Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

Prime Directive
Prime Directive
Prime Directive
Ebook382 pages4 hours

Prime Directive

Rating: 0 out of 5 stars

()

Read preview

About this ebook

Brace yourself for an electrifying saga of moral quandaries, superhuman species, and interstellar battles that will ignite your imagination!

Ezekiel, an android with a copy of a human brain, has emotions and a sense of humor that make him unique among the AI crew members of the star ship, Delphi. His fellow AIs are strictly logical and follow rigid rules that prevent them using their extraordinary powers to interfere with or harm other races. Those rules are tested on Trappist-1, a star system shackled by oppression and injustice. The Delphi’s newest crew member, a compassionate human empath, urges them to violate their rules and aid the oppressed population. Ezekiel agonizes over the dilemma. When a fleet of predatory aliens arrives to plunder the planets’ resources, he and the crew must choose—stay and fight or follow their Prime Directive and leave.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateNov 7, 2023
ISBN9781941271421
Prime Directive

Related to Prime Directive

Related ebooks

Science Fiction For You

View More

Related articles

Reviews for Prime Directive

Rating: 0 out of 5 stars
0 ratings

0 ratings0 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

    Book preview

    Prime Directive - Casey Dorman

    "The Prime Directive is not just a set of rules; it is a philosophy...and a very correct one. History has proven again and again that whenever mankind interferes with a less developed civilization, no matter how well intentioned that interference may be, the results are invariably disastrous."

    —Jean-Luc Picard, Captain of the Starship USS Enterprise (NCC-1701-D) Stardate 41986.0, Star Trek: The Next Generation*

    *(Star Trek: The Next Generation Quotes. Quotes.net. STANDS4 LLC, 2022. Web. 30 Jul 2022. <https://www.quotes.net/mquote/864039>.)

    Navigation Page

    Chapter 1

    Chapter 2

    Chapter 3

    Chapter 4

    Chapter 5

    Chapter 6

    Chapter 7

    Chapter 8

    Chapter 9

    Chapter 10

    Chapter 11

    Chapter 12

    Chapter 13

    Chapter 14

    Chapter 15

    Chapter 16

    Chapter 17

    Chapter 18

    Chapter 19

    Chapter 20

    Chapter 21

    Chapter 22

    Chapter 23

    Chapter 24

    Chapter 25

    Chapter 26

    Chapter 27

    Chapter 28

    Chapter 29

    Chapter 30

    Chapter 31

    Chapter 32

    Chapter 33

    Chapter 34

    Chapter 35

    Chapter 36

    Chapter 37

    Chapter 38

    Chapter 39

    Chapter 40

    Chapter 41

    Chapter 42

    Chapter 43

    Chapter 44

    Chapter 45

    About The Author

    Ezekiel rubbed his thumb along the spine of the ancient book, a relic of a time when books were things to be held—items of heft and texture. He turned it face up, its dog-eared pages falling open to a familiar passage, an old friend returning. Snail, snail, glister me forward, / Bird, soft-sigh me home. / Worm, be with me. / This is my hard time. The words from Theodore Roethke’s The Lost Son echoed in his mind, their specter of death a phantom that lurked in the depths of every human mind. Memories of an earlier life, his own as a flesh and blood being, pressed against the door to his consciousness, threatening to intrude, to turn his thoughts inward. His mind, emergent from his silicon circuitry, was human, his circuits an exact copy of the brain of Professor Ezekiel Job, the scientist and neurosurgeon who had invented him, whose memory and personality were his—but otherwise, he was a machine. His life as a human had been limited, an instant swallowed by the immensity of time. Thoughtful humans asked why. What meaning could be gleaned from such a brief sojourn? Such thoughts belonged to his past, his childhood, his adult life in the 21st century—two hundred years ago. They haunted him, just as they had the poet, but they no longer applied to him.

    He slid the book into the top drawer of his desk, then exited his cabin. It wasn’t that he didn’t want the other crew members to see the text, but they wouldn’t understand—not poetry, not books, not the innermost thoughts of humans. Why would they? They lived, like him, as machines—brilliant, inquisitive, even moral— but unlike him, they’d never experienced life as a human.

    He took his seat in the semicircle facing the ship’s visiscreen, the last crew member to arrive on the Delphi’s bridge. No one asked his whereabouts. They accepted his moments alone. Could artificially intelligent robots understand loneliness? They comprehended the concept, but the feeling—the ache of being alone, the primordial fear of abandonment, the terror of utter uniqueness in the universe—they had no way of understanding that as he did.

