Giddiness rushed through me, but that quickly waned when I realized that I couldn’t read a single thing on it. I could tell that the strange symbols meant something, but hell if I knew what that was. But what did I expect, English? That would be even less believable than this whole situation.
Then again, I remember learning that you can’t read in your dreams. That was a bit troubling. Was this a dream? It wasn’t a very nice one.
That frustration began to turn into outright anger, and I flicked my finger different ways across the thing, navigating blindly like a child going through a picture book. There was a butt-ton of schematics, and then what I guessed were chemical compositions. At least science held the same basic meanings in this strange universe.
However, I hardly knew science in my own home, so it wasn’t like I was going to unravel any great mysteries here. I navigated to the back button, then a circle that had ‘home’ glowing slightly above it.
I froze.
Did I just read a couple words?
I looked back to the pad, and there was just the strange symbols again. Not back, or home, or anything.
Freaked out yet again in a very short period of time, I hit the little sphere and sure enough, I was brought to what basically looked like the start screen of a phone. Instead of folders, there were different, large symbols, but the intent was pretty clear.
I clicked on a random one, and a series of pictures came up. I clicked at the one at the top of the list and was treated to a shot of the alien/author girl standing in front of an empty lab, smiling brightly. She looked so happy with a dazzling smile and her dark hair pulled up into a messy bun.
I slid on to the next picture, which was basically a selfie with what I guessed was a krelach. I couldn’t help but let out a short, wry laugh. It seemed that some things were truly universal in the technological age.
I kept going from photo to photo until I reached the end. There were only a handful – she most likely had them backed up to whatever this world’s version of the cloud was – but I could feel myself taking a liking to the girl. All of her pics had science stuff in the background, so I imagined she was wicked smart. And she always looked like she was thinking about some intense calculation or mathematical theorem.
A buzz sounded throughout my little square holding pen, and I quickly shoved the thing back into my bra. Once I was sure that it was safely submerged in my cleavage, I stood up and limped back to the transparent field.
Three aliens were marching toward us in outfits that screamed law enforcement. There was a human, a nesr-roona, and a mooreerie but no kodadt. That was odd. I would have thought the muscled, peaceful wildcats would have been excellent guards for a prison.
The trio stopped in front of my little slice of paradise, and I just noticed one was carrying some brightly colored supplies. “Prisoner LL-69852, walk to the back of your containment unit and place your hands on the wall.”
“Wow, so you speak English? That’s a little weird.” I stared stupidly for a moment. “Oh, you guys are probably talking to me. Sorry, I’ve never been a prisoner before.” I headed to the back wall and complied with the orders, craning my neck, so I could watch what they did.
“Eyes forward!”
I snapped my head back to face the wall. I bristled at the tone, but I had to realize that I couldn’t exactly pick any fights when I was in a strange prison, on a strange planet, in a strange reality.
One of the officers approached, the others flanking him. “You may turn, inmate,” he commanded.
I did, and I was pretty pleased that I towered over all of them except the human, who was my height. It was harder for people to intimidate those taller than them. Not impossible, mind you. Just a wee bit more difficult.
“This is your uniform.”
I looked at the pale-gray bodysuit in one of the nesr-roona’s hands. It was futuristic-looking and was tight enough to be a second skin.
“You have got to be kidding me.” I said, picking it up and holding it to me.
“Change.”
“Fine. Where’s the bathroom?”
“You are not allowed facilities to change, inmate. Put on your uniform now, then you will be taken to the scanner.”
“Wait, are you serious? You guys let male guards do this?”
“Officers Klavic and Moq are female. Change!”
We had an intense stare down for several moments, but I eventually relented. I wasn’t about to win a fight between three aliens while I had a bum leg, so I might as well get over the embarrassment.
Besides, I doubt the orange and beige aliens cared if I was naked or not. To them, I was absurdly pale and squishy with weird lumps.
Slapping on my best deadpan, I set my new uniform on the ground, then slowly unbuttoned my flannel shirt. Thankfully, I was wearing a tank top under that, and I tentatively left it on. From there, I pulled down my sweatpants.
To their credit, none of the officers leered, and the human kept his eyes trained to the side wall, while only the aliens watched to make sure I didn’t try to pull anything sly.
I bent back down to pick the jumpsuit up, then stepped into it. It took a fair amount of wiggling, but the fabric seemed to stretch with my body heat until it was up to my chest. Before I put my arms in the sleeves, I zipped it up a bit, then pulled my tank top over my head without flashing my bra too much.
Thankfully, they didn’t ask me to remove my bra or notice the rectangular object held within my body’s ‘natural pocket’ as I liked to call it. Straightening myself and finishing zipping up, I tried my best to square my shoulders and not look like I was totally terrified out of my mind.
“Hands forward.”
I obeyed, holding my hands in front of me for what I assumed were going to be some high-tech handcuffs.
Sure enough, the officer slid two circles of metal over my wrist. I waited patiently, knowing that they couldn’t just be some chunky bracelets. A couple seconds later, they flashed a bright blue and then slammed together, pinning my chest uncomfortably between my arms as they shrunk to perfectly fit my wrists.
