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Authors: Tom O'Donnell

BOOK: Space Rocks!
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Lenses didn't join them, however. She sat back down on her rock and pulled a shiny black rectangle out onto her lap. With a flick of her grasper, the device lit up. Suddenly, a 3-D holographic projection was swimming in the air above the device.

We Xotonians have computers, but they were nothing like this. The display was beautiful. Shimmering and sparkling with bright blues and warm pinks. I give the alien invaders credit where it is due: They are light-years beyond my people in graphic design.

I couldn't help myself. I silently crept within a few meters of Lenses for a better look.

By swiping her upper appendage through the holographic space, she seemed to be navigating some sort of computer interface. Glowing icons zoomed past until at last she found the one she wanted. She reached up with her grasper and poked it.

Suddenly, the hologram projection showed the stars. Red-and-green ringed planets spun slowly in the distance. Farther out were glowing nebulae and rotating spiral galaxies. A comet sailed past.

In front of Lenses, a glowing, holographic blaster weapon hovered in the air, the handle toward her. She grabbed it. With her other appendage she punched a virtual green button at the bottom of the projection. And just like that, she was in the middle of a war.

Saucer-shaped ships hurtled toward her from space. With her blaster, she fired angry bolts of red energy at them. When the spacecraft were hit, they would trail flame and exhaust and sometimes spiral out of control. Occasionally, one would explode in a halo of metal and fire. This human female was repelling an alien invasion!

Faster and faster the alien saucers came. When they got past her shield barriers, the whole projection would flash red, and a glowing meter at the top of the display would shrink. But she was good. For every ten that came at her, she shot down nine. At last, the meter shrank to nothing. The whole projection froze and faded to gray.

And then she started the invasion all over again. It was just some sort of simulation. Realistic and thrilling, but completely imaginary.

Lenses repeated the scenario at least ten times. I must say, it looked really, really fun. Watching her play almost made me wish my home had been invaded by aliens. Then I remembered that it had.

By this time, the other humans had all mastered No-Lenses's rolling-sideways rocket trick. They were sailing through the gap, two at a time.

At last they came back and tried to persuade Lenses to give the new boulder trick a try. After a little coaxing, she gave in. Lenses deactivated the holographic simulation and hopped back on her rocket to join them.

Part of me wanted to watch these humans forever. Something about how they interacted was fascinating. Very un-Xotonian, in a way that I just couldn't put my thol'graz on. I almost wished I was out there on a fifth rocket, blasting around and laughing along with them.

But no. These aliens were part of an invading army that came from the stars to steal our iridium.

Plus they had only two eyes. Two eyes! The very thought made my skin crawl. Why two? Everyone knows you need at least three. And, of course, five is the best number of eyes to have.

T'utzuxe was slipping below the horizon, and the sun was soon to follow. I checked my chronometer. Only an hour until the Grand Conclave at Core-of-Rock. It was time for me to leave.

I had completed my reconnaissance mission: There were four undersized humans in Jehe Canyon, wasting time on rockets. Not a threat.

I turned to go. As I did, something glinted on the rocks below. It was the shiny black rectangle, the hologram projector device. Lenses had left it behind.

Disobeying Kalac's order to return home immediately upon seeing humans was arguably forgivable. After all, they hadn't detected me, so what was the harm? But what I did next would be harder to defend.

When I was sure the four humans were thoroughly distracted, I took the device.

CHAPTER TWO

I
pulled the surface hatch—a round airtight door on hinges— closed behind me. Inside, it was finely crafted Xotonian metal with a one-way viewport; outside, it looked like nothing more than a completely ordinary blue-gray rock. Most of our exits to the surface are concealed in this way. Xotonian sneakiness yet again.

I started back toward Core-of-Rock, clutching the holographic projector in my thol'graz.

I wouldn't say this to Kalac, but the surface of our asteroid is, quite frankly, boring—a whole lot of craters and dust. To experience the real Gelo, you must dig a bit deeper. Our asteroid is riddled with tunnels. Though no one can say with absolute certainty, the elders believe that the core is probably more tunnel than not. And when I say “tunnels,” I don't mean the new human mines. Those are just crude rectangular holes. I mean the ancient, endless tunnels. A twisting cavern system so vast that much of it remains unexplored, even by Xotonians. Our chief worry was that the human miners would accidentally dig their way into these tunnels and discover the Xotonian race. By all accounts they were getting closer every day.

Tunnels may not sound exciting to you. But you must understand that Xotonians are not the only creatures that live beneath the surface of Gelo. My people only inhabit roughly 2 percent of the total cavern system of Gelo. The rest is wilderness. It is what we call the Unclaimed Tunnels.

In the Unclaimed Tunnels, there are towering forests of giant fungi and fields of luminous mushrooms. There are bottomless lakes teeming with schools of blind r'yaris and who knows what other creatures. There are chambers so wide and tall that it is impossible to say where they begin or end. Herds of wild usk-lizards gallop across these underground plains, and deadly thyss-cats stalk them.