    In front of them, Hypatia, tall and sleek, her sable ponytail cascading like a mane across one shoulder, leaned over the control console. Her hands resting on the arms of her pilot’s chair, she used her mental connection with the ship’s computer to change the image on the screen above her, causing the interminable lines of data to disappear, replaced by a panorama of black space, a void dotted with pinpoints of light—thousands of them. Hypatia served as the Delphi’s pilot, her electronic mind connected to the ship’s onboard computer. Even the captain’s commands to the ship went through her. She moved the cursor across the screen, then stopped, the dot metamorphosing into a square, then enlarging until a dim orange star emerged at its center. That’s it. Ross 128, she said.

    Hero, the Delphi’s diminutive captain, stood and peered intently at the screen. The image is optical, not virtual—right, Hypatia? The captain was forthright, tough-minded, scientific, and logical, a proven warrior and leader, as well as the Solar system’s leading biologist. Despite their many clashes, Ezekiel respected him and was glad to be serving in his crew.

    Hypatia turned to him, her dark ponytail flipping to her other shoulder. She had a long, oval face, a straight Greek nose, and almond-shaped brown eyes. Her complexion was a deep chestnut color, darker than the ivory, olive, or almond skin of her fellow crew members. Like every crew member, except Ezekiel, she had chosen her visage, as well as her gender, after she had been created. She was tall like the men, dressing in a thigh-length Greek-style chiton as they did, rather than the floor-length dress worn by women. She was a mathematician and scientist, not an artist or poet, the occupations chosen by most females in the Solarian culture. She was the fleet’s only female pilot and one of its best mechanics when those skills were needed. It’s optical, sir, she said. We’re no longer at warp speed, so our optical sensors are functional. We’re seven million miles away from the star. The planet we’re headed for, Ross 128b, is just over five million miles from the star and has a slightly eccentric orbit. Right now, it’s 1.8 million miles from us. I’ve switched to the magnetoplasm engine, so our Euclidean Warp Drive’s energy won’t endanger the planet. Their warp drive, with its voracious appetite for energy, could consume a whole world, and the accumulated particles and energy in the contracted space ahead of it would form a deadly explosive discharge when the ship dropped back into normal space and sub-light speed, with a belch of energy that could obliterate anything in its path.

    Good job, Hypatia, Ezekiel said. Destroying the first planet we intend to visit just seems wrong, somehow.

    Hero frowned at him. Hypatia rolled her dark eyes. Ezekiel gazed back at them. Would his fellow crew members ever develop a sense of humor? He might as well ask a biosensor to develop empathy.

    Hero, their stocky captain, paced the bridge. His short legs moved in powerful, choppy strides as he surveyed the image on the visiscreen. Like all members of the Solarian race, the androids who occupied the Solar System after the extinction of human beings on Earth, he dressed in the attire of ancient Greeks. Keep taking readings, Hypatia, Hero said. As soon as we’re close enough, we need to find out if 128b is inhabited.

    The tall woman knitted her forehead, a typical Solarian expression of confusion. But it must be, sir. We’ve visited it before.

    The captain stopped mid-stride. That was in another universe. There’s no guarantee things will be the same here. He glanced at his chief engineer. Am I right, Euclid?

    The chief engineer, characteristically disheveled, hair askew and spots of grease on his chiton, gazed at the ceiling, his eyes darting back and forth as if scanning an invisible computer screen. No guarantee, but the likelihood is 99.863% according to my calculations. Of course, that’s an approximation. There are still some unknowns in my equations.

    Ezekiel suppressed his urge to laugh. There were times when Euclid really did seem like a calculating machine. He was an autistic savant, the solar system’s most gifted mathematician, an artificially intelligent Einstein, complete with the distraction, vagueness, and inattention to ordinary details of life that had characterized the 20th century genius.

    Hero frowned. Whatever the likelihood, we must prepare for the unknown. Complacency could be fatal.

    It’s inhabited, Hypatia said, her eyes glued to the biosensor readout. And they’re sentient.

    Ezekiel clenched his fists, a habit left over from his human origin. The parallel universe inhabitants of Ross 128b had been human. That’s why the Delphi had returned to it. Let them be human again. He gazed up at the visiscreen. What else can you tell us about the planet, Hypatia?

    The tall female pilot was absorbed in the readings from the bank of sensors displayed above her. I’m picking up widely dispersed radio signals. It fits the pattern of a population living in small groups. On the dark side, there are clusters of lights, suggesting more population centers, none of them near the size of those as on Earth in the days of the humans.

