"
Yes, Ma'am," the officer replied. His face vanished, being replaced by a different one. They all studied it carefully. Tevos's first thought was how incredibly similar to an Asari the person was. The facial features were almost identical, but the lack of head tentacles and the different coloration was very obvious. Still, the resemblance was eerie.
"
Good afternoon, Councilor Tevos," the alien said politely, her voice neutral, and speaking practically accent-less Thessian. "
I am Commander Taylor Hebert, of the New Concordiat. We need to talk regarding the recent Turian invasion of our space."
Suppressing a shudder of worry, Tevos nodded slowly. "I understand, and agree. I will arrange a docking bay for your ship and we can meet."
"
That will be unnecessary, Councilor. If you are free now, I can be there momentarily."
Tevos stared, then glanced at Vaesarth and Eporius, who were listening intently. "I don't understand, I'm afraid. What do you mean?"
The hologram cut out, and the same voice spoke from behind her. "I mean, I can be here
now, Councilor."
Jumping violently, the Asari spun around in her chair, while her companions both froze and gaped. Standing not two meters away was a female with the same face as the one she'd just been talking to, who had seconds before been on a ship tens of thousands of kilometers away. "How… Goddess,
what!?" she said weakly, trying to calm herself.
The alien smiled very slightly. "Apologies for startling you, but this is an important matter and I have little patience for standing on ceremony. I'm told that is a trait worth cultivating, but so far it hasn't been a problem." She bowed a small amount, then straightened up. "Commander Taylor Hebert, New Concordiat Military, at your service. You are Councilor Tevos Araeus, Asari, Councilor Vaesarth Solus, Salarian, and Councilor Eporius Bolarian, Turian. My species is called Human."
They all studied her in shock. She was tall, slender, dressed in some form of fairly understated black uniform, and held herself with the body language of someone who was very obviously used to combat and commanding people in battle, Tevos thought. She gave off an air similar to some of the veteran commandos she'd worked with in the past, only in some undefinable way, more so. All in all, the overall impression was of someone who it would be unwise to take lightly.
"How did you get here?" Eporius managed to ask, having been watching with an incredulous look on his face.
"We have a number of methods of instantaneous transportation suitable for different purposes," Commander Hebert replied. "The one I used is commonly utilized for relatively short range intra-system transport."
"Teleportation?" Vaesarth looked utterly fascinated and totally appalled at the same time, an odd expression on a Salarian face. Tevos glanced at her, still feeling shocked and not knowing quite what to do next. The entire situation had suddenly become even more bizarre and less predictable than it had been heretofore, which wasn't something she'd thought possible a few minutes ago. It was certainly not a normal First Contact.
"That is correct."
"I would say impossible but I cannot deny my eyes," she said after a long moment.
Taking a deep breath and trying to settle her nerves, Tevos thought rapidly, then said, "On behalf of the Citadel Council we wish to apologize for the unfortunate actions of the Turian Hierarchy. It was an unfortunate confluence of events that led to the trespassing in your territorial space, and a series of misunderstandings followed from that point. I hope that we can overcome any differences and come to a peaceful resolution of this situation."
"We are aware of the reasons behind the recent issue," the human replied politely, with a nod. "And we bear no ill will towards the Citadel species. We have taken action to ensure that the situation can't repeat in future. As NKY7248624 explained to Major Falgius at the time, the New Concordiat has much more important things to do than engage in minor squabbles with other species who, quite frankly, present no threat to us." She smiled again, something about the expression sending chills right through all three councilors. "Unless provoked we prefer to mind our own business."
They all regarded the alien woman for a few seconds, then exchanged looks. Eporius asked, in a tone of voice that suggested he was rather grateful yet very puzzled, "With all due respect, Commander Hebert, is not an armed invasion of your space sufficient provocation for action?" He hastily added, "Obviously I'm not for a moment suggesting that it should be, and I am very thankful that you don't feel that you want to retaliate, but I'm curious. If the same thing had happened to the Hierarchy, the response would be… more vigorous."
She smiled again, this time not quite as worryingly. "Such a small incident is not worth going to war over," she replied. "No damage was done to our side, and while regrettably a number of Turians did lose their lives in the operation, we did what we could to minimize that. It takes much more than a few overenthusiastic small warships to push us to the point that we need to take serious action. As far as we're concerned, this matter is done with. We will return all captured prisoners and the bodies of all those we were able to recover after the fact. In return, all we want is a binding promise that no Council race will seek us out. Assuming that is adhered to, no further action will be taken."
Once again the three councilors looked at each other. Tevos was thinking that this was an exceptionally simple bargain, considering that they didn't really have any feasible way
to seek out these people. She was also wondering what the sting in the tail was. By the looks of it, Eporius and Vaesarth were thinking much the same.
Eporius, after a little more thought, carefully asked, "And the ships involved?"
"Will be retained." Commander Hebert made a small gesture of amusement with one hand. "We have already fed them into a matter converter to dispose of them, after studying them for anything of interest. Nothing we haven't seen before. Consider it our price for your people back."
"A fair bargain," Vaesarth commented, getting a somewhat annoyed look from the Turian councilor, who was going to have to explain to his government what happened to their fleets and clearly didn't relish the idea. The Salarian seemed entirely unconcerned about him, though.
"We believe so. People are much more valuable than mere hardware, we have always felt." The human nodded to the councilor.
"An enlightened outlook, if an unusual one," Tevos responded, trying to gain control of the situation with diplomacy. The look she received suggested that their visitor was completely aware of this.
"Without wishing to seem rude, curious to know what the response would be if this bargain breached?" Vaesarth asked a moment later, which was certainly something both Tevos and Eporius wanted to know but didn't want to inquire about. "Also curious why New Concordiat not interested in diplomatic relations with Citadel."
"Two simple questions with complex answers," Commander Hebert replied after a second's thought during which she inspected the Salarian with interest. "Very Salarian, in fact." She didn't seem offended, which made Tevos relax a little after tensing abruptly. "Allow me to explain as much as I can." Moving around the table she sat at one of the two spare seats that were for the rare visitor to the private chamber. "The second one first, I think. This requires a short history of the New Concordiat and my species. I can't go into details as much of this is classified, but I can give you an overview."
They waited, wondering what she was going to say, as she apparently collected her thoughts. "A long, long time ago a space-faring civilization arose from a planet called Earth, the home world of the Human species. It was the outgrowth of a number of nation-states, and went through a number of iterations and troubles, as most civilizations do, but eventually settled down into a stable form that rapidly spread out through the galaxy. From the very beginning of their evolution, the human species has been good at the art of war, and along the way they designed many machines to help them in that field, even as they tried to avoid overindulging in it."
The alien looked at them all in turn. "The Turians have a vaguely similar background in some ways, as do the Krogan. Even the Asari have gone through these periods in their history. It is not uncommon."
Tevos nodded slowly, knowing what the visitor meant.
"In any case, humans have always been
very good at technology, if at times incautious with its use. Luckily humanity managed to avoid killing itself long enough to get off the homeworld. Even before they'd managed that, they'd been steadily building more and more complex computer systems which, inevitably, got added to their weapons as well. These passed through the stage of expert systems, to what you would call a virtual intelligence, ultimately becoming fully sapient artificial intelligences. Each version smarter than the one before. And humanity wasn't foolish about it, they were designed with safeguards in place to ensure loyalty to their builders, and it took a long time before they were fully trusted."
She paused, examining their reactions. Tevos was hardly breathing, since it seemed horrifyingly familiar to her, Vaesarth was listening raptly, and Eporius looked fascinated. "I know you are all thinking of the Geth. This is an entirely different situation, and entirely different mechanism. However, I would suggest that at some point you should carefully and objectively re-examine that particular situation as it isn't really what you've been thinking it is. But that's a different story."
She shrugged slightly. "The people who served with the AIs realized far sooner than the general public that they were totally trustworthy. The safeguards were, in the end, redundant, and eventually removed entirely. No human AI has
ever betrayed its creators. They have served with distinction and honor, sacrificed themselves to save the innocent, and in many ways are better people than we organics. It turned out that humans were even better at designing intelligent systems than they were at designing weapons, and they are
extremely good at designing weapons."
'
Oh, that wasn't worrying at all…' The Asari kept listening, but became very uneasy at the implications.
"The Concordiat of Man was the eventual form of the civilization of humanity, spanning much of the galaxy, and consisting of thousands of worlds with a total population well into the trillions."
Tevos felt faint, that if true was vastly larger than the combined Citadel races. And it raised the issue, of course, of why they'd never run across these humans before...
"Of course, it wasn't all lightness and joy. Humanity weren't the only species out there, as they discovered fairly quickly. Some species were much more primitive and were mostly bypassed. Some were on the same technological level, or close to it. And a few were in some ways at a higher level. Not all were peaceful, unfortunately. Wars of various sizes were fought, humanity usually prevailing with the aid of their AI allies, and aligned species, although individual battles were often lost."
The commander sighed. "Until one day humanity and another very high tech species, the Melconians, happened to meet. They were quite similar in many ways to humanity. Likely too similar. The end result was a war, which in retrospect possibly could have been avoided if people on both sides had managed to talk things out. Perhaps not. We'll never know." She looked reflective for a moment, then continued. "The Melconian Empire was considerably larger than the Concordiat, with a similarly long military tradition. They also had allied species aiding them. The Concordiat was at a higher overall tech level, much higher in the field of computing and AI, but the Melconians were very good at weapons design and outnumbered them. It was more or less a stalemate, and the various wars, which were really one long one that ebbed and flowed, lasted for well over fifteen hundred years."
"Fifteen…
hundred… years?" Tevos echoed with an appalled sensation of horror.
