psl: polychromatic AU | stargazers
May. 5th, 2013 09:35 pm[On the top of the hill, Pai feels like she can reach up and touch the stars. Lying on her back, the grass scratchy on the back of her neck, she stares up at the sky.
She reaches an arm up and covers one of the stars with her thumb. Look, brother! I made another star fall! Except it's still there; all she has to do is move her hand. She doesn't have to kill anyone anymore. Neither of them do.
Hei isn't comfortable here. He's fallen into the habit of paranoia. He doesn't trust the peace, doesn't remember who he is outside of the Syndicate's control. He's so very human in that respect. Pai isn't bothered by the uncertainty. It's irrational to worry about something so completely out of her control.
Instead of making the stars fall, she can make them into stories. She traces shapes in the sky -- finding a bear, a swan, a man dancing. It's a silly exercise, but important. The mind is a muscle like any other; it requires a variety of exercises. It needs whimsey & rationality, exertion & rest.]
熊...
She reaches an arm up and covers one of the stars with her thumb. Look, brother! I made another star fall! Except it's still there; all she has to do is move her hand. She doesn't have to kill anyone anymore. Neither of them do.
Hei isn't comfortable here. He's fallen into the habit of paranoia. He doesn't trust the peace, doesn't remember who he is outside of the Syndicate's control. He's so very human in that respect. Pai isn't bothered by the uncertainty. It's irrational to worry about something so completely out of her control.
Instead of making the stars fall, she can make them into stories. She traces shapes in the sky -- finding a bear, a swan, a man dancing. It's a silly exercise, but important. The mind is a muscle like any other; it requires a variety of exercises. It needs whimsey & rationality, exertion & rest.]
熊...
(no subject)
Date: 2013-05-09 01:45 am (UTC)[She leans over her brother to get a better look at Chekov, her face a perfect picture of excitement.]
How? What's it like?
[Look at that innocent excitement, Hei. You have nothing to worry about!]
(no subject)
Date: 2013-05-09 02:20 am (UTC)I haven't been in space that much, but the stars are remarkable when you can look at them without atmospheric interference. Extraterrestrial life? [He shrugs and smiles at Pai.] I like the humanoids I have met, but the plants and I don't get along.
(no subject)
Date: 2013-05-09 02:30 am (UTC)[ He offers Pavel a look over Pai's head, eyebrow raised. ]
There are 'Fantastic Flora' forms of alien life too?
(no subject)
Date: 2013-05-09 02:46 am (UTC)She leans a little against her brother and gives Chekov a bright eyed look of total interest. Yes, please, say more!]
(no subject)
Date: 2013-05-09 03:18 am (UTC)Of course there's alien flora. A friend of mine keeps several exotic alien plant species and they hate me.
(no subject)
Date: 2013-05-09 08:46 am (UTC)[ However, Pavel's explanation makes Hei curious despite himself, ]
How can a plant hate you? [ Congratulations, he now has images of a bloodthirsty kudzu and slavering planimals. ]
(no subject)
Date: 2013-05-09 11:40 am (UTC)They're alien plants. Maybe they have a central nervous system?
[She looks back to Chekov for confirmation or explanation.]
(no subject)
Date: 2013-05-10 01:40 am (UTC)All plants have rudimentary nervous systems, but some alien plants are more advanced than their Terran counterparts. None of them have brains that I know of--not so far as Sulu has told me. He doesn't think that his plants are capable of hating me.
(no subject)
Date: 2013-05-10 02:48 am (UTC)[ Even away from the war, Hei isn't sure how to let go of that fact. ]
[ To Chekov, he says, almost dryly, ] Are you sure you're not imagining the hatred? They don't shrivel and die when you come near them. Right?
(no subject)
Date: 2013-05-10 02:50 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2013-05-10 05:40 am (UTC)They shrivel and die if I try to take care of them. I feel that plants can tell when someone who is bad at keeping them alive is near.
[Pai throws him off.]
I suppose so...
(no subject)
Date: 2013-05-10 07:06 am (UTC)[ He makes a mock-punchy face at Pai -- Little Miss Pocket Encyclopedia -- although she certainly has a point. To Pavel, ] If they're sentient, maybe it's your stress they're sensing. Some plants supposedly give off ethylene to warn each other of trouble. [ Thoughtfully, ] In your case, it may have been a mass suicide.