Ours is a whole subterranean ecosystem, as distinct from the surface as could be. Even the air is different down here. Xotonians can breathe the thin atmosphere of Gelo's surface, but not as easily as the oxygen-rich air of the cavern system below.

I wound my way through the tunnels, mentally reversing the twenty-seven turns it had taken me to get from Core-of-Rock to the surface entrance near Jehe Canyon. Twenty-seven turns might sound like a lot to remember, but when you live your life in a cavern system, you need to have an excellent memory (as all Xotonians do).

At last the tunnel widened, and I came to the formal boundary between the Unclaimed Tunnels and the Xotonian city: a shimmering field of purple energy swimming in the air before me. Our Stealth Shield.

The shield was created by our ancestors long ago. It completely envelops our underground city and conceals it from outside scanners and sensors. It was also the main reason the humans hadn't detected us yet. When they had observed the asteroid from Eo with their telescopes and orbital satellites and other instruments, the Stealth Shield had sent back false information. To the human computers, our city appeared to be nothing more than solid rock. Even our ancestors were sneaky.

I felt a slight tingle on my skin as I stepped through the shield. Behind it, the tunnel opened onto a huge domed chamber, a few kilometers across. The light of thousands of Xotonian dwellings twinkled in the gloom. This was the city of Core-of-Rock—my home.

On the outskirts of Core-of-Rock, I passed farms. Fields of mushrooms grew in straight rows, and dull-eyed usk-lizards grazed on lichen. No farmers, though. They had already headed into town. The Grand Conclave was about to begin.

Soon, the singular mass of the city began to resolve itself into individual buildings. They were mostly low and round with the occasional tower poking up above its neighbors like an oversized stalagmite. Even at a distance, a few structures stood out clearly among the others: the Hall of Wonok, our center of government, stately and imposing; the dull gray pyramid of the Vault, at once mysterious and forgettable; and Dynusk's Column, our center of observation, spiraling all the way up to the ceiling of the chamber high above.

My family's dwelling stood closer to the center of the city. The houses here were a tight-packed jumble, nearly touching one another. After a quick detour to my chamber—where I stashed the hologram device under my sleeping-veth—I made my way toward Ryzz Plaza.

Ryzz Plaza was the social hub of our society, a bit of open space in the very densest part of Core-of-Rock. In the middle of it stood an iridium statue of Great Jalasu Jhuk, striking a heroic pose, one thol'graz extended, as if pointing the way toward the future. At the base of the Great Progenitor's statue stood the less-than-epic leaders of my own time. Four members of the Xotonian Council, in the flesh: Loghoz, Dyves, Glyac, and Sheln.

Normally, a Council meeting would take place inside the Hall of Wonok. But a Grand Conclave is no normal Council meeting, and the hall was far too small to accommodate it. Thousands of Xotonians, young and old, had already gathered in the plaza, and more were still filing in. Some wore the drab breechcloths or rough-spun tunics of laborers; others the sparkling x'yzoth jewelry and bright feathered cloaks of the elite; still others the usk-leather helmets and cuirasses of the city guard. Every stratum of our small society—from Ydar, the High Observer, to several well-known professional oog-ball players, to Sertor, who runs a food stall in the market—had turned out. The whole population of Core-of-Rock was here in one place.

“Hey, Chorkle! What's the good word?” someone yelled out from the crowd. I turned.

There stood Hudka, my grand-originator, leaning on a cane. Hudka was so old and stooped, it was barely taller than me.

“Hudka!” I cried, and hugged it.

“Careful, don't break me, Chorkle,” it said, but it hugged back just as hard. “So are you ready to listen to a whole load of nonsense?”

“This is important,” I said. “We have to decide what to do about the humans.” A Grand Conclave was an extremely rare event, and I was excited.

“Eh. They mainly call Conclaves to hear themselves flap their own gul'orps for a while before a bad decision is made,” said Hudka. “The Council is a pack of idiots! Possibly dumber than the population at large. And I should know, I was on the Council! I've sat through quite a few Conclaves, and I can tell you with certainty: I'd rather be having dental work done.”

“You must have been on the Council a really long time ago,” I said. “Had the Big Bang happened yet?”

“You know, when I finally pass to the Nebula Beyond,” chuckled Hudka, “you won't be able to make fun of me for being old anymore. What are you gonna do with all your spare time?”

“Make fun of you for being dead?” I said. Hudka laughed.

Now this may sound harsh to the outside observer, but Hudka and I always teased each other. It's hard to explain, but it was just part of the relationship we had.

Hudka squinted. “Well, look at that,” it said, shaking its head. “Here comes the biggest gul'orp-flapper of them all!”

At the center of the plaza, under Jalasu Jhuk's resolute gaze, the Chief of the Council joined the other four members. This was Kalac, Hudka's offspring and my originator.

Yes, I was the direct offspring of the elected leader of the Xotonian people. You might think this would mean countless perks and advantages for me. Mostly it was just awkward. I was proud of Kalac, but it seemed I could never quite measure up to its great deeds. And I often felt like I was judged twice as harshly for my own mistakes—which somehow seemed to occur more frequently the older I got. Anything I did, good or bad, was also a reflection on the Chief of the Council's leadership. Other Xotonians couldn't understand how a strong, dynamic figure like Kalac could have such an odd, quiet (often scatterbrained) offspring like me.