The commander nodded heavily. "Yes. There's no knowing how many lives were lost. Trillions at least. Entire star systems were destroyed, worlds were shattered, fleets of ships vaporized in numbers that don't bear thinking about. Both species were whittled down to the point of extinction."
The three councilors were listening with expressions of appalled shock, as the human woman continued. "The final war, near the end, pretty much finished off both the Concordiat
and the Melconian Empire. Weapons that could wipe entire stars systems from existence were used. The destruction was unbelievable. And the end result was that the Concordiat fell, more than three thousand years after humanity first left their home world."
She stopped again and there was dead silence in the room.
When she began talking again, it was in a quiet voice. "One single AI escaped one of those final battles. He was the sole survivor, possibly of the entire Concordiat military. Incredibly damaged, almost destroyed, he found himself drifting in the void of hyperspace for an unknown time. He eventually managed to repair enough of his systems to become at least minimally functional, and by a whole series of coincidences, detected something odd and decided to investigate. What he found was Earth."
The human half-smiled. "Not his Earth, though. Mine."
They gaped at her.
"What… what does
that mean?" Eporius asked in befuddlement.
"It's complicated, but in essence he found himself in a place between parallel universes. A place he couldn't escape, but somewhere from where he could monitor many versions of Earth. And he found that humanity was, yet again, under attack." Commander Hebert shook her head. "He was built specifically to defend humanity from the Enemy.
Whoever that Enemy was. Luckily for us, he decided that we were in essence the same humans who had designed him and his kind, and stepped in. I was the one he initially contacted, for reasons that are far too complex to go into. I was very young, but he did what he could with what he had. It took a long time, but in the end we prevailed against the threat."
"What was this Enemy?" Eporius asked after a couple of seconds. "Is it something we should worry about?"
Shaking her head, the woman replied, "No. They were a parasitical species that spread out across space, basically infecting other species with special abilities powered by their superior knowledge, in an attempt to find new insights into how such abilities could be used. These abilities ranged from the trivial through things that make Asari biotics look pointless to utterly world ending powers. This species was basically using us, and many, many other species, as a live fire and research exercise. At the end of a '
cycle' as they termed it, the planet in question would be destroyed as part of their breeding method. All iterations of that planet across a vast number of parallel worlds."
The mere concept made Tevos feel sick. And extremely curious about what sort of '
special ability' might be possible.
And, for that matter, if Commander Hebert had any such abilities.
"Luckily for us, circumstances meant that both the members of the species that attacked our world met early ends, one by a particularly bone-headed accident, and one apparently in a fit of depression. The species was, despite their power and knowledge, remarkably stupid. They left their system running, though, which would have caused the end of our world in time anyway, but due to the lone AI and a hell of a lot of work, we turned that around on them."
The smile she was wearing turned nasty. "We strip-mined their knowledge base, added it to my friend's, suborned their remaining processing engines, and transformed our society. The end result was the New Concordiat. And we hunted down every single member of that species and
ended them. With enormous pleasure considering the utterly unprecedented number of innocents they had destroyed over their existence."
As she paused, Tevos numbly reflected on how the even and pleasant voice of their visitor had still somehow conveyed a sense of total and vicious satisfaction at what she'd said. The look in those nearly-Asari eyes, for a moment, chilled her to the bone.
The commander resumed her explanation. "That was a long time ago. It left a legacy of not wanting to be used. By anyone. We tend to be
very cautious about who we ally with. There are a number of species we consider close allies and friends, but in most cases that took many decades to happen. Our way of life isn't really compatible with current Citadel politics, and
we're not going to change. We like ourselves the way we are. But we're not going to insist that anyone else change either, for the same reason. That leads to some obvious issues should we open formal contact with the Citadel species. The Batarians, particularly, are entirely counter to our own ethics. We would almost inevitably be forced to deal with them, which wouldn't aid good relations with the rest of the species in your system."
She leaned back in the chair, regarding them as they watched her, all of them feeling like they were in the presence of something incredibly dangerous yet nonthreatening. "We
do not permit slavery of any kind in our space. Neither do we see machine intelligences as a threat. They are people, inorganic rather than organic, but
people. Friends, co-workers, and citizens of the New Concordiat. I very much doubt that would make your people very happy."
"No, I doubt it too," Tevos said a little weakly. "We were discussing just that before you contacted us."
The knowing glint in the eyes of the human suggested that she was well aware of that, somehow. The Asari made a mental note to have a
very thorough sweep of the Citadel computer network performed as soon as possible. Just in case.
Several seconds passed before Vaesarth stirred, making the unnerving visitor look at her. "I have a theory," the Salarian began. "No contact with your species before Relay 314 episode. No contact with any
other species who knows of you. Your technology is utterly unlike Citadel tech base. And no knowledge of this parasitical species you mentioned."
The commander waited patiently, a small smile on her lips. The Salarian councilor examined her for a moment, then went on, "You talked about parallel realities. Other data suggests you are not from
this one..."
"I wondered if you'd work it out," the human nodded, as Tevos and Eporius alternated between staring at their colleague and their visitor. "You are, of course, correct. This is not our native reality. We come from what you might term a parallel timeline, although that's not a particularly accurate description. We have explored a number of alternative realities, and have a few friends and allies from them. They've taught us a lot, in fact, and we have returned the favor."
"That is..." Tevos shook her head a couple of times, feeling she should by rights think this was a tall tale to end all tall tales, but for some reason believing every word. "...Incredible."
"It's interesting, certainly," Commander Hebert replied.
"Assuming this is all true, what reason could you have for visiting this… reality?" Eporius asked slowly and thoughtfully. "Or, based on what we've seen, possibly a more accurate word would be colonizing it."
The woman looked at him for a moment, then replied, "Our species in this timeline very nearly died out entirely, due to a number of natural disasters, wars, and other factors. We happened to stumble across them during an exploration mission and in the end decided it was our duty to help them. They are, after all, us. Family, if you will." She smiled oddly. "Friends of ours are very keen on family, and I happen to agree. It was an easy decision. We have spent a considerable amount of time and effort helping our… cousins, I suppose… rebuild their world, and become part of the New Concordiat. They were very happy to do so, considering the alternative. In the long run, it's possible they'll go their own way, and if that happens we'll wish them good luck and move on. On the other hand, they may not. And until and unless they
do, they are as much a part of our civilization as I am."
She watched them think it over for a while, then resumed her discussion. "Getting involved with the Council and the Citadel species is a distraction from the work we're doing with our local analogs, and other important projects, which we don't particularly desire. It would also upend
your civilization to an enormous degree, which wouldn't help anyone. So overall it was decided that we should maintain a good separation, at least for now. In the long run perhaps the situation will change. Only time will tell, I suppose."
Falling silent once more, the woman waited and watched as they thought it over. Tevos could see from her colleague's expressions that they found the entire story nearly unbelievable, as did she, but the evidence so far seemed to suggest that it was probably accurate information. Clearly a vast amount was being left out, which was only reasonable for such a short conversation, but what she'd heard already made it abundantly obvious that this New Concordiat was not a power to deal lightly with.
It was also, she realized, evidence that their visitor was of a much higher level of importance than the rank she'd given suggested. Tevos hadn't missed the way she'd said that the AI from an alternate timeline had contacted
her first, and that together they'd entirely rebuilt their civilization. If she was correct, this woman was not only probably the senior military figure in the entire New Concordiat, if only from experience, but most likely
much older than she appeared.
There was no way all this took place in only a few decades. Or possibly even centuries.
The Asari councilor wondered just how long
Humans lived… As long as Asari or Krogan? Longer?
It didn't seem the sort of thing one could just ask, but she was very intrigued.
Out loud, she said, "I have to admit that I cannot deny your desire for no contact with us is probably for the best. I agree that I can only see trouble coming if we did otherwise. There is going to be enough upheaval already when what's happened becomes public knowledge."
"Regrettable but unavoidable," Commander Hebert replied. "I'm sure that people of your talents will be able to manage the situation, though." She looked mildly amused. Eporius snorted, making Tevos sigh faintly.
"I hope you're right, Commander. My government is already very upset about the loss of so many ships."
"Probably a good thing we moved the relay, I suppose," their guest chuckled. "We should have done that much earlier but as NKY7248624 said, it was a minor failure of planning. We've made sure that no relays that open into our space are available any longer, which should prevent a recurrence of the situation in future."
Wondering for a moment just how this bizarre woman could speak so casually about simply moving Mass Relays around the place like they were small ships, Tevos decided that she probably didn't want to really know. It certainly wouldn't help her sleep any better.
"The other question my colleague posed still remains," Eporius finally said, after absorbing what she'd said. "What
would happen if a Council species, despite anything we said, deliberately went looking for you? It would be hard, but not impossible."
Commander Hebert studied him. "That would depend on how they went about it, I suppose. A single ship that got lost, or something of that level… We'd take them home and tell them firmly not to do it again. We're not generally quick tempered and we accept that mistakes can be made."
She looked around at the other councilors. "On the other hand, we react very badly to deliberate attacks that persist after a polite warning. With sufficient reason, we would probably eliminate the problem at source."
"Which means?" the Turian asked, almost reluctantly.
After looking at them all again, the human sighed. "All right, I suppose that you need more than my word. Let's try this." She looked to the side and made a motion. Tevos felt her eyes widen a little as an incredibly detailed hologram sprang into being a couple of meters away, with no obvious mechanism to produce it apparent. "This is a record of a recent operation." The hologram showed a star system that was unfamiliar to any of them, with at the center what Tevos recognized after a moment or two as a black hole of all things. It was surrounded by a vast accretion disk, and was radiating huge amounts of energy released as infalling matter was ripped to nothingness by the event horizon.