“Follow us,” was the terse order.
It took all of my strength not to roll my eyes. No, I thought I’d go on a merry stroll by my lonesome self, I snarked to myself. I had spent years learning to carefully choose my words; I wasn’t going to ruin that now by getting mouthy after a few years of freedom.
They led me out of the cell and down the hall. I surveyed the area as much as I could without spinning a full three-sixty, and my prison theory was basically one-hundred percent confirmed. I saw some of every species in every cell we passed in various stages of aggression. It seemed that prisoners weren’t separated by sexes or gender either, which was pretty interesting. I wondered if that helped or hurt compared to Earth penitentiaries.
Eventually, after what seemed like ten minutes of walking down row after row of cells, they reached a door that basically looked like it had walked off a starship. I saw the three officers scan something in their bracers, then place their thumbprint on a pad in the wall, then finally scan an eyeball. Welp, looked like I wasn’t going to be picking locks anytime soon.
Not that I knew how to pick locks, but that was beside the point.
Down more nondescript, chrome halls–although these were far dirtier and more battered than the lab I had first arrived in. Before the explosion, of course. But we passed door after door until, finally, the guards stopped and ushered me inside of another small room.
It was a bit bigger than my cell, with a chair in the center that could have possibly starred in either a horror movie or a space opera–coin toss on which–and a whole lot of equipment arranged around it. Two seirr in white jumpsuits stood ready with bigger versions of the techno-square that was currently in my brassier.
“Sit.”
I sat.
I had to admit, it was pretty uncomfortable just being still and polite as they strapped me down across my chest, waist, wrist, and ankles. I could see how someo
ne might get a little…agitated being so confined. It made me feel small. I hadn’t felt small in a long time.
I didn’t like it.
The guards took a step back once I was arranged, and the two seirr came forward, speaking amongst themselves.
“Prisoner LL-69852, presenting with leg lacerations and compression fracture. Mild smoke inhalation and dehydration. What do you recommend?”
“Rehydration, followed by mild sedative for debridement of the wound. Once sterile injury site is confirmed, rebuilder nanites for the compression fracture and a skin graft for the necessary areas of skin.”
“Very good. Go ahead and start with your course of treatment.”
I could tell the taller seirr was nervous as they approached me. It was clear this was some sort of intern or resident, and I was part of their learning experience. Great. If there was one thing I loved more than being a prisoner in an alien universe, it was being a med student’s guinea pig.
However, I was kinda jazzed about the free, super advanced healthcare.
I watched with interest as the seirr loaded a clear, liquid-filled vial into what looked like a syringe, but with no needle. They pressed the head to my wrist, then depressed the end until the vial was empty.
Nothing happened for a moment, but then a cool, soothing feeling rushed through me, and my stinging thirst faded. I guessed that was their version of an IV. It was considerably faster and didn’t involve me being tethered to a stand that liked to topple over at any point, or a machine that screamed violent beeps every time its battery got too low.
I was all set for my own little learning experience in this reality’s modern medicine when the intern began prepping another vial. Oh, right. If I remembered correctly, that was a sedative.
“I should warn you,” I said, not sure if it was relevant or not. “I’m extremely susceptible to any form of sedation or narcotic. I only need a half dose at max.” I had no idea if these future medicines were built on the same rules as my world’s remedies, but it was better to be safe than sorry. I knew it was hard to believe, considering my size and all the procedures I’ve had done in my life, but even night time cold meds could knock me out for fourteen hours.
The intern looked from me, to their mentor, to me again.
“If your patient warns you of a sensitivity, listen. Apply a half dose, then we can reassess and increase the dosage later. In instances of non-emergency, it’s always important to be safe, rather than sorry.”
I let out a small breath I hadn’t been aware I had been holding, and the seirr continued their work. Just like before, they loaded a smaller vial, then pressed it to my wrist.
The result was practically instantaneous.
One minute, I was strapped in a chair in a galaxy that was not my own, worrying about reactions to sci-fi medication, and the next, it all just…didn’t matter.
You know what I wanted? A nap. A nap sounded great. I wanted to just close my eyes and drift off into the blissful relaxation of lala land.
‘This is who she was so obsessed with?’
My brow furrowed, and it felt like my mind was moving through molasses as it figured out who that voice belonged to. Slowly, I ticked through all the people I had heard speak in the room and realized it didn’t match anyone.
I cracked my eyes open to see they were all busy doing their things. Guards guarding. Medics, uh…medicking?
‘I mean, she looks imposing.’
‘Yeah, but we spent years waiting for that machine, and this is all she used it for before blowing it to pieces?’
Wait…no one around me was talking. Why was I hearing people talk? Hallucinating voices inside of a hallucination seemed like a bit of a stretch, so one of these things had to be real, right?
My head tipped forward, and it took me longer than I would like to admit that the lead seirr was moving it around to examine it with her techno-gizmo-whatever.
“Pelli, come here, please.”