But I wasn't the only one who didn't have the smoothest relationship with Kalac. As far back as I could remember, Hudka and Kalac had been at odds. This conflict was only heightened by the fact that Hudka lived with us.

At this point, all the Council members had arrived, and the Conclave was called to order.

“By Great Jalasu Jhuk of the Stars,” cried Loghoz, the Custodian of the Council. “Let this, the eight hundred seventeenth Grand Conclave of the Xotonian people, commence! The first to speak will be Council Member Sheln!” A hush fell over the plaza.

Sheln, a heavyset, dull-eyed Xotonian, stepped forward. It had recently challenged Kalac for the position of Chief of the Council and lost the vote. To put it mildly, I knew that Kalac didn't have the highest opinion of Sheln's intelligence or integrity.

“We all know why we're gathered here today,” said Sheln, gesturing broadly with its upper thol'grazes and stroking its z'iuk with its lower ones. “Because of them!” Sheln pointed ominously at the roof of the chamber, toward the surface of the asteroid. The crowd shuddered, and many squealed in fright. Few had laid eyes on a human, so whatever they were imagining could only be more frightening than reality.

“The so-called hoo-mins,” said Sheln, mispronouncing the word. “They have invaded our homeland. Day and night their machines rumble. Spewing exhaust. Throwing out garbage everywhere. Digging deeper and deeper into our world. And for what?”

Sheln produced a small chunk of shiny metal. It tossed the little nugget up and down a few times, then continued. “Iridium. They came to steal it. Now I don't need to tell you folks, but we Xotonians need iridium for power. If the hoo-mins take it all, then guess what? No more electricity. No more Stealth Shield. It'll be lights out for us.”

Sheln suddenly pocketed the iridium lump.

“Some may say, ‘Oh, but once the nice hoo-mins get enough iridium, they'll simply leave and go back to Eo,'” said Sheln, affecting a simpering tone. “Well, they've got a whole planet, ten times the size of our asteroid, and that still wasn't enough for them! Hoo-min greed and aggression know no bounds. This goes deeper than iridium, folks. This is about right and wrong. This is about good and evil. This is about the very future of the Xotonian race. These hoo-mins, they hate our way of life.”

At this, the crowd quaked with dread. Many began to weep openly, big, salty tears dripping from all five eyes. With large groups of Xotonians, emotions tend to run high.

“How can they hate our way of life if they don't know we exist?” called out Hudka. The collective sobbing of the Conclave was undercut by a ripple of nervous laughter.

“Hudka? Is that you, you old bag of spores?” cried Sheln, scanning the crowd. “You're a hundred years into senility. Why don't you shut your stupid gul'orp and leave this to the Council?”

“You're right. It took me a long time to go senile,” cried Hudka. “I defer to one who achieved it at such a young age.”

The crowd laughed louder this time. A few even clapped.

“I'm not the one who's . . . who are you calling . . . I'm street smart!” Sheln sputtered with rage.

“Order! We must have order at the Conclave,” called Loghoz, still dabbing its eyes with the corner of its cloak.

“Now is not the time, Hudka,” said Kalac firmly. Hudka shrugged and gestured for Sheln to continue.

“The point,” growled Sheln, “is that whether certain appeasers admit it or not, we are at war.” Sheln paused to let that final word sink in for a little while.

“But by Great Jalasu Jhuk, this is a war we can win!” cried Sheln. “Human technology is pathetic. They still use combustion-based projectile weapons! We have energy blasters—two hundred fifty-six of them, in fact. All in good working order. We have seventeen personal shield devices. They have none. We can monitor and jam their radio communications with our Nyrt-Snoopers. And let us not forget, folks, we have the Q-sik.” Sheln gestured toward the Vault, which sat behind Ryzz Plaza. It was a bold move to mention the legendary Xotonian weapon. Perhaps too bold?

“Plus we have the element of surprise,” continued Sheln. “But not forever. Estimates put the hoo-mins only twenty-one days away from tunneling right into the Gelo cavern system. Once that happens, they'll figure out we're here. We'll lose the advantage.

“That is why we must strike now! A small group of Xotonian warriors should take the Q-sik and blast the hoo-min spacecraft while they sleep. Boom! If any of them manage to make it out of their ship, we pick them off one at a time with our blasters. Pow, pow, pow! A single battle, and the war is over. Xotonians win.”

It sounded more like a slaughter than a battle to me. I imagined the four humans I'd seen, disintegrated by the Q-sik or shot down as they fled their burning home. The crowd murmured in excitement or fear or both. Sheln had certainly painted a vivid picture.

“Next to address the Conclave will be Kalac, the Chief of the Council,” said Loghoz.

Kalac stepped forward. “I agree with certain points my fellow Council member has made,” said Kalac, gesturing to Sheln. “The humans are a threat to us. About that, there can be no doubt.”

Sheln nodded. Kalac continued.

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