possibility.

  6. Dann says:

    Oh boy, this story is amazing, I bet something really awesome is in store for part 3! Can’t wait 😉

  7. nergal says:

    Once more I say use the explosive power of those reactors. Not as a last resort, but as a first defense. Lay them out in space like mines, if it’s at all possible. Create as big of a minefield as possible, with planet busting mines. Surely enough would dent the bugs, at the very least. Yes, their ship is huge, yes it requires a massive power source, but power sources are simply contained. If they go critical, most ships explode. And bugs don’t seem that worried about shields and high tech protection.

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