Xenos paragon, p.1
Xeno's Paragon, page 1

XENO’S PARAGON
MISSION 3
BLACK OCEAN: PASSAGE OF TIME
J.S. MORIN
Copyright © 2022 J.S. Morin
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law. For permission requests, write to the publisher, addressed “Attention: Permissions Coordinator,” at the address below.
Magical Scrivener Press
www.magicalscrivener.com
Publisher’s Note: This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are a product of the author’s imagination. Locales and public names are sometimes used for atmospheric purposes. Any resemblance to actual people, living or dead, or to businesses, companies, events, institutions, or locales is completely coincidental.
Ordering Information: Special discounts are available on quantity purchases by corporations, associations, and others. For details, contact the publisher at the address above.
J.S. Morin — First Edition
ISBN: 978-1-64355-641-3
XENO’S PARAGON
MISSION 3
The walls gleamed white and clean and gave the impression that Jessie Ramsey was somewhere that cared about doing things the right way. She sat with hands folded in her lap atop freshly laundered pants. All of her felt refreshed, from her undergarments to the properly knitted bones and teeth and ligaments that no longer ached as a background sensation to her every motion. Only a nagging worry of waiting for the gotcha to sneak up and ambush her kept Jessie from truly relaxing.
“You should be receiving an invoice from Planetary Medical Services. Don’t be alarmed. Just ignore it. Once your asylum application is approved, all your medical expenses will be taken care of.” The laaku on the far side of the pristine plasticized steel desk gave a wide, reassuring smile. The nameplate read Klaree of Kethlet, and it sat between a stationary holo depicting a family of five and a propped-up plaque identifying the owner as Employee of the Year 2590 for the Ministry of Immigration and Refugee Processing, Kethlet location.
“What are my odds?” Jessie inquired. She didn’t want to get her hopes up. It wasn’t as if she’d needed organ replacement, just a basic overhaul of shoddy, first-aid-grade care and a replacement hormone regulator. Yet any expense was going to put her into debt at this point.
“Of what?” Klaree asked. “Oh, you mean of your asylum application being accepted. Don’t worry. Seriously. Don’t. An Earth Navy vessel literally broadcasted a demand for your surrender over an open comm channel. You’ll be getting top-listed as soon as I finish filling out the forms.”
Klaree tapped on a datapad as she breezed through basic questions that ranged from personal history to job skills to political affiliations.
“Logged more hours in astral as a kid than most long-haul freighter captains.”
“Planet I spent the most time on? Dunno. Earth, I guess. Basic training was the longest I ever spent in one place.”
“Never did the politics thing. Yeah. No, really. I enlisted without ever registering to vote.”
“I know my military record is classified, but I was—”
“Oh, we have your records,” Klaree cut in. Jessie blinked. “How is this surprising? Until the Dissolution, we had full access to covert ops personnel.”
Jessie leaned forward, trying to surreptitiously peer at the laaku’s datapad. “How much you got in—?”
“Everything. Right up to the court martial in absentia after your magi-temporal incident.”
At hearing that, Jessie cringed. She waggled a tentative finger toward the datapad. “Mind if I see?”
The ministry agent shrugged and turned the pad 180 degrees as she slid it across the desk. Jessie gave a cursory glance over the details. By the end, swiping down quickly as she skimmed, she found herself shaking her head and muttering, “Those assholes.”
Klaree retrieved the device when Jessie lifted her gaze. “Not my place to judge, but I tend to agree. They made it sound like you volunteered for a risky magical experiment.”
“It was not by choice.”
“Of course.” Klaree tapped away on her pad.
“What’re you writing?”
“Oh. Nothing to concern yourself with. Internal ministry datawork. Sorry.” She looked up and cleared her throat. “So, a few basics. Once your application is approved, you’ll be assigned standard housing in the refugee district. Clothing and meals are provided at no charge within the zone. Security is for your protection; you’re welcome to leave and re-enter freely, but for a high-profile case such as yourself, it’s highly advised that you remain within the secure zone.”
Jessie smirked. It was almost sweet of them. “I can look after myself.”
Klaree tapped the datapad with the backs of her fingers. “Hey, it’s boilerplate. Same spiel for youth pastors, journalists, and covert operations specialists. Bear with me. Where was I… Oh. Here we go. Um, clothing. You can wear anything you like, but blue and red are generally considered political colors these days, especially when worn on shirts, hats, and prominent accessories.”
“I was just on Echo Niner. The local Mars-leaning warlord was big on blue.”
Klaree set down the datapad, laced the fingers of her upper hands, and gave Jessie the Disapproving Mom look. “We’re talking intragalactic politics here, not a game of Parcheesi with blasters. Wear whatever you like, but be prepared for fistfights and nights in protective lockup if you parade around in red track suits.”
Jessie scoffed. “Like I’d go red.”
“Or blue. Look, I’m just here to help you through the process.”
“Sorry.” Jessie was too used to picking at the edges of rules and systems.
