‘Anomaly’ - a short story by Adam Carlton
1. Adèle
Our survey ship spins down from configuration space, materialises in a cloud of evanescent photons - and settles into synchronous orbit around Anomaly. This is only our third flight, and everything is still new to us. I spare a thought for the intrepid explorers of the old Empire who first reached this super-remote system millennia ago, but only after years of boosted fusion flight, centuries of cold sleep.
“Adèle, is the AI prepped up yet?” demands Cateline.
So peremptory, so big and bouncy. So here to give us all a bit of get up and go.
“Patience,” I say.
This was the last planet the Empire reached, shortly before the Fall. Records from the time are sketchy - we don’t understand the collapse at all but the coincidence sometimes gets people on edge. Recovery took us so long - two thousand years from a remnant population of nearly zero.
We were almost wiped out.
We have an advantage over their extraordinary powers in just one field: our deloc drive, which makes distance immaterial. This planet - Anomaly - was at the very boundary of the old Empire's domain, almost sixteen light years out. Really hard to get to.
But three hours ago we were all having coffee in the departure lounge, back on Earth.
The drive burrows beneath the metric structure of space-time. Down there at the Planck scale distance is just ... irrelevant. The theory was discovered just a few years ago, they only recently got the engineering to work. We are the one and only survey mission ... and this is our third flight, the ‘farthest’ yet.
Our final crew member is Elicia, our petite team historian cum archaeologist. She’ll be investigating the previous expedition. We believe there will be ruins.
That's a remarkable planet beneath our ship, kind of what you’d like Earth to be. Some equatorial jungle but mostly semi-arid in the temperate zones - think southern France or Spain. Just the sort of place you’d have expected the Empire to have moved heaven and earth to colonise. But of course, as a culture they vanished before they could get round to it.
As the scientist of the party, I’ll be staying on board to work with the systems - which on cue come on line, the computer Alpha addressing us on the net.
“Adèle, we’re picking up a signal from a ground transponder. It’s very weak, no doubt the power source has decayed. The message is in Empire navy cypher. We don’t have decryption keys so it’ll be brute-forced. Invoking the quantum coprocessor now.”
We know about this protocol. Despite the awesome computational power we’re about to deploy I'm not expecting any immediate decrypt; we’ll just have to wait.
Cateline and Elicia are dressed to go. We don’t need spacesuits down there, it’s so warm my colleagues are in summer wear - though who Cateline is trying to impress I don't know.
They’re under constant surveillance by the ship - any issues their personal transporters will whisk them up here no problem.
The reason we called this planet Anomaly? - Well, there are two reasons. First, despite the abundant vegetation, there is a strange ecological hole in the biosystem. No animals larger than insects and mice: that’s a puzzle.
Secondly, there is a very large physical hole. It’s in the warm-temperate zone directly below our ship, near where the navy beacon is whispering its sad little coded signal. The depression is not natural and our best guess is that the Empire ship lofted a city-buster right onto the planetary surface. The crater is quite spectacular and it’s one of the first things we’ll be looking at (the radiation has quite decayed away by now).
Why would they have done that?
This place is full of tantalising mysteries
2. Cateline
Elicia and I translate to the surface, shimmering into existence in a sunlit glade. We're a kilometre from both the crater lip and that odd signal source. This will be our RV after we've walked around a bit, taking in the sights.
“... I'm getting an update from Alpha. It's a vector code so the top-level meaning is in the principal components, the ones we get first …”
Buzz, buzz, buzz. Adèle is a fly in a bottle. Should have been a librarian. Sure, we need techs - just not around me, thanks very much.
And there's Elicia, head bowed in thought, tottering off towards the ruins.
It's glorious to be off the ship! I stretch ... expand ... absorb the landscape! I could do a little jig here, limber up; something for my feed. But instead I stride off towards the crater. That should be a great sight, like that meteor thing in Arizona I saw pictures of once.
“... means we'll get the broad outline first, with the details later. Sorry folks …”
There are bushes, flowers! The air smells so sweet. Fragrances wafting past on a gentle breeze. It reminds me of the Ardèche of my youth - same countryside.