"You are familiar with the species known as the Collectors?" she asked, looking back at Eporius. He looked surprised, but nodded after a moment or two.
"Yes, although they are almost a myth. I do know they exist but they're very rarely seen. To the best of my knowledge they've almost never been encountered outside Terminus space, and rarely within it."
"Correct. Something you don't know is that the Collectors are a species artificially created some fifty thousand years ago by a combination of heavy genetic engineering and cybernetic implants, from a precursor species you're well aware of." She waited for any of them to ask the obvious question, as they exchanged uneasy glances.
"What species would that be?" Tevos finally said.
"The one you call the Protheans."
The silence this time went on for a
long time. Then everyone started talking at once.
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
"Thank you, Centurion. Your loyalty to the Hierarchy will be remembered." General Gainus ended the call from his agent on the Citadel and pondered what he'd learned.
A ship arrived at the Citadel with no warning, apparently from the new species that had, somehow, taken out over a hundred Turian vessels with ease, then moved or otherwise hidden an entire mass relay. One that built mega-structures that made planets look fairly compact and discreet. One that, spirits damn them, used
artificial intelligences to actually run
warships! Powerful, yes, but clearly also insane.
And now a representative of this species seemed to be in discussion with the Citadel Council. Eporius hadn't reported it to them, as one would have expected. But then, their representative to the Council had always been someone who spent far more time putting himself in the place of a potential opponent than seemed healthy. Yes, it had led to him being oddly respected by both the Asari and the Salarians, and their respective councilors, but back at home there were those who felt he wasn't really doing things the correct way.
Gainus, remembering the recovered data from the data probe that had been retrieved, wondered for a moment if perhaps Eporius was right to be circumspect. Obviously this species was dangerous. Yet, at the same time, they had sent a diplomat or something of that nature to
talk to the council, even if he or she had turned up in a ship that his man inside C-Sec had said was covered in so many gun emplacements that you could hardly see the actual hull under them.
Anyone could look threatening with the right props, after all. But actually
using those props was an entirely different matter. It seemed to him that if this new species was aggressive to match their technological level they wouldn't have just turned up for a chat, they'd have arrived in force and
demanded that the Council do what they wanted.
It was, in the end, what
he would do in the same circumstances. You make a strong showing, threaten the opponent with destruction,
then negotiate from a position of power. The only sensible approach in his view.
He was well aware that there were those who preached a much milder approach to other species. Captain Abernius, the one who had managed to trigger all this trouble, was one of them. Major Falgius, the man who'd failed to resolve the issue, was another, albeit not quite as cautious. Both very good commanders or they wouldn't be where they were, but clearly not the correct people for the job that they'd been called on to do. It was annoying, but it was something that couldn't be changed now.
Luckily, there were also people of high rank in the Hierarchy who believed in the peace through power approach that
he did. Primarch Opitis was very definitely one of them. He'd been spitting mad when the second fleet vanished with almost no trace, and had spent enough time shouting about it that even Gainus was starting to get slightly tired of it. The discovery of the disappearance of Relay 314 was a shock and had aborted the plans that the Primarch had been making to send a
proper task force into their space to determine the fate of the previous one
and show the aliens that the Turian Hierarchy was to be respected. That had made Opitis even angrier, unfortunately, but there was at that point nothing that anyone could really do about it.
Eporius had actually looked relieved when he'd found out, having spent some time attempting to calm Opitis down and get him to avoid doing anything to, in his words, '
Exacerbate an already perilous situation entirely of our own making.' The Councilor had, as a result, very nearly been recalled for a meeting he wouldn't have enjoyed. He'd managed to talk himself out of that in the end, which left Gainus rather impressed, since talking Opitis out of something he'd set his mind on was notoriously difficult.
Even so, he felt that the other man was being somewhat unTurian about it. And he knew very well indeed that Opitis had
much stronger words to use for the situation. He'd used them at length.
But now… Now they had a possible opportunity to set things right. While that ship was at the Citadel, they knew the exact location of at least one high ranked individual from the aliens, and possibly an entire team. If they moved fast, they could take the chance handed to them and extract some form of payback for the insult. It would be complicated but not past the point of feasibility. He had enough agents on the Citadel to get the relevant intelligence, and there were also plenty of mercenaries who would happily do anything you paid them too. Arranging to… vigorously interview… this representative from the New Concordiat shouldn't be vastly difficult, as they had to return to their ship at some point. Either by demanding a meeting backed by the persuasion of heavily armed ships, or simply arranging to acquire the diplomat in question through other channels.
It wasn't like a
diplomat would present that much of a challenge, and in general governments tended to be quite keen on getting their people back. Oh, certainly there would be protestations, threats, censure from the Council, and the usual sort of thing, but under the table concessions could be extracted easily enough. The public could easily be manipulated to see the necessity of such an action, as had been the case the last time this type of operation was used. If nothing else, the news that the new species made use of soulless AI warships and had brutally wiped out a Turian fleet would spin things in the right direction without any real problem.
He smiled a little viciously. Hells, with that sort of genuine truth to the matter, he'd probably get commended for it.
Putting together a plan of action took only half an hour, since there was a well-practiced routine for such things. All he had to do now was to get the Primarch to sign off on it and he could begin.
As he rose to leave his office, Gainus chuckled to himself. '
Considering how furious Opitis was and still is, he'd probably want to do it himself if he had the chance,' he thought with amusement. The man was pretty direct at times and before ascending to his current position had been noted for his many achievements in combat.
Satisfied that he had the best method for both the glory of the Hierarchy and personal career advancement, the General went off to find his ultimate superior and the all important order to proceed with his plan.
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
Mind spinning, Councilor Tevos stared at their visitor when she finally finished her explanation. It had taken close to two hours, and covered a number of things that were terrifying beyond speaking, or thought pure myth, or both. The really horrifying thing was that the human had proof of all of it. Or the special effects department to end all special effects departments.
Unfortunately, the Asari didn't think the second option was the right one, as desperately as she wished it was.
"The Reapers are real?" she asked in a weak voice, slumped in her chair and just gazing helplessly at Commander Hebert, who merely nodded.
"And they've been wiping out entire species for millions of years," she went on helplessly, thinking of the myths and legends she'd heard and discounted over her long life. They were
obviously stories to scare children with, not historical documents or truth. Yet…
She looked to the side at the fantastically detailed holographic image floating next to the commander, showing a huge ship that looked like some tentacled horror from the deep ocean. Apparently that was a Reaper, the boogeyman of the galaxy. And the things were allegedly behind almost all their technology, not the Protheans.
They had merely been the last and highest tech victims of a feeding cycle that spanned more time than she could even contemplate.
And there were hundreds of thousands if not millions of them floating somewhere outside the galaxy. Waiting.
The councilor shuddered. Looking at her colleagues, she could see they were also horrified. Eporius was visibly trying to think of something to say, and Vaesarth was staring at the slowly rotating hologram with a contemplative look that hid a deep unease.
"I've got a complete data package covering the Reaper threat, which I will arrange to get to all of you shortly," the human woman said after the silence had gone on long enough. "There are a number of issues you should be aware of, and we have no problem with you knowing." She flicked a finger and the hologram changed back to the initial one that had lead into the revelations that Tevos was pretty sure would send ripples through the galaxy for decades.
"As I was saying, this is the star system that is home to the species now known as the Collectors. They are, in essence, agents of the Reapers and totally subservient to their will. Unfortunately they're beyond saving, having been so heavily modified that none of the original species is really present other than as a little badly corrupted DNA. A true pity, but it is what it is." She shook her head somewhat sadly, staring at the image. "There is nothing left of their intelligence, or knowledge. Just drones controlled by a few more intelligent ones, essentially living robots."
All three of them watched as the hologram changed, zooming in on the mass relay that orbited the star out past the last planet of the system. "Unfortunately, they are a major threat to everyone else. They have technology that is substantially past that which you use, again due to the Reapers. In time they would become a serious problem since they would not only gather information for their masters, as they have been doing for millennia, but they would sooner or later attack in force. They have a huge number of ships available to them, and weapons that you have no real defense against."
As they watched, a ship appeared some distance from the relay. It was obviously a New Concordiat one based on the design, which seemed to use the philosophy of there is no such thing as too
many weapons. As far as Tevos could judge, it was probably roughly the same size as the one the commander had arrived in, perhaps slightly larger.
"Approximately a year ago, we decided that we should deal with this threat preemptively. We don't like doing that if we can avoid it, since people can change, but in this case there was no chance of that, and in many ways it could be considered a mercy." Commander Hebert looked pensively at the image. "There was a lot of discussion for a long time about what to do, but in the end we had no real choice. Eventually the same thing would happen no matter what we did, and this way we could minimize the number of lives lost. Even so, it wasn't something we enjoyed."
The ship maneuvered for a moment, then one of the larger weapons on the hull slewed to lock onto the relay. Even before it fired, Tevos realized what was going to happen. Moments later, a brilliantly white-blue beam of
something linked the ship and the relay for less than a second. It was so sudden all of them jumped.
The relay instantly exploded in a truly awesome detonation, an expanding sphere of rippling blue fire wrapped in gravitational distortions expanding at a ferocious rate from where it had been. The three councilors watched in awed horror as it increased in size to what must have been hundreds of thousands of kilometers in diameter, engulfing the position of the ship that had fired on it in seconds. From the viewpoint of the camera that had taken these images, presumably a second ship, the fireball grew and grew, reaching a size that was close to that of a small star, before it finally began to fade.