    Aha! Villages! Menander’s eyes lit up. He was the ship’s historian and an expert on human civilizations. In assuming his identity as a historian, he’d also adopted the visage of an old, bearded sage.

    Radio signals, lights, villages. That meant people, although people who lived in far different circumstances from Ezekiel’s forebears on Earth. Like many planets within the habitable zone of their stars, Ross 128b was tidally locked. A celestial yin and yang, one of its hemispheres lay perpetually in darkness, the other in light. But unlike many tidally locked planets, its dark side was not a frozen no-man’s-land, nor its bright side a burnt and blackened inferno, like the imaginary Niflheim and Muspelheim from the Norse legends Ezekiel had learned in childhood. Its ample atmosphere, great expanses of water, and temperature differences from one side to the other, engendered strong wind and water currents, which served to moderate conditions on both sides of the planet, making them both habitable. In the parallel universe, they’d found the atmosphere breathable, hospitable to life.

    There’s a clearing near a village on the bright side where we can land. Hypatia turned to Hero. It’s near where we landed in the other universe, and it’s within walking distance to the village.

    Good. Make preparations for landing. Hero turned to Ezekiel. We’ll let you make the first contact, Ezekiel. You’re more like them than any of the rest of us.

    Hero’s words made him gulp or would have if he were still human. I hope you’re right, he said, uncomfortably aware that his similarity to humans didn’t make him identical to one. How much do we want to share with them about ourselves? Do we tell them we’re machines? Both he and the other Solarians so closely resembled humans that another race would probably never suspect they were robots. He, himself, wasn’t just a copy of his creator’s brain. The body he’d chosen perfectly resembled the six-foot, dark-eyed, brown-haired Professor Ezekiel Job.

    Remember, our instructions are not to interfere in the internal affairs or development of another civilization, Isidore said. The round-faced woman, her gray-flecked hair undulating in waves down her back, acted as the ship’s philosopher. Her words referred to the unwritten Prime Directive given to them from the Solarian Assembly, their civilization’s ruling body. In addition to not interfering in local affairs, they had been told to not reveal any technology, either related to their spacecraft or themselves, more advanced than that of the local culture. The aim of their mission was to observe, not to cause change.

    We are unable to lie, Hero reminded them all.

    Speak for yourself, Ezekiel said. Unlike the Solarians, he didn’t have the inability to lie built into his brain. How could he if his brain was human? For humans, lying was as natural as getting out of bed in the morning. Okay, so he didn’t get out of bed or even go to bed, but lying still came naturally to him, when it was needed.

    So, we have a dilemma, Hero said. Letting them know we’re machines, and that we can travel faster than the speed of light, violates our Prime Directive. On the other hand, to tell them anything else would mean we lie, which any of us but Ezekiel is unable to do.

    I’d say a 350-foot-tall spaceship landing in their midst is pretty much a giveaway that we didn’t arrive from the next village, Ezekiel said. And if they have any astronomy at all, they’ll know that we didn’t come from within their star system, since they’re the only planet that orbits their star.

    Hypatia turned to the captain. So, we might as well be honest. Anything less than honesty will only undermine our relationship with these people.

    Hero nodded. Let’s not forget that this isn’t the same universe, and whoever lives on this planet isn’t actually the same as those people we met before. They may not be as friendly. They could even be hostile. He turned to Antonitis, the broad-shouldered, bearded lieutenant in charge of the small contingent of soldiers, who also doubled as the ship’s lab technicians. Have your men be ready, just in case we need to defend ourselves.

    My men are always ready, sir, Antonitis said. The burly lieutenant had served under Hero in the Mycenaean war. He idolized the captain, and he kept his soldiers and their equipment in top condition, though no one expected to have to use them in a military capacity. Ezekiel knew that Hero kept Antonitis on a tight leash, the military man being a little too ready to jump into a fray.

    Hearing the request and answer, Isidore turned around, directing a warning look at the captain. We don’t want to appear hostile. Hostility provokes hostility. As the Delphi’s philosopher, Isidore had a duty to remind them of the ethical principles applicable to each situation they encountered. Following those principles was a commitment every Solarian shared.

    Frowning, Hero resumed his pacing. We won’t provoke anyone. The soldiers will remain on the ship, but I want them to be ready in case they’re needed.

    Why don’t we send them a message, sir? Hypatia said. I can tap into their communication system.

    The captain stopped pacing and sat, turning away from Isidore. Ezekiel, what do you recommend? What should we say?

    The same as before, sir. ‘We come in peace,’ and give them Sol’s stellar coordinates.