[ Poisonings and felo-de-se flora. Clearly the siblings are the most charming dinner companions. ]
(no subject)
Date: 2013-05-10 11:43 am (UTC)That doesn't make any sense.
[For all that Pai appears to be the more sensitive of the two siblings, there are certain things that, as a Contractor, she is fundamentally incapable of understanding, and suicide is one of them.]
Maybe they just missed your friend. [Not that she understands dying of loneliness either, but she knows it's possible. She's seen it in her brother.]
(no subject)
Date: 2013-05-10 11:15 pm (UTC)That could be so.
[He would like to talk about stars again, please.]
(no subject)
Date: 2013-05-11 10:50 am (UTC)[ It's not a time he wants to remember. Not now. ]
[ Taking a sip from his coffee cup, he belatedly reads Pavel's discomfort for what it is, and changes the subject, ] Have you ever encountered those 'diamond stars' astronomers discovered, back in 2004? I've always wondered if they were a hoax.
(no subject)
Date: 2013-05-11 12:55 pm (UTC)Fortunately, diamond stars prove an adequate distraction.]
Diamond stars?
(no subject)
Date: 2013-05-11 11:05 pm (UTC)I haven't encountered one personally, but they are not uncommon. All they are is dead stars... compressed carbon, mostly. The stars must be massive to create a significant amount of carbon because it's a relatively heavy element, but it happens.
(no subject)
Date: 2013-05-12 02:20 am (UTC)If those stars were accessible, think of the booming diamond trade you'd have in space. Slave traders and pirates. [ Relax, that's a joke. ]
[ ........Well. Maybe not the space-pirates. ]
(no subject)
Date: 2013-05-12 02:43 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2013-05-12 04:04 am (UTC)They are accessible, although I don't believe the Federation has ever mined such a star. The Orions--and some of them are pirates--are far more interested in them. Gemstones are not so valuable in the future as they are now on Earth.
[Pai gets the same kind of smile that a teacher's favorite inquisitive student might get.]
They should look the same. Diamonds, however or wherever they are formed, come in every color, depending on what, besides carbon, composes them. Maybe some stars would produce exotic colors, since some parts of space are rich in elements that show up only in traces on Earth.
(no subject)
Date: 2013-05-12 11:59 am (UTC)[ (Granted, Hei's not so crazy he’ll zap someone for smiling too long at his sister. But he has his moments.) ]
[ Appropriating a grilled cheese sandwich for himself, he asks Pavel, ] So what is the most valuable commodity of the future? [ To Pai, at a softer register, ] He's right. The carbanados -- black diamonds -- in South America are supposedly extraterrestrial in origin. Their spectra don't match signatures for earth's hydrogen and nitrogen, but those in interstellar space. There's a theory they were brought by a meteor.
(no subject)
Date: 2013-05-12 12:53 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2013-05-12 07:51 pm (UTC)But Pavel isn't paying that much attention to the nuances of Hei's behavior (although he does snag a cookie with a quick thank you and nibble on gingerbread feet). The most valuable commodity of the future? That's quite a question.]
Dilithium crystals, I would say, but value is relative. The Halkans, for example, live on a dilithium-rich planet and have no use for the mineral. For the Federation and Klingon Empire, the crystals are necessary to spaceflight, and so we value them very highly.
(no subject)
Date: 2013-05-13 03:48 pm (UTC)[ But more for Pai's sake than his own, Hei tamps it down. ]
[ Pavel gets a look that borders on bright-eyed, ] Never heard of dilithium crystals. But I think I know what might've been their precursor. Back in our [ funny, how easily he slips into We and Us with Pai here ] homeworld, astrophysicists were using deuterium and LI6 -- stable isotopes of hydrogen metal lithium -- in crystal form for fuel. [ Realizing he's getting too technical, he simplifies his words for Pai's sake. ] It had the capacity to take spaceships to Mars in roughly two months. A big deal in those days.
[ More quietly, ] But whether they'd get past the Gate was the real question.
(no subject)
Date: 2013-05-13 04:20 pm (UTC)Pavel's enthusiasm reminds her of Hei when they were both younger, and even if she doesn't understand a lot of what Hei says at first, she's happy that he has someone he can be a science nerd with. It's been years since she's heard her brother chatter about science like he used to.]
Does everybody in your world travel in space?
[They have to, if these dilithium crystals are more valuable than jewels in his world. Very few people know about or care about deuterium and L16 in their world.]
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