No paths - no animals! - but easy walking. I’m taking in the sights, the sounds. It’s quiet except for the bee-things. I’m heading for the crater edge, just a few hundred metres ahead.
Wait, this is interesting! It’s a conical hole, quite deep, three metres I'd say. It's like someone’s taken a very big ice-cream cone and pressed it, point first, hard into the ground.
Wow!
It’s about six metres across. The sloping dirt surface looks loose and crumbly.
Right, I’m at the edge here. It doesn’t go down to a pure point in the middle. Well naturally, soil would wash down. And at the bottom there seems to be something half-buried in the run-off, looks a bit gooey, like gelatine.
This all goes to the ship in real time so there’s no need for me to record anything special. Also, I don’t need anyone telling me to ‘be careful’ or demanding by-the-book observations. I’m going to explore. Let me just dig my heels in here at the top and take it steady.
3. Elicia
This place is so spooky. I’m on my way to the old base to see what’s there. It’s pleasant enough here but I feel like there are hidden eyes, you know? After all, what do we really know about this place - not much! I’ll be glad to get back on the ship.
I’ve studied the Empire for years. They consolidated on Earth then stretched out to other star systems as their ships improved. A paternalistic dictatorship; aggressive monopolies fuelling their imperialism.
We've learned some lessons this time around.
And then suddenly it all collapsed. Everywhere. It seemed to be all over in a year or so. The interstellar colonies withered and died, abandoned. Our records are fragmentary in the extreme. There are records of a new social movement, almost a new religion which swept the Earth shortly after the last starship returned.
Returned from here, actually.
The zealots of that new religion seemed to be in love with love itself. A frenzied desire to spread the message - which might not have mattered so much, but they seemed incapable of organisation. Wherever the new movement took over, collapse rapidly followed.
A small surviving remnant of the Empire’s ferocious military - dug in deep under the mountains of North America - decided global extermination was the only answer. Those fascists unleashed Armageddon! Humanity itself, along with all traces of civilisation, was almost completely obliterated. Their motivation is still a complete mystery but we live with the consequences of that reckless, final, genocidal act every single day.
Never again!
If there is anything intact here at the site, perhaps it will shed some further light on those distant and terrible atrocities.
OK, so I’m here. And, well ... this is a classic Empire defence bunker, isn’t it? Half-pipe construction, reinforced concrete on heavy foundations. Five metres high at the centre curving down to the ground. The whole thing is about 20 metres long with bulbous end-pieces. And there's the apron for the shuttle. Empty now of course.
The thing to remember is that the Empire was toxically militarised. With any new colony their first thought was to build this kind of site, hardened against even a close nuclear strike. Inside they'd place their command, control and communications protected by a dedicated squad. They’d build the research centre, and later the colony itself, at least a kilometre away.
The Empire was always nervous about threats - internal and external. Thank God we’ve evolved beyond that kind of paranoia: we don't even have a military.
Give peace a chance, hey?
So what happened here? It’s a mess, right? The walls in front of me are pockmarked with shell holes - and part of the end has been blown in. So that’s how the attackers got in. Then the nuke would have arrived from orbit and excavated that crater and you can see the effects here where the surface has been scorched. With the building breached no-one was going to survive that.
So what’s the real story? I’m thinking of that beacon we've picked up, squatting in its hardened repository deep inside this derelict fortress somewhere. Perhaps the beacon will tell us, once we crack the code.
4. Cateline
So several things happened at once. I’m like scree-walking my way down into this hole when the surface becomes a lot less supportive - and gives way. That half-obscured goo at the bottom's trembling now … the dirt slipping off it as I’m sliding down. The emerging, gelatinous lens is half my size!
I topple and fall right on to it, for a squishy landing.
Wow! I'm lying on my back at the bottom of a deep hole, looking up at the sky and a few wispy clouds - and the ship up there, though of course you can’t see it - and I’m feeling this jelly-mattress thing beginning to flow. Flow over my skin.