They gaped as it slowly dissipated, not only shocked at just how violent the destruction that had resulted from a
single shot from the alien ship had been, but as the ball of energy finally disappeared, the sight of the completely intact ship in question sitting where it had been when it fired. Tevos stared, then blinked. There should have been no possible way for
anything to have survived that. The gravitational distortions from that much eezo destabilizing aside, the sheer heat would melt any known material.
"We needed to make sure that none of their ships escaped the system, so destroying the relay was the quickest method to ensure that," the human commented.
Turning towards the black hole at the center of the system, the ship orientated itself for a few seconds. A port at the bow opened, and there was a flicker of light as some sort of missile was launched. The thing moved so fast it was gone in an instant.
"The next part is sped up by a factor of approximately twenty five times," Commander Hebert added, still watching as were they.
The recording zoomed out once again, re-centering on the black hole. There was a pause of maybe twenty seconds, then the singularity…
twisted. That was the only way Tevos could describe it later. It was a sight that years afterwards tended to wake her in the middle of the night with a headache and nightmares.
"The weapon used is based on something the Melconians came up with, we suspect by accident," their visitor said quietly as they stared. "We worked out the operating principles and improved it. One of our allies from another parallel timeline figured out the math behind it, which is beyond even most of our AIs, which finally let us fully understand the mechanism of how it works. We have only had to resort to something like this four times so far, all of them in extreme situations."
She fell silent as they watched the recording. The singularity, impossibly, flared with energy, becoming an intolerably bright pinprick of light in the middle of the system. The accretion disk cast immense shadows through space, before it simply evaporated in the unbelievably vast torrent of radiation as the black hole seemed to go into reverse, vomiting out in minutes what it had probably taken centuries to collect. The whole thing flew in the face of anything Tevos knew about physics, but it seemed to be happening even so.
The recording only went on for a few minutes, but in those minutes they witnessed the destruction of an entire stellar system. Somehow converted into a fairly good approximation of a supernova, at least temporarily, the flaring black hole completely vaporized everything within range. Tevos was certain that even ships as far away as the former mass relay wouldn't survive the shock wave when it finally reached them. Goddess knew how much hard radiation was being given off, but it wouldn't surprise her to learn that it was lethal at a range of light years.
In effect, the human weapon turned the black hole into a short-lived quasar.
Which was the single most frightening thing she'd ever come across.
Flicking a finger, the woman made the recording stop. All of them kept staring at where it had been for several seconds, before refocusing on her. She shrugged a little. "We have other weapons, of course. That was one of the more extreme ones, reserved as I said for specific cases. But making a star go nova isn't all that difficult if needed. It very seldom is, but I hope that answers the original question. Obviously, we don't think that any Council species would ever provoke such a reaction, since that would take an
immense amount of effort and as much stupidity." She smiled a little as they all looked fixedly at her, each feeling like they should in fact be running. "On the whole we feel that your various governments are far more sensible than that. Even the Batarians."
After a
long pause, Tevos licked her lips which had gone dry, then slightly hoarsely said, "I would like to hope that was true, I agree. I will say without reservation that I will let my government know your position."
Eporius and Vaesarth nodded simultaneously, as if they were being operated by strings.
"Thank you." Commander Hebert made a gesture of recognition. "That's all we ask. In the long term, when our work is done, and if circumstances are then right, we may well revisit the situation. But for now it's best on all sides that we stay at a distance from one another for a number of reasons." She stood, smiling at them all in a way that wasn't at all threatening. So why was Tevos having trouble breathing?
"We'll bring your people to the Citadel shortly, as agreed. I will also arrange to get you the data set I mentioned. You may find it..." She trailed off, looking suddenly mildly annoyed. "Ah. That's inconvenient."
About to ask what was inconvenient, Tevos twitched at the sound of her omnitool beeping as a call came in. Considering that she'd set a privacy mode that prevented anything other than '
Oh-Goddess-save-us' level emergencies getting through, that wasn't a good sign.
With an apologetic glance at their visitor, she answered it. "What is it this time?!" she snapped, her nervousness coming out as an unusually short-tempered response.
The C-Sec officer, the same one as before, flinched at her tone. He visibly swallowed before replying.
"
Sorry to bother you again, Madame Councilor, but we have something of a situation here."
"Which is?"
"
The Turian fleet flagship Unification has just entered Citadel space with a fleet of twenty ships. Including four dreadnoughts." He glanced off camera for a moment before returning his eyes to hers.
"They're demanding to speak to the New Concordiat representative."
Eporius made a strangled sound and caused everyone to look at him. "How did they know about that?" he asked, leaning into the view of the omnitool's imager.
"
Enough people have seen that ship that we can't keep it quiet, sir," the C-Sec man replied. "
But as far as knowing that you were talking to someone, and who it was, I suspect we have someone whose loyalties are divided. I'm making inquiries even now."
"Oh, damn it," Tevos muttered, rubbing her forehead. "Who is commanding that ship?"
"
Fleet General Gainus, Ma'am," the officer replied immediately. Eporius quietly groaned. Glancing at him for a moment, the Asari sighed. She knew that particular Turian, and considered him a hawkish idiot. His first response to almost any situation was to aim a gun at it. His second response was to work out how to turn it to his benefit. Overall, he was more of a problem than a solution for most purposes, but he got on much too well with the current Primarch, who was of a similar mind-set that encompassed many of the least pleasant of the Turian stereotypes.
Eporius, in her opinion, was a far better example of their species than either of the others, and someone she could both respect and work with. It was a great pity that there weren't more like him in a position of power in his government since it would make life much easier all around.
The officer turned his head to talk to someone behind him for a couple of seconds. When he looked back, he didn't appear any happier. "
Ma'am?"
"Yes, Lieutenant?"
"
The Destiny Ascension has just come through the relay and is asking for you as well."
Tevos stared at him, then closed her eyes. Oh,
perfect. Now they had the flagship of the Turian fleet
and the flagship of the Asari fleet in the same place at the same time. It was enough to make her wish she'd stayed in bed that morning. Matriarch Kaizphia, the commanding officer of the Asari warship, was nearly as difficult to deal with as Gainus was although for different reasons. She was a good ship commander, but one of the most arrogant people Tevos had ever met, and more full of her own importance and the Asari superiority over other species than she was comfortable with. This had caused more than one diplomatic issue in the past.
"Tell General Gainus that we are currently busy and will call him back shortly, please. As politely as you can. Stress that we're in the middle of very delicate negotiations. Put Matriarch Kaizphia through."
"
Yes, Ma'am."
Before the call went through, Tevos glanced apologetically at the visitor, who was listening calmly and quietly. The human didn't seem as surprised as she probably should have been, adding to the mystery of their guest. "I'm sorry about this, Commander. I need to deal with this immediately before someone does something foolish."
"Of course, Councilor. Please proceed, I'm in no hurry."
A moment later the image of another Asari appeared in the projection field of the omnitool, one that was giving off an indefinable air of being better than everyone else and knowing it. "
Tevos. About time. What is going on here? Why is there a heavily armed Turian fleet lurking about, and what in the name of all that is holy is that bizarre ship that's absolutely covered in weapons doing in Citadel space? We've heard rumors that the Turians encountered a new species. Is that their ship?"
All of this was said in a voice that demanded answers, making Tevos suppress a wince of her own. That woman…
"Yes, Kaizphia, the Turians did accidentally encounter a new species, that much is true. They are called
Humans and their governmental structure is known as the New Concordiat. There were some… misunderstandings… which resulted in a few minor issues which we have now resolved. The New Concordiat representative arrived a few hours ago in that ship to talk things over and explain their government's position, which they have done."
"
And I assume to petition for Council membership," Kaizphia cut in, shaking her head knowingly. "
Of course. Hopefully they will be sensible about things. They will, of course, be required to adhere to Council law, which looking at that monstrosity I am sure they currently do not. But we can easily guide them in the correct direction."
Out of sight of the camera, Tevos squeezed the arms of her chair hard enough that her hands ached, while she somehow kept a pleasant expression on her face. Her eyes flicked to Commander Hebert's, who was watching and listening with a small grin, apparently somewhat amused. "They have not, in fact, asked for Council membership. The situation is very complex and this is neither the time or place to go into it." She paused, then as Kaizphia opened her mouth to say something else that would give any trained diplomat a headache, hastily went on.
"The Turian flagship is apparently here because they also found out about the New Concordiat representative being present via channels we are currently looking into. I assume that Fleet General Gainus is here on orders from Primarch Opitis to ask more questions about the small misunderstanding their forces had with those of the New Concordiat a few days ago. Hopefully we can resolve everything to the satisfaction of all parties concerned."
"
Gainus." Kaizphia looked thoughtful. "
A competent officer if somewhat overfond of his own brilliance. And rather prone to actions some would consider unwise."
'
As if you have any moral standing to criticize that,' Councilor Tevos sighed internally, keeping her face fixed in a neutral expression. '
Considering some of the things you've managed to engineer in the past that took years to deal with the fallout from...'
"I haven't yet spoken to him so I don't know precisely what he wants," she said out loud, feeling that she had a pretty good idea regardless, "but I will have to do that next. I would request that you keep the
Destiny Ascension at a safe distance, as we don't want to potentially crowd him and possibly push him into actions we would all regret."
Translation: Stay the hell out of the way and don't poke the easily annoyed Turian idiot. Tevos hoped that her peer would listen for once and not just push her way in from an overinflated sense of Asari importance. This situation was
far too potentially catastrophic for that sort of posturing. She had no wish at all to see what would happen if the human commander was poked too hard, not after the last few hours. One thing was abundantly clear, that being that the New Concordiat had a definite point beyond which it was unwise to push them, and a very abrupt way to deal with things they found irritating beyond that point.