Wait. I knew that tone. Although it felt like my brain was off somewhere, lightyears behind my body, I knew that tone. It was the doctor equivalent of an ‘uh-oh,’ which was not something I wanted to hear while I was strapped down in a medical chair.
The intern left my side, where I assumed she was monitoring my vitals to make sure I had been telling the truth about my sensitivity, then joined the lead seirr at my head.
“What does this look like to you?”
“A subdermal hematoma, with a very, very slow bleed. The rings of darker blood indicate that this injury has been through several periods of growth, so I would guess childhood trauma.”
“W-wait,” I mumbled, putting all of my brain power into moving my lips. It was surprisingly difficult to coordinate my tongue and jaw at the same time. They definitely had some good drugs in space land. “S-s-subdermal hematoma? I’ve been getting c-checked since I was a kid because of chronic mi-m-mi-m…headaches.”
There was silence behind me for several beats. “You still get headaches?”
“Yeah. You say that like it’s weird.” I gasped and tried to look back at them, but it was growing increasingly difficult to move my body. “Oh, my god, did you guys cure headaches?”
More silence, then quiet conferring that I couldn’t quite catch.
“Where are you from, Prisoner LL-69852?”
“That’s a mouthful, just call me Andi.”
“Where are you from?”
I shrugged. Or at least attempted to. It was more like a confined shimmy in the chair and pulled upon my knowledge of the books I had read. “Outer world. Like out, out. Out, out, out.”
The Seirr in charge nodded to the intern, who circled back to my side and began loading up another vial into her cartridge.
“Wait, what are you doing? I’m already pretty loopy. I’m not consenting to any more d-d-drugs…” I trailed off as she pressed it to my wrist once more, and another wave of exhaustion flooded me. Certainly, it couldn’t be so bad to just stop talking and drift off for a while, right? Humming to myself, I slid down into the warm sleep enveloping me.
I could worry about what they were going to do tomorrow.
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Ralis 1st, 4702
Hello. My mother gave me this data-log today and told me I was to treat you as a diary. I do not think I need a diary, but both she and my therapist think it will help me practice my interactions with others.
I do not think I need to practice my interaction with others either. The children around me are boring, and the adults patronizing. I would rather read, draw, or play with Andi.
Now that I’m writing to you, I realize this may be a tactic to distance me from Andi. They think it odd that I, a gifted child, would still have an imaginary friend. I suppose it would be less strange to them if they knew she was real, but I do not know how to prove her veracity to them yet.
Oh, I suppose I should actually introduce myself to you. Not that you are a sentient being, but I researched how diaries are supposed to be used, and the most common utilization is to treat you as an always listening friend and confidant. I suppose that’s meant to be comforting, but I feel it makes me rather paranoid.
Either way, I will try to comply with my mother’s wishes as best I can. I know it is hard to have a child like me. Most children laugh, and joke, and squeal with delight at the colored lights of the holo-projector. But I always want to know why, and how.
Anyway, my name is Jyraxic-Vyrinnza, but you can call me Jyra. I prefer that, actually. I was born on Latier to my human mother and half-sierr father. They’re not sure if my intellectual abilities come from his side or a mutation in their genes combining, but I suppose that’s one of the few things I’m not curious about. I know I’m smart; I have too many other things to discover to worry
about why.
I’m nine-years-old, but I am aware I am not like the others around me. It doesn’t bother me too much, but sometimes it is a bit lonely. That is why I am so grateful for Andi.
I should probably tell you about her. She’s my best friend in the entire world, except I don’t think she’s really in this world at all. Don’t get me wrong, she’s real. Definitely real. She’s just… real somewhere else.
I can’t really explain it, but one day I would like to. Maybe one day I’ll be smart enough. But for now, I accept the strange world she tells me about. Apparently, their space is very far away and only special people go there. Also, all her people live on a singular planet. It’s quite fascinating in a backward kind of way, but what I love most of all is all the art she shows me.
She has books of it! Page after page of fighting, flying, and contorting figures. And they’re not depictions of light either, but rather real, actual pigmentation on a physical surface. I would give anything to hold one of those in my hands and breathe in the smell of creation and dust.
Anyway, I think that is enough talking for now. I do not want you to get bored of me right away. I find myself already projecting my personality onto you, which is quite an interesting phenomenon. I hope you don’t turn out to be a bitch.
That would be terribly disappointing.
With cautious familiarity,
Jyra
Ralis 9th, 4702
I apologize for neglecting you for so long. A lot has happened.
For starters, I got into the gifted school that my parents had applied to. I must admit, I am… less than enthusiastic. I mean, I love learning, and I am certainly excited for the abundance of learning opportunities, but I can already tell that they’re going to try to make me get rid of Andi.
And I had another meeting with my therapist. He asked if he could read my first entry – if I was comfortable with it. I agreed, of course. I have very little to hide. My father jokes that maybe one day I’ll be smart enough to learn how to lie, but I very much doubt that.
Unknown Cargo (The Meridian Crew Book 1) Page 69