It’s not unpleasant. It’s quite warm in fact and it’s just flowing up my legs and arms, under my clothes, even over my face, though I’m not panicking.
It’s warm like a bath and I lick my lips and it's sweet. I’m not at all worried as it covers my skin, my body, flowing into me everywhere it can.
I extend my tongue and taste my sticky fingers, lick at them ... hmm ... I reach down and smear the goo over my body. I don’t feel tempted to talk to anyone, it’s enough just to lie here and savour the feeling. So warm and good; drowsy contentment; like a pleasant dream.
I feel remarkably well … and revitalised. I get to my feet. A bit dizzy but it passes. The gelatine lump or whatever has quite vanished. The way cream vanishes into your skin, I suppose. But so what, it feels good!
I leave the depression with no difficulty at all and begin to lope in the general direction of Elicia.
5. Elicia
I’m hearing Adèle on the net, beaming down from orbit.
“We’re nearly finished with the decode but - take care down there. It’s just what you suspected, Elicia, there has been violence. It's the final transcript of traffic between the Empire ship and the ground commander in the bunker. He says a mob has advanced on the bunker.
‘... We're surrounded. There are researchers massed behind our security team - which has itself defected to the mob! They've trained their weapons on us. They're demanding we surrender and come out. We've checked: they have heavy anti-armour ordnance. It's possible they could force entry. We're in contact with the ship. Maintaining a stand-off for the time being …’
It’s still coming through. More in a few minutes. Puzzling isn’t it. This is very strange behaviour. What could possibly turn a bunch of sober scientists and a rough, tough security squad into …?"
But Elicia stops listening because Cateline has emerged into view, approaching while pulling off her top. Cateline with a big gloopy smile on her face which is odd, since she normally has little time for either of her crew-mates.
“Elicia,” Cateline whispers as she pulls up, and even her tone is strange, thinks Elicia, because it’s earthy, breathy, even erotic. Her lips are unusually red, cheeks blushing, pupils dilated. It’s really puzzling and unsettling, she thinks.
And Cateline is so big, and I am so small.
And because Elicia is polite and rational and small, she ignores that profound uneasiness which fuels a growing panic beneath her quiet, controlled exterior.
The kiss comes without warning. Soft at first, then urgent. The taste is strange - sweet, cloying, it spreads across her tongue. Elicia tries to pull away, but Cateline holds her fast, a hand firm at the small of her back.
Warmth pours through her, making her dizzy. The more she resists, the more her body betrays her - leaning in, answering pressure with pressure. Breath mingles. Fingers slide under clothes.
Panic flares, then ebbs. Concentration loosens, slips. Desire and fear coalesce. She clings to Cateline, not knowing whether she is yielding or consuming. When they break apart she is shaking, her lips still wet, her hunger raw. Cateline’s smile: a mask of barely-controlled passion.
Afterwards, they both experience an intense urge to return to the ship, to Adèle - and to get something to eat: they are suddenly ravenous.
6. Adèle on the net:
Adèle’s voice on the net: urgent, cracking...
“Stop where you are. I’ve got the transcript. It wasn’t an attack, it was contagion. Some kind of neuro-parasite. It infiltrates the host, takes the nervous system whole. And the host helps it, welcomes it. That’s why the soldiers defected. That’s why the scientists turned…”
Silence follows. Then a faint chime: transport signatures.
Cateline and Elicia materialise on the deck. They move with perfect coordination, smooth and deliberate. Their covetous eyes find Adèle at once.
Adèle stumbles back toward the console, pulse hammering. Her words tumble:
“Stay back. We can quarantine. We can—”
But they keep advancing, smiling in unison, radiating warmth and desire, footsteps slow but inexorable.
Adèle thinks of the drive, of the shimmering tunnel that leads home. Three hours to Earth. Three hours to the cities, the families, the billions.
Her hand searches for the emergency self-destruct - that option they never even trained for.
She hesitates, fumbling; their arms open wide, as if in welcome.