She had no doubt at all that
Kenny's Friend could deal with the entire Turian fleet
and the
Destiny Ascension without trouble, and the political fallout from
that would be appalling. It might topple both the Turian and Asari governments in a worst case scenario. All in all, she desperately wanted to calm things down before someone did something there was no turning back from.
Another glance at the commander showed she looked entirely unconcerned, which made Tevos relax slightly, but she was still dreading the talk with the Turian general.
"
Turians." Kaizphia sniffed dismissively. "
Some of them are as bad as the Krogan."
The councilor glanced a little guiltily at her colleague, seeing that Eporius was glaring at the hologram. Out of view of the omnitool, he made an obscene gesture that nearly made Tevos smirk, only iron control of her face stopping it. Vaesarth was definitely suppressing a chuckle, and giving her fellow councilor a look of both respect and sympathy.
"That isn't a very polite thing to say, Kaizphia, and neither is it particularly accurate. It would be best to avoid such things in future. The Turians are very close allies and friends of ours, remember," she chided gently. The other Asari didn't seem to care. "In any case, I have kept General Gainus waiting long enough so I really do have to talk to him. Please bear in mind my request and don't get involved unless there is no choice."
"
We will keep an eye on the situation," Kaizphia replied. "
Destiny Ascension out." The hologram vanished.
Tevos sighed heavily, rubbing her forehead again, something that was beginning to become a habit. "I'm sorry about that, Eporius. She is… not a diplomat. A good commander, but not someone you would ask to negotiate a treaty."
"I'm all too well aware of Matriarch Kaizphia's personality," he replied with a frown. "It is hardly unique to her, there are a lot of Asari who are worse." He shrugged. "But that's not your fault, and I can hardly point fingers when my own species has more than enough arrogant idiots of its own."
"Possibly not how government on Palaven would like to be characterized," Vaesarth commented with an expression of mild amusement.
Eporius snorted dismissively again, glancing at her. "Probably not, but do I really look like I care?"
"No," the Salarian grinned. "Is why I like you." This made him laugh briefly, and caused Commander Hebert, who they'd almost forgotten about for a moment, to snicker.
"I apologize if my presence has exacerbated any existing problems you all face," she said as they returned their attention to her.
"It's not your fault, Commander," Tevos said wearily. "We go through something like this on a regular basis, if not this exact scenario. Running the Council is a series of compromises, as I expect is the case with most governments." She shook her head. "Admittedly this particular situation is unusual, but that can't be helped. I'd better talk to General Gainus before he gets angry about being ignored."
"If it helps, I can simply go back to my ship and leave," the human offered.
"At this point I doubt anything would change," she muttered. "I'll have to talk to him in any case. And we still need to arrange the prisoner return."
"Fair enough," Commander Hebert nodded, sitting down again in the chair and leaning back, not looking concerned. Tevos braced herself mentally, then called the Turian flagship commander, hoping he'd be a little less abrasive than usual this time.
"
About time."
Nope.
"
I've been waiting for ten minutes, Councilor. I'm here on the direct orders from the Primarch himself, and I expected more courtesy, I have to say. I may lodge an official complaint." General Gainus's face showed his displeasure. "
I understand you have a diplomat from this new species, the New Concordiat, with you? My government wishes to talk to them urgently. We have a number of concerns that must be dealt with."
"May I ask how you came into this information, General?" Tevos kept her voice even and calm.
"
That is irrelevant," he snapped. "
Do you or do you not have a New Concordiat representative present? On the orders of the Primarch, I must talk to them."
Eporius leaned into view from the side, Tevos moving to the side to let him more than a little gratefully. The damn general was pushing her self control to the limit. "General, we are in the midst of some very delicate negotiations," he said, with great self control himself. "I am sure that a polite request to talk to the New Concordiat representative once our current business is concluded would be a better method than demanding access in the middle of Council work."
"
Eporius," the other Turian said with a look that made it almost an insult. "
Your own position on this matter is well known to both the Primarch and myself. This has gone beyond the Council's purview. This new species has wiped out over a hundred of our ships and all the people on them, and we wish make our displeasure known."
"You know as well as I do that the first encounter was an accident, and ended the way it did because of stupidity on
our part," Eporius retorted. "That stupidity was compounded by the insistence of sending a reprisal fleet before contacting the Council, as is standard procedure
and the legal requirement. Captain Abernius was correct when he wanted to withdraw and pass the issue of First Contact on to the Council. If it hadn't been for some lackwit on that frigate firing without warning on a new species
in their own territorial space we wouldn't
be in this position in the first place!"
Gainus glared at him, while Tevos idly wished she'd never heard of the New Concordiat, Humans,
or Turians. Life would be
so much simpler…
"
That is close to treasonous speech, Eporius," the general hissed, clearly infuriated. "
Don't think that your actions will be forgotten. You may have talked yourself out of trouble once before, but when I report to the Primarch, you may find yourself recalled and sanctioned. I must talk to this New Concordiat representative." He stopped and seemed to collect himself. "
They use AI, for the spirits sake! To control warships! Surely you realize how insane that is, and how it will appear to the public? We need to regain control of this situation before it goes too far."
Tevos nudged Eporius to the side, the Turian councilor still glaring at the general, but complying. "General Gainus, that attitude worries me," she said as mildly as she could. "You are not in full possession of the details. The current situation is much more complex than you appear to realize, and is best left to the experts. With all due respect,
please allow us to handle it. We will ensure the Hierarchy is fully informed about the recent events as soon as the outstanding issues are resolved."
About to retort, he stopped when she held up a hand. "And I must take issue with your earlier comment. The New Concordiat has
not '
wiped out' the crews of the ships that attacked them. While there were casualties, I am reliably informed they were minimal, and the vast bulk of the crew-members were captured and will be returned, unharmed, shortly. We were in the process of arranging how this would work when you interrupted us."
'
In other words, shut up and go away,' she mused silently. Wishing she could say it out loud, if only to see his expression. By the look on Eporius's face, he was right on the verge of saying something like that himself, so she fixed him with a look of her own warning him not to escalate things. He subsided but was clearly more than a little irritated.
She sympathized, as the general was insufferable at the best of times in her opinion.
The information apparently took him by surprise, causing him to go quiet for a few seconds. Eventually, he said, "
And the ships?"
"They are the price for your crews," she replied, inwardly amused at how furious he looked. "If I were in your position I would consider the trade a fair one."
He scowled at her, while she smiled back just a tiny amount. "
You are not in my position, Councilor. Which is probably a good thing for both of us."
"Agreed," she responded evenly.
There was an uncomfortable silence, until he said, "
Despite your efforts to shield them, Councilor Tevos, I will have words of my own with this diplomat, one way or another. The Hierarchy has a number of concerns that we feel are not likely to be raised if we leave it in the hands of the Council. With all due respect." He smiled grimly at her, even for a Turian, and disconnected the call.
"What a pleasant person," Commander Hebert commented after a moment with a strong hint of irony. Tevos looked at her, seeing she was still smiling in a completely unconcerned and non-hostile manner, apparently finding a glimpse into the inner workings of Council diplomacy quite funny.
"That is not the term I would use," Eporius said, shaking his head. "I must apologize on behalf of the Turian species, Commander. Despite our reputation as quite militaristic, which is admittedly both true and well earned, we are not all like that fool. Please don't judge us on that basis."
"I try to take people as individuals on the whole, not as a monolithic block," she assured him. "Every species has people in it that cause problems for the rest of them, mine included. On the whole I have been pleasantly surprised by how receptive you all were. I'm sure we can work things out. Now, on the subject of your captured crews, as I was saying before the recent interruptions, we will return them to you in good health to any destination you desire."
Tevos and Vaesarth both looked at Eporius, who thought for a few seconds, then said, "I think it would probably be best to have them returned to the Citadel, rather than Palaven. A New Concordiat ship in Turian space could spark… a problematic response."
"Of course, I understand and we expected that would be the case." Commander Hebert nodded to him. His omnitool beeped as it signaled receiving a file. "That is a manifest of all recovered personnel, living and dead. Thirty-six thousand, four hundred, and ninety-two Turians, five hundred and eighteen Asari, thirty-nine Salarians, and six Quarians survived the two incidents. Two thousand, one hundred, and sixty-one bodies were recovered, wholly and partially, in addition to the survivors. We also retrieved all the personal effects we could and those will be returned as well, along with the ship's logs of all ships not initially destroyed during the second attack."
The human woman smiled at him in a genuinely sympathetic manner. "We do regret the loss of life, and would much prefer it not to have happened. Despite the circumstances, permit me to pass on our condolences to the families of the deceased. They did their duty and died with honor."
Eporius bowed his head for a moment, then met her eyes. "Thank you."
Tevos's omnitool beeped again as she was about to ask how the woman was managing to send files without any visible effort or equipment, causing everyone to turn to her. Gritting her teeth, the Asari councilor picked the device up with a deliberate motion, activated it, and said with enormous patience and considerable menace, "Yes, Lieutenant? How can I help you
this time?"
The projected image of the C-Sec officer looked worried. "
Apologies once again, Councilor Tevos. Citadel Traffic Control has been monitoring the Turian fleet and wanted me to pass on the message that they appear to be moving to attempt to blockade the New Concordiat vessel. They've positioned the Unification between the ship and the relay, with the other three dreadnoughts moving to englobe it, along with their cruisers as support. Traffic Control is warning other vessels away from the area, just in case, and there has been no reaction from the New Concordiat ship yet. They're still ninety thousand kilometers away from the Citadel but it's making people nervous. No one wants a battle anywhere nearby, there are millions of people and thousands of ships at risk as you know."