Klaree flashed a tight-lipped smile. “Very well. As implied, you don’t need to work while you’re here. Your basic needs will be provided for. The refugee zone includes a community center, theaters, museums, vocational training, and plenty of outdoor space. But if you like, you can find work and plan for a future beyond the zone.”
“Vocational training?”
“With your background, corporate security or consulting could put you in high demand. However, given your current status, you may prefer something with less exposure.”
“Maybe….”
“Well, that’s about it. The rest you can find on the local omni or stop by to ask anyone in the ministry for assistance.” Klaree opened a desk drawer, pulled out another datapad, and slid it over to Jessie.
Jessie turned the datapad over in her hands. She wasn’t one to drool over A-tech toys, but this was beyond top-of-the-line from five years ago. “JaighTech? Wow.”
“They’re a sponsor. Consider it a present for one of the birthdays you missed.”
Jessie snickered without glancing away from the screen as she flew through the baseline setup and personalization script.
“Any questions?”
Jessie blinked and left the datapad to wonder about her musical tastes. “Um. Yeah. Actually. Why you guys still operating all in English? I get it having a human-speaker interviewing me, but all the signs the whole way here are still in my species’ language.”
Klaree sighed. “You wouldn’t believe the number of humans who don’t even know laaku have languages of our own. But the answer to your question is twofold. We’re still part of a multi-species alliance, and English is by far the most commonly spoken among all the member races of LoIP. But worse, I don’t think most of us had realized how many laaku didn’t speak even Kejathi.”
“Wow. And I felt like a slacker barely knowing how to buy breakfast in Kejathi.”
“There’s a committee to develop a true galactic language. Pronounceable by all species. No inherent biases or cultural underpinnings.”
“Nice,” Jessie replied, not knowing how else to respond. She cleared her throat. “Um. When should I expect to hear about my asylum approval?”
Klaree grinned. “I’d been trying to stall you on that question. Usually, it takes—” The laaku social worker’s datapad dinged. “Aha.”
“Aha, what?”
“I told you I was top-listing you.” She stood and offered a handshake across the desk. Jessie shook, still slightly confused. “Congratulations. You’re officially a Phabian resident under the protection of the League of Independent Planets.”
Jessie stood, unsure what to do. She had plans for how to survive until her application had been bounced around enough to find someone with the authority and courage to take a chance on sheltering her from Earth’s predations. “You… you couldn’t have finished that application fifteen minutes ago.”
“Welcome to a new way of doing business. This is Phabian. We’re done fucking around.”
As Eric entered the interview room, he noticed several things. For one, the room was exceptionally clean. Shiny, white walls looked freshly built just to greet him. The runes scrawled in long lines all around the room’s perimeter caught his eye next. In the middle of the rather small office was a desk with a friendly-looking laaku waiting for him. But the final thing Eric noted was the presence of two ssentuadi flanking the door just inside the room.
Eric stuck out his tongue and waggled it at each of the door guards, then hissed a polite greeting. Both guards inclined their heads in acknowledgment.
“Didn
“I kept it brief. My pronunciation is a little horrific.”
“Wizard Eric, do you understand what we’re doing here today?”
“It’s not wizard, actually. Just Eric is fine.”
The interviewer fiddled with a datapad a moment. “My mistake, Mr. Ramsey.”
“Eric. Like rice with the ‘e’ at the front but pronounced differently.”
“As you prefer. Eric, do you know why you’re here?”
Eric looked all around for clues but didn’t spot anything that altered his initial impressions. “Well, based on the runes, I’d imagine you’re worried I might break all the tech in a ten-block radius.”
“A precaution. We don’t have so many wizards come through here that we have gradations of interview room.”
Eric nodded along. “Well, I wasn’t planning to do any magic, so it shouldn’t matter how pompous the runes look.”
“As a general rule, we don’t try to use technology to ID the magically proficient. So, we’re going to run through a few quick questions.”
“OK.” This sounded easier than he’d been led to believe the asylum process would be. Figgy was going to get an earful for making him worry.
“Full name?”
He hadn’t inflected his voice upward, which called into question the legitimacy of the query. Eric banked on this not being the kind of quiz with tricks like that and answered the implied “what is your” as if it had been tacked onto the beginning. “Eric Clapton Ramsey.”
“Date of birth?”
“January 3rd.”
“Year.”
Eric huffed a sigh. “I was hoping you weren’t going to ask that.”
“It’s a straightforward question.”
“Yeah, but I traveled five years forward in time. I’m twenty-two years old. I think. But if that’s true, did I drag my birth date forward with me? It was a clean five-year jump, so the date should have stayed put. But did I move the year?” He noticed the laaku tapping on his datapad. “What are you writing down?”
“It’s basic math.”
“Basic? My timeline has an aneurysm in it. I consulted a licensed philosopher and couldn’t get a solid answer on what year I was born.”
“We’re calling it ’64. On my authority.”
A sigh left Eric sagging in his seat. “Thank you. I can’t tell you how much of a relief that is.”
“Indeed. ANYWAY, let’s move on. Do you believe yourself to be the same Eric Ramsey sought by Earth’s Convocation?”
