December 21, 2017

LOVE IN A TIME OF ALIEN INVASION 77: The Trials of Group One

On Earth, there are three Triads intending to integrate not only the three peoples and stop the war that threatens to break loose and slaughter Humans and devastate their world; but to stop the war that consumes Kiiote economy and Yown’Hoo moral fiber. All three intelligences hover on the edge of extinction. The merger of Human-Kiiote-Yown’Hoo into a van der Walls Society might not only save all three – but become something not even they could predict. Something entirely new...

The young experimental Triads are made up of the smallest primate tribe of Humans – Oscar and Xiomara; the smallest canine pack of Kiiote – six, pack leaders Qap and Xurf; and the smallest camelid herd of Yown’Hoo – a prime eleven, Dao-hi the Herd mother. On nursery farms and ranches away from the TC cities, Humans have tended young Yown’Hoo and Kiiote in secret for decades, allowing the two, warring people to reproduce and grow far from their home worlds.

“We had nearly fallen into stagnation when we encountered the Kiiote.”
“And we into internecine war when we encountered the Yown’Hoo.”
 “Yown’Hoo and Kiiote have been defending themselves for a thousand revolutions of our Sun.”
 “Together, we might do something none of us alone might have done…a destiny that included Yown’Hoo, Kiiote, and Human.” (2/19/2015)

Everyone looked to Commander Baksh expectantly. They figured he’d laugh and take over. What he did was even more chilling. He said, “Risking your life for the rest of us is the most mature thing I’ve ever seen you do, Oscar.” He nodded, “Well done.”

There was silence. All of us would have to be fit leaders eventually. We were learning what it took to direct our own destiny. We would have to act for the Triad – not for our individual peoples. Not even for ourselves personally. Our individual civilizations had failed us. We were all we had. We were the future. I just might not see that future. So I said, “Let’s go.”

I guess we weren’t really noisy, but it’s hard for nineteen living things to move silently; especially with two of them are in hiking boots and another ten of them have hooves. But we walked.

The tunnel was dark. “What was this  used for, Commander?” I asked.

“Utilities.”

“You mean like electricity and water and stuff?” Xio said. In the past, she would have ended up as some kind of civil or aerospace engineer. Too bad all we did these days was destroy the old stuff – she’d tell you it had been called infrastructure – and forget about going into space. Humans know exactly how far that got us.

“That, but more. Before things started to fall apart, there was a movement to take the stuff we depended on and protect it. Used to be that power lines, communications, and video and audio transmissions used fiber optic cables. They were vulnerable to weather and physical damage. So they started putting them underground. Problem up here in the northland, was freezing ground. So some utility companies created tunnel systems. This is one of those tunnels.”

We were moving faster than we had been trying to go overland, though not as fast as we had in the truck; though with the truck, we’d been a moving target and the burnt out shell was somewhere miles back. We passed the first tunnel and for some reason, I started to jog. Xio was right beside me. I’d forgotten how good she looked running and was watching her so closely, I nearly ran into a wall as the tunnel veered left – west. I stumbled.

Retired laughed out loud. Xio smirked. Fax had been on my heels and he gave a little affectionate nip. I just felt more confused. I picked up the pace more and as we passed the second exit, I sprinted. Stopping abruptly, I was shocked to see the Triad and Retired had done the same. I was gonna make a big deal about it, but kept my mouth shut. For some reason, I didn’t think Retired would have made a snarky comment.

I was wrong. He said, “I thought you were gonna run us all into the wall just to prove you were in charge.”

Fax heard it for sure, ‘cause he snorted. None of the Herd would have heard it because he pitched his voice too high. I ignored him and said, “Find a place to stash the first set of trackers.”

After a few minutes, one of the Pack’s puppies yipped, “I dropped mine in a hole.”

“Rat’s nest,” said another.

“Ew!” said Xio and moved closer to Retired. Great. She wanted him to protect her.

“Let’s get moving. Qap, Quilf, Towt, are you ready?” Three yips. I glanced at my watch – cellphones had disappeared a long time ago; before I was born, I guess. Mechanical watches survived the high energy, electromagnetic pulses the Yown’Hoo and Kiiote fought with. Humans hadn’t stood chance when all-out war broke over Earth. “Good luck, my friends.” No one else spoke as the three Kiiote, in four-legged form loped up the exit to the surface. It was winter and by now, it would be dark. Cold, probably, too. I wished I could go with them…

***

The three Kiiote emerged from a concealed exit at the bottom of a sand pit, ringed with scrubby pine, loping to the surface and instantly split up, doubling back a few times before trading directions to confuse the trail. Like Earthly canines, they were deeply scent animals. Unlike dogs and wolves, they could biologically manufacture scents, sometimes even consciously triggering certain scents by a series of thoughts Humans might have called mantras.

Scent mantras.
It wasn’t long before any Kiiote happening along – or deliberately set on them – would have lost the original scent in a heady mixture of sex stimulants and pup scent that would elicit protective scent blindness. Their world was as complex in scent as a Human’s was in color and a Yown’Hoo’s was in movement.

Pack Leader Qap used slang – Yipe*fart – to communicate with the mini-pack, “We head north. Follow the scent of cold and veer to the stirring of Plains and mountain snows.” Holding a loose formation three or four lengths apart, they made their way northwest – by Human orientation – keeping low to the ground and occasionally back tracking to confuse their trail.

Unfortunately, they had not arrived unnoticed…


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