With a sense of unreality, Tevos gaped at him, then felt fury rise inside her. That
idiotic man was apparently trying to force a confrontation with their visitor, presumably in an attempt to '
have a word' with her in some chest-thumping exercise to salve the injured pride of the Primarch. He obviously didn't think about the proven fact that the New Concordiat ships didn't
need access to the relay, never mind that it was one only half the size of
Kenny's Friend that had comprehensively defeated a force nearly this size with one barrage. She had no doubt whatsoever that the ship was in no danger and could easily take out the entire Turian battlegroup in moments.
Glancing at Commander Hebert, she also realized that the woman had been aware of this before they were and was watching them to see what they did about it. Possibly a test, possibly simply well earned confidence, or a mix perhaps. Or just a wish not to start anything in someone else's territory, which Tevos was grateful for. She doubted that the patience of the human would last forever, though, if Gainus was stupid enough to actually fire on her ship. People tended to defend themselves and she could hardly expect the humans to simply sit there and get shot at, even if it would do absolutely nothing. Which was definitely the case.
She remembered that recording from a while ago and shivered momentarily.
No, the only one
not at risk in any confrontation was the New Concordiat ship, she was sure of that.
"Thank you for the information, Lieutenant," she said very calmly, but in tones that made him slightly recoil. "I believe I need to talk to General Gainus. Please continue to monitor the situation. Also, increase patrols between the Council chambers and the docking area." She knew full well that the human woman wasn't going to board a ship docked with the Citadel, but it was likely the General was working on the basis of normal operation, and she wouldn't put it past him to have arranged some sort of snatch squad or something like that. It had been known to happen in the past and the station was awash with mercenaries and agents from every government in the galaxy.
There was the off chance they might manage to lay hands on some undesirables and make the place that little bit safer.
"
At once, Ma'am," he replied instantly. She dropped the call, took a couple of calming breaths, and called the Turian general directly. He picked up the call almost immediately, obviously having expected her.
"What are you doing, General?" she asked without ceremony, fixing his image with her most level look. "Apart from apparently attempting to cause a non-aligned species here on a diplomatic mission to consider you a threat? Bear in mind, please, that you are in Citadel-controlled space at the moment and we will
not permit aggressive actions."
"
Doing, Councilor?" he asked with an innocent expression that he
really didn't pull off well. His face wasn't made for it.
"You are obviously attempting to stop the New Concordiat vessel from moving towards the mass relay if it should so choose," Tevos grated. "Which is, among other things, a violation of Citadel traffic control regulations in the absence of any reason to suspect a ship of wrongdoing. It is a deliberately provocative move as you know very well."
He looked at her for a few seconds, then replied, scowling, "
Enough games, Councilor. I have direct orders from the Primarch to talk to the representative from this new species. At length. We demand reparations for the loss of our ships and the insult given to the Hierarchy. If you won't give me access to them, I will sit here and wait until they return to their ship, then talk to them. I answer to the Primarch, not you."
Tevos stared at the obstinate fool. He embodied in one person pretty much all the stereotypes of Turian military idiocy. A more than competent battle leader combined with someone so sure of his species own right to throw its weight around it made Matriarch Kaizphia look totally reasonable. Not to mention a complete and misplaced sense of his ability to come out on top no matter who the opponent. That had served him well for a lot of his career, fair enough, but here and now she could only see disaster looming.
And the really worrying thing was that Primarch Opitis was
worse…
Looking at Eporius she saw he was alternating between glaring at the projection with visible fury, and rapidly working on his omnitool, apparently getting a feed from the Citadel traffic operations sensors. Vaesarth was leaning over to inspect the results with interest. Commander Hebert appeared to be relaxing in her chair and merely observing the current state of play with interest but no concern visible.
"I fear that you may be taking a larger slice of the meat than you can digest, General," she finally replied, using a Turian saying. "The humans have been more than reasonable about the whole sorry affair and the Council does
not want to reverse the progress we have made. Continuing with your path will end badly, I'm warning you. Not to mention risking the relationship between the Hierarchy and the Citadel. Is it worth it?"
"
I have my orders and my pride, Councilor," he stated. "
The Primarch is not happy. I intend to do something about that."
She sighed, shaking her head. "I have always considered your undoubted intelligence overrode the less salubrious aspects of your personality, General Gainus, but perhaps that was a mistake," she said, deciding that she no longer had the patience with the fool to be polite. As he swelled with indignation at her blunt words, she went on, "On behalf of the Citadel Council, I am formally directing you to remove your ships from the vicinity immediately."
"
Your request is denied, Madame Councilor," he replied with a neutral expression that concealed what she imagined was considerable anger. "
Give me access to the human representative, allow me to put the Hierarchy's demands to them, and I will leave. Not before."
"I have no authority over the New Concordiat, General," she told him tiredly, wishing that this day would end. "Neither do you. If you persist in this matter, it will not end well. I urge you to reconsider."
His expression turned into a small smirk then the call ended. Tevos put her hands over her face and gently rubbed her temples, wondering what she'd done to deserve people like him causing the problems they did. She did her best to be a decent councilor, balancing the demands of the job against the demands of her own government, which wasn't easy at times, and despite all odds had managed it for a long time with a reasonable amount of success.
Then the Turians went and poked something that should have remained unpoked.
Life sucked sometimes.
"You have done everything you could, Tevos," a voice said. She dropped her hands to see Commander Hebert regarding her with sympathy and understanding. "We are well aware of the history of the Citadel and the various species that comprise it. And of the common stereotypes of all of them. He embodies some of the less helpful ones of the Turians, while Eporius here is proof that
stereotypes are not
truths. The Asari, again, have many things said about them, some of which are unflattering, and many of which are true. From what I have learned today, you show that these things are no more universal than in the case of the Turians. Or, for that matter, the Salarians or any other species."
The woman shrugged. "Everyone tend to group a people by perceived characteristics, for one reason or another. That doesn't mean its either valid or sensible to do so. We're not going to hold the actions of one Turian against their entire species. As I explained earlier, we aren't easily pushed into war. Our agreement stands, despite General Gainus or Primarch Opitis doing whatever it is that they have planned." She smiled faintly. "It's not like they can succeed, after all."
"Intend to simply ignore Gainus, or make an example?" Vaesarth asked curiously, seeming fairly unconcerned about what might happen as a result. If anything, she appeared interested to see what the results would be. It was a quite Salarian outlook, Tevos thought.
"I think I should probably have a word with him," the human woman smiled. "I'm sure we can come to an understanding."
Rising, she straightened her clothing, brushing a little speck of lint from one arm. She bowed respectfully. "It has been a pleasure talking to you all, Councilors. I am glad we could come to a mutually satisfactory agreement. The New Concordiat thanks you for your time and understanding, and once again expresses regret that lives were lost in our initial encounter. With any luck this will never happen again. And in due time, if circumstances permit, we may well meet again. Until then, I wish you all the best."
She saluted crisply, then blinked out of existence.
All three council members looked at where she'd been for a few seconds, then at each other. There was silence for a while.
"That
did really happen, didn't it?" Eporius asked in the end.
Tevos and Vaesarth nodded.
"Strange day."
They nodded again.
"Gainus is fucked, isn't he?"
They nodded again.
He grinned viciously. "Good. With any luck, this will result in Opitis losing support, and someone with an actual brain getting in. It's past time we had a change at the top."
"That is your own government you're talking about, Eporius," Tevos pointed out with a small smile.
"I am well aware of that," he chuckled. "Never liked that overbearing idiot. I wonder what she's going to do?"
"Something spectacular, I would think," Tevos replied, wondering what the new reports were going to be like when all this finally hit the public awareness and rather dreading it, while still being curious.
He nodded, returning to fiddling with his omnitool. After a moment, he produced a holographic image over the table, showing the Citadel in the middle with all the ships coming and going from it. The human ship was highlighted, as were the Turian vessels surrounding it. "A friend of mine in Traffic Control linked this to me," he explained as they watched. "I thought it would help us see what results from all this."
"Will be educational," Vaesarth commented, leaning forward for a better view. Tevos did the same. Then they waited.
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
Gainus closed the link with an internal feeling of satisfaction. The entire Council annoyed him, and that mealy-mouthed Asari was the worst of them. All talk and no action, that was generally the Asari way in any case, and she exemplified it nicely. It had been a genuinely pleasurable moment essentially telling her that she was irrelevant.
He would have to step carefully, even so. Push things too far and he couldn't engineer a way out of the problems that would ensue, but he was
good at going right up to the line and no further. With Opitis backing him, the Council could pretty much be safely ignored, as long as he was cautious.
The New Concordiat ship, which was one of the ugliest things he'd ever seen, and definitely the most heavily armed by a completely ludicrous amount, had totally ignored them as they'd surrounded it at a respectful distance. None of the weapons had even twitched, there were no obvious emissions from it indicating it was targeting them, or even noticed they were there. Every weapon in his small fleet was aimed at it, with the targeting calculations run over and over to ensure that if it came to the point he fired nothing would hit either the Citadel or any other ship not involved.
Traffic control ordering all the other vessels in the area to keep clear, as he'd expected would happen, had helped that enormously. So did the fact that the human ship was a long way from the Citadel, the representative presumably having used a shuttle of some sort to visit the Council.
His agents on the Citadel were all in position to attempt to grab this mysterious person, but he didn't like to assume that they would succeed. No one had apparently noticed the New Concordiat diplomat
arriving, after all, so it seemed likely that they might be able to slip away as easily despite his precautions. He could think of several ways of doing the same thing, the easiest being to use a small ship from another species that no one would look twice at. Possibly one of the Turian landing craft that they could have laid hands on from the fleet they'd ravaged. That class of vessel was so common as to be totally unremarkable.