Well, if that wasn’t a nesting doll of a question… “How many of us are there?”
The interviewer—oh, there was a nametag on his desk; his name was Gunthi—tapped away. “I’m jotting down a yes. Do you fear for your safety if you return to Earth?”
“I can’t really say what they’ll do to me.”
“But you’re afraid of it.”
“I try not to be unduly biased against the unknown.”
“But you fled your homeworld—”
“I’ve only lived on Earth for school.”
“You fled your species’ ancestral homeworld rather than find out.”
Eric shrugged an indifferent affirmative. “I guess so. When you put it like that.”
Gunthi stood and walked to the far wall of the room, taking his datapad with him. “Very well. It’s all a formality anyway. Your request was pre-approved; I just needed to verify your identity.” He touched a spot on the wall, and a previously invisible seam appeared as a panel opened. Gunthi tucked the datapad inside and shut it. “Now we’re just going to perform a basic magical assessment.”
“A test?”
“There’s no pass or failure. More of a measurement.”
The two ssentuadi approached. Gunthi reached into his desk and pulled out a fist-sized cube—his fist, not Gunthi’s—upon which someone had carved a rune into each face.
“Alphabet blocks in Sanskrit?”
“Eric, these runes each represent a different level of influence. Try to see how many of them you can light. These two proctors will attempt to thwart your efforts.”
“When do we start?”
“Any time you like.”
Phabian, as a whole, was a wet wipe of a planet when it came to magic. It was soaked in science, spongy, resistant. Every arcane effort felt like you needed to rinse your brain afterward. Nevertheless, Eric lifted the cube and studied the faces. It was gibberish. Like trying to find literary merit in an eye chart. One of the runes, it seemed, was practically trying to light itself.
“Does speed matter?” He hadn’t tried anything yet. He hoped his ssentuadi proctors knew that.
“No. Just light as many as you can.”
“Do they get in trouble if I win?”
Gunthi shook his head. “This is just an assessment.”
He said that, but Eric wondered if that was just for the sake of getting an accurate result. After all, if Gunthi admitted these two poor working wizards were one bad performance away from getting fired, maybe Eric would go easy on them. Or, maybe, because a lot of Convocation wizards hated the ssentuadi, Gunthi didn’t want to rouse any latent bloodlust that might skew the results.
After a moment’s debate where Eric tried to look puzzled by the cube, he finally just gave in and decided to let supernature take its course.
Just light them all. Not too bright; just enough to tell they’re lit.
Gunthi gasped. The proctors hissed their surprise.
“What?” Eric asked as he set the cube down to balance precariously on one point. He gave a gentle twist to set it spinning, letting everyone see all six sides as it revolved. Then he noticed that Gunthi wasn’t paying attention to the cube at all. Turning in his chair, he followed the gaze of the ssentuadi as well.
All the runes around the room were glowing.
“Dammit!” Eric exclaimed. “Sorry!”
Not those! Turn those off.
The runes in the wall went dark. A pop and crackle sounded from the far wall. Smoke leaked from the hidden panel, outlining the edges.
In a panic, Gunthi leapt into motion. He opened the hiding place and coughed as a billow of smoke escaped. When he pulled out the datapad, he held it between thumb and forefinger, scorched and blackened.
“Give it a minute,” Eric said with a cringe. “Maybe it’ll be OK.”
Gunthi set the ruined device on his desk. “It happens. We’re practically made of datapads around here.”
Eric brightened. “Really?”
“No. Not really. But I’ll requisition another and fill in your file from memory, along with the results of this assessment. You’re free to go.”
“Super!”
“However, there are some reporters who’d like to speak to you. Is that all right?”
“I’m all asylumed up, right?”
“Yes.”
“Sure, then. Sounds like the least I can do.”
The two proctors escorted him out a side door as Eric tugged the wrinkles from his shirt.
The interview room was a peculiar combination of cozy and huge. Eric’s ssentuadi escorts guided him to a pair of plush chairs with a low circular table between them. One of the chairs contained a laaku with slicked-back scalp fur and a snazzy business suit. The other, he presumed, was for him. What seemed out of place were the rows upon rows of simpler chairs that rose like a wave ready to crash onto the low theater stage whereupon Eric’s and the laaku’s chairs rested.
A woman in a pink rhinestone jumpsuit with matching lower gloves bustled out, tapping at her datagoggles. They looked expensive, so Eric tried super hard not to do anything that might fuzzle them. “We’re on in two minutes. Relax your instinct to blur the cameras. Sit. You can cross your legs or not, but don’t sit with them spread. We’re going for an all-ages rating, so anytime you curse, we’re going to have to trim it from the galactic feed. Do you have an agent?”
“No.”
“Blasty. Pablek, you good?”
“As always,” the slick-furred laaku replied with an ease that sounded second nature to him.
As this exchange was going on, doors at the rear of the theater had opened, pouring in an audience comprised mainly of laaku but with a token human or tesud here and there.