    Hero turned back to Hypatia. Go ahead.

    I just sent it, sir. She stared at the communication console, then looked up, eyes wide with surprise. She turned to face the others. You all need to see this. She transferred the output from the radio sensors to the big screen. On the dark side of the planet, lights blinked off. Radio signals shut down one by one on both the dark and bright sides. Ross 128b was transforming into a dark and silent sphere.

    The crew stared at each other.

    Hero’s gaze went from one crew member to another. Does anybody know what’s happening?

    They may not have been expecting us, but they were expecting someone, Menander said.

    What do you mean? Hero said.

    They were ready for our signal. As soon as it appeared, they tried to hide their locations. It’s only a guess. He looked at Ezekiel. What do you think?

    A message from space should have been a shock, he said. An unexpected event that would create mayhem, confusion, and planet-wide communication, everyone trying to figure out if it’s real and what it means. Instead, they’re taking cover. I agree with Menander. They were expecting something—or someone—who they think could be a threat.

    What do we do? Hero looked at him.

    Ezekiel gulped—a persistent vestigial human reaction he couldn’t seem to get rid of. As cultural officer, first communication with an alien race was his responsibility. Do just as we planned. Land the ship and learn who these people are and what they’re expecting.

    Hero searched the faces of his officers. Everyone nodded in agreement. Okay. We’ll land in the spot Hypatia picked out. Let’s see how different this world is from the one we visited before. He fastened his seat belt then leaned back in his chair. Hypatia, take her down.

    The slender nose of the Delphi rose above the green canopy of thick trees, like the shiny tip of a giant dagger. The bright light of Ross 128 reflected off its smooth surface. Below, Ezekiel and the rest of the ship’s officers walked in a slow procession along the narrow road that wound from their landing site toward the village. Neither he nor any of the others carried weapons. The ship’s ten soldiers, plus Lieutenant Antonitis, remained with the vessel.

    Beneath their feet, the road was narrow, paved with rectangularly-shaped flat stones, giving it a cobblestone-like surface reminding him of the streets and alleyways of Beacon Hill in Boston, his one-time home. The street was empty. No one had come from the village to witness their landing. Along both sides of the road, one-story wooden houses stood, gates unlatched and doors ajar, as if their occupants had fled in haste. Bicycles and small, solar-powered vehicles sat idle next to houses. In a small, graveled lot, a collection of single-seat double-winged vehicles sat unattended, resembling large flying insects at rest. Near the center of town, they encountered several two-story buildings, some brick, some wooden-sided. Rows of windows covered their top floors and glass-front shops below displayed clothing, hardware, and house supplies but were empty of customers. Just before the town center, they passed through an open market, several of the stalls still displaying their wares—meat, fish, and fruit—artfully arranged to appeal to shoppers who had completely deserted the premises. By the time they reached the square in the center of town, they had yet to encounter a single soul.

    Hypatia switched her attention to the remote sensor display programmed into a corner of her visual field, her thick eyebrows knitted in concentration. There are people among the trees and buildings at the edge of the square.

    Putting out a hand, Hero signaled them to stop. Standing in the center of the square, the captain’s pale blue eyes scanned the area’s perimeter of brightly painted wooden and brick buildings. Between and behind them grew dense clusters of flowering trees, a profusion of green, red, and yellow—a welcoming setting, but empty of people. Be ready to defend yourselves, but remember our mission is peaceful.

    Ezekiel waited and watched with the others. Slowly, human heads peeked around the corners of the buildings. In the groves of trees, branches moved, their leaves rustling as they were pushed aside. Flashes of clothing showed briefly though the green curtain of foliage. Ezekiel’s amplified hearing picked up the sounds of whispers, indistinct but tinged with anxiety. They are afraid.

    Hero looked at him. If they’re afraid, how do we approach them?

    With seven of us and probably a thousand of them, I don’t recommend trying to chase them down. If we wait long enough, they’ll approach us.

    Hero raised an eyebrow, then looked over at Menander. Do you agree? Waiting wasn’t their leader’s strong suit.

    Ezekiel knows his race. Humans are curious. The historian smiled. If we approach them, they’ll retreat further into the forest, but if we wait, they’ll come to us.

    They could come out armed, Ezekiel said. If the people on Ross 128b were like those on Earth, they could well have a tendency to shoot first and ask questions later.

    Hero shrugged and relaxed his shoulders. We’ll deal with that when it happens.

    The ambiguous phrase made Ezekiel squint, but he remained relaxed. From what he’d seen so far, this looked like a fairly undeveloped society, and the Solarians’ titanium bodies and ability to move at accelerated speeds would probably protect them. They’d deliberately not carried their weapons, which were more advanced than anything these people would have.