Whatever the truth of it, sooner or later they had to return to their ship, and he was in position to intercept them. The human craft was imposing, true, being a dreadnought or whatever they would call it, but they weren't going to risk firing on one of
his ships when one of
theirs was in the firing line. No sane person would, after all.
So all he had to do was wait for a small craft to head towards the New Concordiat ship and stop it. Once he had the diplomat and their team, if present, on board, he could apply pressure to this new species and extract reparations for their actions.
Lost in his plans, he twitched when his communications officer called for him. "General?"
"What is it?"
"There's an incoming call for you. From the New Concordiat ship."
Somewhat surprised, he looked over to the crew member, then replied, "Put it through on the main viewer."
"Yes, sir."
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
Tevos looked at her omnitool as it beeped with the tone that indicated an incoming message. Opening it, she scanned it quickly.
I'm relaying the conversation I'm about to have with General Gainus to you for your own records, Councilor. I thought you might find it interesting. Commander Hebert.
Activating the link provided, Tevos set her device showing another hologram to go with the one Eporius had displayed. Between them, they could see and hear the entire encounter.
She settled back to watch, idly wondering if there was a suitable snack for times like this.
It was sort of funny when it was happening to someone else...
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
Returning his attention to the large holographic display, Gainus studied the image of the alien that appeared in it. The creature appeared remarkably similar to an Asari aside from skin color and the dark hair or fur instead of tentacles on her head. She was wearing a black military cut uniform, impeccably turned out, and standing with her hands behind her back in a position like parade rest in his own armed forces. "Fleet General Gainus, I am Commander Taylor Hebert of the New Concordiat. I understand you would like to speak to me?"
"I wish to speak to the New Concordiat diplomat that has been meeting with the Council," he corrected. "I must talk to someone with authority higher than that of a ship commander."
"
You are speaking to someone with such authority," she replied with a small smile. "
And the person who was recently in discussion with the Council. I have just returned to my ship and I find it appears to be surrounded by a Turian battle group." She tilted her head inquisitively. "
Every member of which has a target lock on me. I find that slightly odd, considering that I parted from the Council on good terms and as far as I know am not presenting a threat to anyone at the moment."
"You are in a very large, ridiculously well armed warship, Commander," he pointed out, at the same time motioning with one hand out of sight of the camera to the sensor operator who should have seen whatever ship she arrived on. The officer rechecked his instruments then shrugged, shaking his head. "A certain level of caution is only sensible, especially taking into account the fact that your species has defeated two separate fleets from the Hierarchy very recently using far smaller vessels."
She smiled more widely, showing a hint of teeth in a subtle but very definitely vicious manner. "
Yet you feel it a good idea to attempt to make yourself a threat to me even knowing that? Interesting."
"You have one dreadnought. I have
four, as well as sixteen cruisers." He returned the smile, rather maliciously. "And
we are not going in blind like the last fleet did. We know about your AIs and you won't take us by surprise."
She inspecting him for a moment, looking intrigued as far as he could tell. Then she said, "
The Council and the New Concordiat have reached a mutually satisfactory arrangement, one of non interference on both sides. We have no quarrel with you as long as you stay out of our territory. And we have taken steps to make sure that is easy to do. I urge you to stand down and forget about this. As far as we are concerned the matter is over. We will return all captured crew very shortly, as we promised the Councilors. It would be in your best interests to stop your current actions."
He snorted in anger. "Your species attacked our fleets."
"
After you invaded our space and fired on us without warning," she retorted. "
You were asked to leave, very politely, and right up to the moment the first shot was fired we would have happily allowed that. Once your frigate opened fire on us, our rules of engagement allowed our sentry to defend himself and the system he was patrolling. He did his duty and will be commended for it. The second fleet was a deliberate invasion and could easily be considered an act of war if we were so inclined. Luckily for you, we are not so inclined and wish to put it all behind us."
"It's not that easy, Commander. We demand fair reparations for the missing ships and the cost of replacing them. Not to mention the insult to the Hierarchy." Gainus glared at the figure in the holotank. "The Primarch is furious about this entire affair. He is not easily placated and isn't going to just forget about it."
"
I would advise you to advise him that it's a good idea to learn to live with minor disappointments," she replied, shrugging insolently. He fumed but kept his temper. "
I reiterate, from our point of view we are finished with this incident. If you wish to incite another one, that's your business, but I would strongly urge you to reconsider."
General Gainus glared for a moment or two, thinking over his options. The damn woman was, somehow, back on her ship without any trace of how she'd managed that. Assuming, of course, that she
was the diplomat in question. It was always possible she was trying a bluff of some sort. He'd keep the undercover agents on the Citadel active for now, just in case that was the truth and all this was a diversion.
On the other hand, if she was indeed the one who had been closeted with the damn Council for hours, how the hells had she got back onto her ship without any evidence of it? Some sort of stealth craft? That spirits-damned AI warship that had jumped the first fleet at Relay 314 had apparently popped up out of nowhere, so there was precedent for it. A worrying thought.
Whatever the final truth of it, she claimed to speak for the New Concordiat and she was on that ugly ship, so he might as well proceed according to that part of the plan.
"I'm afraid I can't let you leave until we come to our own arrangement, Commander," he began, making a signal with his hand again. Every vessel under his command armed weapons. It was mostly a bluff, since he didn't want to fire unless there was no other way, since the political fallout of such an action would be immense, but as long as
she thought he was ready to act…
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
Another call came in as Tevos stared in horror at the idiotic Turian who seemed intent on committing suicide. She answered it, not taking her eyes off the hologram. "
Tevos, what is that idiot General doing now?" Matriarch Kaizphia said angrily. "
He's armed all his weapons and looks ready to fire on that bizarre ship."
Tevos glanced to the side, at the image of the
Destiny Ascension commander, who looked ready to step in. Which would only lead to things the councilor dreaded. "Matriarch Kaizphia, do
not interfere," she said firmly.
"
But he's about to cause a major diplomatic incident..." the other woman protested.
"By the authority of the Citadel Council, I
order you to stay out of this.
Do nothing. Keep back and let the New Concordiat commander deal with Gainus. I mean it, you are
TO. DO. NOTHING. Do you understand me?" Tevos almost shouted.
Kaizphia stared at her, apparently taken aback at the unusual display of command from the Asari councilor. "
No, I don't understand at all, but I'll follow orders," she finally replied rather reluctantly.
"Good. No matter what happens, it is
vital that the
Destiny Ascension does not become involved. Trust me on that."
"
When this is over I expect an explanation, Tevos."
"When this is over I doubt you'll need one, Kaizphia." Tevos stabbed the disconnect control and went back to watching the other displays, her heart hammering.
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
The woman didn't visibly react other than her smile growing cold. "
Are you certain you want to do this, General?" she asked calmly.
"One warship against twenty, Commander. Despite your technology, I suspect that all of us firing at once would be awkward at a minimum. It would be best if you surrender. I don't want to harm you or your crew unnecessarily but you're not going anywhere until my government gets what it desires."
They stared at each other for a moment.
"
There are three things you are misunderstanding, Fleet General," Commander finally said, still icily calm and speaking quietly. She held up a finger. "
The first one is that even if all your ships do fire at once the effect on my ship will be precisely zero. You have no weapons that would even scratch my paintwork."
As he opened his mouth, she held up a second finger.
"
The second thing is that we do not use the mass relay system. Blockading us from it achieves nothing at all. I can leave at any point I desire." She held up a third finger as he absorbed that. It suddenly struck him to think that Relay 314 had disappeared
before this ship had arrived at the Citadel, which meant that she might well be telling the truth. He'd missed that.
"
The third, and most important point of all, General, is that Kenny's Friend is not a warship. It is a reasonably well armed scout ship, my personal vessel."
Gainus stared at her, then turned his head to look at the image of the kilometer long sleek black shape festooned with more weapons turrets than seemed even slightly plausible that was on one of the operations screens. "A
scout ship?" he asked in strangled tones of disbelief. It sounded utterly ridiculous.
"
Yes," Commander Hebert nodded, still smiling. "
If you wish to look approximately ten degrees to your port, that is a warship."
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
Tevos, along with her companions, looked at the image from traffic control and the ship that had appeared on it. There were some small sounds like tiny animals being killed by a predator from Eporius. She felt her own breathing simply stop for several seconds.
After a very,
very long moment, she cranked her head away with a huge effort of will to look the small holograms of both Commander Hebert and General Gainus, displayed side by side in the feed relayed by the former, who was watching the latter's reaction with what looked like amusement. The Councilor was having enormous difficulty not simply fainting, considering that the ship that had simply and without fuss appeared on cue was, according to the TC sensors, very close to a third the length of the entire Citadel.
It was impossible, but it was definitely there.
And the amount of weapons emplacements she could make out down the light-absorbing hull were simply
insane.
"
So is that one," Commander Hebert added helpfully, as another identical ship appeared on the other side of the
Unification. General Gainus appeared utterly frozen in shock. "
And that one, and that one, and even that one behind you." Unwillingly, Tevos followed the hologram of doom with her eyes, a ship appearing in each spot, until she finally had to close them. Eporius was making a faint harsh rattle in his throat, while Vaesarth seemed to have passed out.
"
I feel it worth pointing out that these are not by any means the largest or most powerful ships in our fleet," the horrifying woman went on after a pause. "
You may wish to bear that in mind. We do have a considerable number of them, in fact, but for most purposes we generally find that one is sufficient. I brought five with me to impress upon you that we are quite serious in our desire to see the end of this matter. I trust I have made my point, General? Or would you like to have one volley each and see who comes out best?"
