Freighter Daragah
Approaching the Maelstrom, Outland Expanse
Stardate: 2411.2 (May 31, 2325)
Looking out the forward viewport, Jaffol Mharras swallowed hard. The swirling mass of dust and clouds in hues of yellow, orange and gold were breath-taking to look at, whilst the occasional bolt of static discharge illuminated the vast nebula in an elaborate light show. But the inherent beauty of the phenomena belied its dangers, as a cursory sensor scan showed the intense levels of ionizing delta, theta and omicron radiation—any of which could kill after only a brief exposure. There was a reason it was called the Maelstrom.
Every spacer in the Outland Expanse knew to avoid the deadly nebula, of the handful of ships every foolhardy enough to enter it barely a quarter of them made it to the other side and those that did typically lost crew to radiation poisoning. Anyone with common sense accepted the four light-year detour around the Maelstrom. Unfortunately, Jaffol didn’t have that luxury.
A series of delays had put them well behind schedule, with a hold full of Tammeron grain that would spoil if they didn’t reach their destination on time and the Daragah struggling to find work and barely covering its operating costs, he couldn’t afford to lose this contract. They’re only chance to make up the contract was to take the point-seven-five light-year shortcut through the Maelstrom and hope that they were one of the lucky few.
He cast a glance to his right where his brother, Loron, sat making final adjustments. He swallowed hard again. “All set?”
“You bet.”
He gave his younger sibling what he’d hoped was an encouraging smile, though knew it fell flat, before tapping the intercom. “Sahja, you ready back there?”
“I still say this is fraking crazy, but I’m as ready as I’ll ever be.”
“I know, but if you have any better ideas now is definitely the time to make them.”
“I’m just glad mother isn’t around anymore to see what we’re about to do to her ship.”
If mother was still with us we wouldn’t be this hard up and desperate for money, he berated himself once again. He shook his head, making his tulga (the trunk-like appendage at the back of his skull that gave him, and every other Chandir, the universal moniker of “tailhead”) wobble. This wasn’t the time for his usual blend of self-doubt and criticism.
“Shut down all non-essentials and shunt power to warp drive and shields.”
There was a pause before his sister and engineer replied, “Done.”
He looked at Loron again. “Lock in our course and keep a close eye on sensors.”
“You got it, Jaff.”
He took a deep breath to try and steady his nerves as his trembling fingers reached for the warp activation control. It was now or never.
Tapping the stud, the old freighter, the only home he and his siblings had ever known, leapt to warp and plunged into the Maelstrom.
* * * * *
Approaching the Maelstrom, Outland Expanse
Stardate: 2411.2 (May 31, 2325)
Looking out the forward viewport, Jaffol Mharras swallowed hard. The swirling mass of dust and clouds in hues of yellow, orange and gold were breath-taking to look at, whilst the occasional bolt of static discharge illuminated the vast nebula in an elaborate light show. But the inherent beauty of the phenomena belied its dangers, as a cursory sensor scan showed the intense levels of ionizing delta, theta and omicron radiation—any of which could kill after only a brief exposure. There was a reason it was called the Maelstrom.
Every spacer in the Outland Expanse knew to avoid the deadly nebula, of the handful of ships every foolhardy enough to enter it barely a quarter of them made it to the other side and those that did typically lost crew to radiation poisoning. Anyone with common sense accepted the four light-year detour around the Maelstrom. Unfortunately, Jaffol didn’t have that luxury.
A series of delays had put them well behind schedule, with a hold full of Tammeron grain that would spoil if they didn’t reach their destination on time and the Daragah struggling to find work and barely covering its operating costs, he couldn’t afford to lose this contract. They’re only chance to make up the contract was to take the point-seven-five light-year shortcut through the Maelstrom and hope that they were one of the lucky few.
He cast a glance to his right where his brother, Loron, sat making final adjustments. He swallowed hard again. “All set?”
“You bet.”
He gave his younger sibling what he’d hoped was an encouraging smile, though knew it fell flat, before tapping the intercom. “Sahja, you ready back there?”
“I still say this is fraking crazy, but I’m as ready as I’ll ever be.”
“I know, but if you have any better ideas now is definitely the time to make them.”
“I’m just glad mother isn’t around anymore to see what we’re about to do to her ship.”
If mother was still with us we wouldn’t be this hard up and desperate for money, he berated himself once again. He shook his head, making his tulga (the trunk-like appendage at the back of his skull that gave him, and every other Chandir, the universal moniker of “tailhead”) wobble. This wasn’t the time for his usual blend of self-doubt and criticism.
“Shut down all non-essentials and shunt power to warp drive and shields.”
There was a pause before his sister and engineer replied, “Done.”
He looked at Loron again. “Lock in our course and keep a close eye on sensors.”
“You got it, Jaff.”
He took a deep breath to try and steady his nerves as his trembling fingers reached for the warp activation control. It was now or never.
Tapping the stud, the old freighter, the only home he and his siblings had ever known, leapt to warp and plunged into the Maelstrom.
* * * * *