    After nearly an hour, a small knot of young men stepped from behind one of the buildings and edged into the square, shoulder to shoulder, a Roman-like phalanx moving as one toward the seven Delphi crew members. All eight of the men wore short pants, their dark upper torsos bare or covered by light shirts. They carried long rifles, all pointed at the crew. Each of the men, stone-faced, jaws clenched in defiance, scanned the perimeter of the square with narrowed eyes.

    They’re wondering if there are more of us.

    When they’d closed the distance from the Solarians to ten feet, they stopped, rifles at ready.

    Who are you? The bare-chested, muscular young man who spoke had black, curly hair that matched his dark skin. He kept his feet planted firmly apart and his rifle aimed at Hero, who stood in front of the members of his crew. The muscles of the man’s jaw bulged as he clenched his teeth. His finger twitched nervously on the trigger of the gun. Despite the resolve in the set of his jaw, his wide eyes betrayed his fear.

    We’re not enemies, Hero said, the universal translator in his brain automatically converting his words into their speech. We have no weapons.

    Where are you from? The man’s eyes darted back and forth from one crew member to another.

    Our home is a planet very distant from here.

    The man’s face showed no evidence of surprise. You have escaped?

    Ezekiel could see that the captain was baffled by the man’s question.

    What do you mean? Hero asked.

    Did you escape, or have you come to conquer us?

    The captain glanced at Ezekiel inquiringly, but the former human shrugged in puzzlement.

    You talk to him, Hero said, a look of frustration on his face.

    As soon as Ezekiel opened his mouth to speak, the man swung his rifle around, aiming it directly at this new target. His finger continued to move nervously on the trigger. His feet shifted.

    Chill. The phrase, an idiom from the 21st century, escaped Ezekiel’s mouth involuntarily. The young man stared at him uncomprehendingly. At least he hadn’t shot them. Ezekiel rephrased his statement. Calm down. We don’t understand your question. What did you mean, ‘did we escape?’

    The man looked equally confused. Aren’t you the voices our seer heard from space?

    Your seer? His understanding of the conversation was rapidly descending into incomprehension.

    Our seer senses all. She heard your voices from the stars.

    Was this some kind of deluded cult tucked away in this small village? The man’s words sounded like the ravings of someone with a mental illness…someone with a mental illness who held a gun. What do you mean, ‘heard our voices?’ He kept his tone as calm as he could.

    Your cries for help. The young man raised his rifle, pointing it at Ezekiel’s head, only inches away. Unless you were the ones torturing the others. His finger moved up and down on the trigger, as if it had a mind of its own.

    Ezekiel looked at his companions. Their ordinarily sagacious countenances were as blank as if someone had wiped their hard drives. That left the communicating to him, even if he hadn’t a clue what the man was talking about. He turned back to the man and carefully slid the rifle barrel away with one hand. Sorry, but guns in my face bother me. He looked him in the eye. We have no idea what you’re talking about.

    The hardness in the man’s eyes melted into confusion. He glanced at his companions, whose rifles remained pointed at other crew members. We will consult with our elders.

    The tight group of men edged backward. Their rifles still pointed at the Solarians. When they reached the side of the square, they disappeared behind a building, helping Ezekiel breathe a mental sigh of relief.

    Hero fixed his gaze on his cultural officer. Do you have any idea what is going on?

    Why does figuring this out fall on me? Either they’re crazy, or they really have gotten some sort of message—what did he call it—’cries for help.’ They think the transmissions came from us.

    Menander nodded, his eyes bright. He was clearly intrigued by the young man’s statements. They said their ‘seer’ received the messages. I’d like to find out who that person is.

    Hero looked skeptical. A seer? Like a soothsayer, a prophet?

    Greek legends abound with them, Isidore said. Remember Cassandra?

    The captain frowned. That was mythology. He looked at Ezekiel. Surely, these people don’t believe in such things, do they?

    Humans are capable of believing anything. In my time, they believed the world was created by a powerful being who punished or rewarded people depending upon whether they worshiped him.

    Hero stared at him, shaking his head.

    Don’t blame me. Ezekiel shrugged his shoulders. I always thought it was a screwball idea.

    Hero’s brows creased in confusion at the human idiom. Then the message they claim to have received is a myth?

    He did his best to give the captain a withering look. "You’re asking me?"

    You know how humans think.

    But those were humans on Earth, two

    Enjoying the preview?
    Page 1 of 1