Gainus's mandibles were moving but no sound was coming out. Commander Hebert waited patiently. Eventually, after close to a minute, the general turned his head and said, "
Stand down all weapons, set a course for the relay." He looked back at the camera. His mouth worked a little.
The human woman nodded slightly. "
Excellent. It was a pleasure meeting you, General. Please give my respects to your Primarch and tell him our business is concluded." She saluted him, then the image disappeared. Tevos reached out with a numb trembling hand and deactivated her omnitool, then put her head in her hands, shaking at the realization of what could have happened if things had gone slightly differently.
Today had
not gone the way she'd expected when she'd woken up.
When Vaesarth finally came around, all three of them stared at each other, then the traffic control hologram, which was now empty of any New Concordiat ships. She expected that the excrement had well and truly hit the air recirculator, since there was no way that the news wasn't all over the Citadel by now. They were going to have a
lot of explaining to do to practically everyone, which meant that they were going to be busy for some time.
With mutual silent accord, all three Councilors decided that it could wait until they had something to eat. And had recovered from the whole weird experience.
Assuming they ever did.
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
"That went well, I think."
"I agree, Taylor. It was also fairly amusing."
"Was all the posturing completely necessary, Kenny? Although I admit it was quite a lot of fun."
"It was the best method of achieving our goals. The revised projections are encouraging. The chances of an internal Citadel civil war in the next two centuries has fallen to less than four percent, while the likelihood of the Geth situation being resolved peacefully has risen to just under eighty-two percent. Other metrics have also adjusted in a positive direction. All in all, I think it went as well as we could have expected."
"A pity that so many people died in the process."
"It was, as you know, a small fraction of the inevitable toll if the situation had gone as it originally was headed. Regrettable in the extreme but avoiding casualties completely simply isn't possible."
"Ah well. Overall, I'm happy, I suppose. We can get back to work now."
"Indeed. Oh, you got a message from your mother while you were otherwise engaged. She wanted to remind you that Emma's birthday is in two weeks and she expects you both home for it."
"I would never miss
that! Have I
ever missed her birthday even once after all this time?"
"No, but you know your mother."
"That I do, Kenny, that I do. Come on, let's go see how things are coming along. The project is nearly complete according to Engineer."
"That insane Kzin has been saying it's nearly done for ten years now. His time estimation skills are inefficient."
"He's a damn good stellar engineer, though. You have to admit that."
"True. And unlike Hunts-With-Knives, you didn't have to beat him to a pulp before he'd sit down and listen to sense, so I suppose that's good."
"Your voice when you talk about them is hilarious, Kenny. You know you quite like the Kzinti."
"They do have their good points, I admit."
"And they're so
soft! No wonder Emma likes stroking Engineer."
"Yes, Taylor.
That's why."
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
Eporius watched as the massive ship docked, the flat black hull relieved only by a surprisingly small number of weapons and a legend at the nose that read SHP6829110 in the human script. The data block that Commander Hebert had sent them just before she left, somehow, had contained among a vast collection of very disturbing information that they were still analyzing some background information on the New Concordiat, including an explanation of their numbering and writing system. Other than that and a small amount of supplementary data, the human culture was still a complete blank to them, and would probably remain as such until and unless they established some form of relationship with the New Concordiat.
He didn't think that would happen soon. Based on what the commander had told them, she had been entirely correct that the Citadel cultures were incompatible with the human one in a number of fundamental ways. One of the problems was that they were clearly hundred of years at least more technologically advanced than the Asari, or even the Salarians. He knew well what was likely to happen to the less advanced culture in such a situation. The Citadel species were also vastly outnumbered, which wouldn't help either.
On the whole, he thought that maintaining a separation between them was a good idea. The use of AI in such quantities was enough to ensure total chaos never mind everything else. It would take decades if not longer before the Citadel species could hope to learn to accept that. Especially with the example of the Quarians and the Geth.
He made a mental note to look into that particular event again. From what the woman had told them as an aside, it was worth revisiting. The way the Quarians had been abandoned had always rankled a little with him, and perhaps it was time to investigate some more…
The Turian sighed slightly. The last week had been unbelievably hectic, and it was only getting started. The fallout back home on Palaven was going weirder by the day, with the Primarch's position looking more and more shaky. He wouldn't have been surprised if the top slot was filled by someone else in the not too distant future. Hopefully someone who would think things out before reaching for a gun this time.
One could hope.
Tevos had spent the last three days talking with the Asari government, and had looked more frazzled every time he'd seen her as a result. He wasn't privy to exactly what had been said, but the data packet had contained some… highly suspect… revelations that he rather thought were causing a certain amount of upset among the Asari. He'd find out sooner or later and right now had other things to worry about.
"Interesting thought occurs," a voice said from beside him, making him glance to that side. Vaesarth was standing next to the railing of the observation balcony overlooking the docking bay, like him watching the New Concordiat transport dock. "Wonder if New Concordiat number ships sequentially..."
"Why?" Eporius asked curiously.
"Statistical analysis can suggest upper limit to number of ships produced. Only two samples, so large error margin. But assuming that serial numbers
are sequential and started at 1, simplest formula is largest number, plus largest number divided by number of samples, minus one. Gives maximum likely number subject to error of over ten point eight seven million ships." The Salarian's voice trailed off as she apparently realized what she was saying as she said it. They stared at each other for a moment.
"Need larger sample size to be more accurate," she added weakly.
"I don't think I want to know," he sighed.
The ship below them finished docking. Several large hatches opened and ramps extruded to the ground. As they watched, groups comprised mostly of Turians began coming down the ramps, gathering in their thousands down the kilometer and a half length of the vessel. He headed for the elevator to the concourse level, Vaesarth and their C-Sec guards following.
A few minutes later he was approached by a group of tall figures wearing power armor that made a Krogan look like a sickly Quarian. The massive figures were accompanied by two Turians, both carrying kit bags. One had the rank insignia of a Captain, one of a Major. The little group halted in front of him.
"Councilor Eporius, Commander Hebert sends her compliments and thanks. I am Major Jon Barnes, New Concordiat Marines." The armored man saluted. Eporius nodded to him politely. "As agreed, we are returning the crews of all ships captured at the Relay 314 incident. Thirty seven thousand and fifty five survivors, two thousand one hundred and sixty one deceased personnel."
The Turian looked past the huge crowd of Hierarchy crew-members and officers, who were standing around in rough ship groupings, to see that a couple of hundred similarly-armored humans were forming a double row down one ramp. Shortly a long series of what were obviously bodies in boxes started coming down the ramp, carried by small automated cargo handlers. As the first one appeared, the entire group of humans saluted it in respect, and held the salute as they kept coming.
He blinked, unexpectedly touched. It was a nice gesture and in keeping with Turian tradition. By appearances, the New Concordiat had more than a few similarities with his species. If only things had been different.
"Thank you, Major," he replied, returning his attention to the armored soldier.
"If you would sign here, please, sir, to acknowledge that your people have been returned as agreed." The man held out an unfamiliar form of electronic pad and a stylus. Eporius accepted it, read the document, then signed the bottom. The device silently extruded a plastic sheet with a copy of the document on it, which he took. Then he gave the thing back to the major, who slipped it back into a case on his armor, saluted, and turned to the two other Turians who had been silently listening and watching.
He saluted them too. "Captain Abernius, Major Falgius, I found our discussions interesting. I am sorry that we met under such circumstances."
"As am I, Major Barnes," Captain Abernius replied. He returned the salute as did his fellow ship commander. "But I have no complaints about how we were treated."
"Thank you, Captain. Until we meet again." The human nodded to them and left, his squad accompanying him. They all watched as the armored figures rejoined their compatriots, who had apparently nearly finished unloading the poor bastards who hadn't made it. Only five minutes later the task was done.
An order was shouted, the whole battalion of soldiers about faced, and marched up the ramp. It retracted behind them, as did all the other ones, then the hatches closed. Remarkably quickly, the ship was sealed and undocked, moving away from the bay until it was clear, before accelerating away. The last sight Eporius had of a New Concordiat vessel was the thing disappearing into the distance, a faint silhouette against the nebula, before it was gone.
The councilor looked at the sheet in his hand, then slowly folded it and tucked it away. He turned to the two ship commanders, who were still peering after the now-vanished alien craft. "We should probably debrief you now," he said wearily. "Come on, I need a drink." Looking at the C-Sec guards who were staring at the huge crowd of returned former prisoners, he added, "Call in as many people as you need to get everyone interviewed and into accommodation until we can arrange ships to take them home, please."
One guard began talking into his omnitool, while the other one followed Eporius, Vaesarth, and the two other Turians as they went in search of something drinkable.
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
Two years later
Star system code name 'Quick Shot'
New Concordiat space
"Final checks all passed in the green."
"Excellent. Target first group, set aperture to ten percent, shot duration five hundred microseconds, simultaneous operation."
"Targets set. Aperture set. Duration set. Ready to fire."
"Fire shot, cycle to next group and repeat."
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
In close orbit of the primary, forty-six thousand, three hundred and sixteen energy collectors each dumped all the solar radiation collected across over thirty million square kilometers of surface through a wormhole only two meters in diameter.
In intergalactic space, over a hundred and fifty thousand light years away, forty-six thousand, three hundred and sixteen wormholes opened, each one spewing a beam of almost solid radiation two meters across for half a millisecond, then closed.
And the first group of dormant Reapers simultaneously ceased to exist…
=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=
"What do you want to do when we finish this project, Taylor?"
"Same thing we do all the time, Kenny. Save another galaxy."
"A rewarding hobby."
"Yep."