"Relics of the past are what bring us into the future. They secure us, they ground us, they hold a history that lasts through the ages, and sometimes they return to relevance.
The rock has been a staple of human violence since man first made war with fellow man. And no matter how we try to advance, almost everything comes down to transferring that rock (and the momentum, mass, and other factors) into or through another being.
It began with the sling and the spear, with a sling, you could move a rock far away, and cause extreme damage. With the spear, you could create distance and use the rock up close.
But as time advanced, and technology grew, we figured out how to break open the rocks, and to use what lay inside, the bronze, the iron, and the other metals that became the standards.
And progress continued, in spite of war, famine, and other disasters. Mankind eventually figured out how to do more with the rock, they figured out how to make it fly through the air. And one day, they achieved the impossible with the rocks. With great flames that burned fuel, they sent the rocks, (And the people carried by them) into the great void that surrounded our home.
Earth, and all that was upon it lay below. But that was not the end of progress. For you see, in April of 2291, the Shaw-Fujikawa Translight Engine was developed and the doors to the rest of the galaxy were opened.
And life continued for Humanity, but we did not know the darkness that awaited us in the shadows. For you see, five years go, we met something, something that sought our end. And though our foe is fierce, I think that we can stand. I think that we can fight, and even win. Because everything, comes down to who can make the biggest rock hit the hardest."
"Thank you for that essay, Adam," Nancy Faircloth smiled at the preteen as she gestured for him to sit back down at his desk. "Does anyone else want to read theirs out loud?"
As she asked this, the bell rang and the kids began to stand up.
"Adam," Nancy called out. "Please stay behind for a moment, I want to talk about this."
"Yes, ma'am," the boy replied, his backpack slung over one shoulder as he waited for the rest of his classmates to leave. "Did I do something wrong, ma'am?"
"Adam, the contents of your essay concern me a bit," the old woman sighed as she looked at the honest smile of one of her favorite students. "Is your father letting you watch the UNSC broadcasts of the war again?"
"Yes, ma'am," he nodded. "We need to be prepared, is what pops says. That the war might come for us when we least expect it."
"I'll have to talk to him again," she shook her head. "He knows not to be filling your head with nonsense."
"S'not nonsense. And I'm the one that asked to know," Adam protested.
"Fine," Nancy pinched the bridge of her nose to stave off the headache she could feel coming. "But I want you to rewrite this essay, you didn't use the topics listed. And please stop focusing on the war. You've got a chance at a really great future if you put your mind to it."
"I'm home!" Adam called out as he slipped off his shoes at the door and hung his backpack and key on the rack next to the door.
"Hey son," his father stepped out into the hallway, wiping dirty hands off onto an apron. "You're a bit late today, your sisters already finished up and are working in the garden."
"Miss Faircloth wanted to talk again," Adam frowned. "She says she doesn't like that we watch the UNSC broadcasts on the war."
"It's the fastest way to figure out where your mother is stationed," Alan shrugged. "And I'm not going to hide reality from y'all. I served my time in war, and I can feel another one coming."
The UNSC Army veteran tapped his prosthetic leg before smiling.
"But I think we're safe for a while longer, now go get your chores done and then collect your sisters. We got a letter from her today."
"We did?!" Adam''s eyes grew wide as he processed that. "I'll finish up the chores."
Adam stumbled into his boots and raced outside to join his sisters in taking care of the family farm.
"Guys, we need to hurry up, dad's got a letter from mom!" he yelled out as he raced to the chicken pen.
"We know," the older twin rolled her eyes before continuing her chores. "We're already almost done, you're the one that's running late."
After they finished the busywork of the afterschool farm chores, the trio gathered in the livingroom where their father was waiting.
"She sent us a video message and a handwritten letter," the veteran smiled and sat down, his three kids piling into his lap even though they were too big for it. "Which do you want to start with?"
"The letter," the girls and Adam said at the same time, the excited grins on their faces matching as their father carefully opened the envelope.
"Alan, Adam, Evelyn, and Jasmine,
I miss you guys. I know it's been a rough couple of years. But what I'm doing is important. I have a responsibility to fulfil here. The UNSC payed for my schooling and as an activated Reservist, I owe it to them to finish this out. I love you guys and I love seeing the letters that you guys send me. They're what keep me going through the days when it's hard.
"Adam, you're growing into such a good young man, and I know that you're learning good lessons from your father. Evelyn, Jasmine, you're nearly grown women now, and I know that your father is already having to fight off the boys.
Girls, I'm sorry that I'm not going to be there for homecoming and prom. I know that we had hoped my deployment would be over in time for that, but things didn't work out that way. Hopefully everything works out and I'll see all of you by the end of the year."
Alan paused in reading the letter to wipe a small tear from his face as he pulled his daughters in close.
"And finally, to my beloved Husband. I love you, thank you for being so strong and taking care of our family. I know that you sometimes feel like you're not doing enough, that you should be serving here with me. But I want you to know that you're doing more right now than I am. Our future is in our children. And they need the stability that their father brings."
A few tear stains were on the letter at that point, the old watermarks from where Emily had cried while writing.
"I love all of you, and I'll see you all for Christmas,
Love,
Emily Heathcliffe.
PS. Kiddos, try to take it a bit easy on your father. He's good at hiding how hard it is sometimes, and he does his best. So try to remember that even when it feels like he's being old and stuffy, that he's trying to look out for all of you."
After folding the letter up and setting it back into the envelope, Alan passed it to Adam and gestured for the steel box that was above their fireplace.
Adam stood and gently picked up the box and opened it, placing the letter with the others in the velvet and wooden interior of the box. Then, he set it up next to the old Relic that hung next to it.
"Now, time for the video message," Adam stood and pushed the crystalline storage device into the screen that was offset in the corner. "Let's see how your mother is doing."
Later that night…
"Hey buddy," Alan greeted Adam from where he sat on the couch. "Couldn't sleep?"
"Never can after a letter from mom," Adam sat down. "I always feel like I need to go outside and try to figure out where she is."
"Well, I was about to do some maintenance anyway," Alan stood and gathered some tools and the relic off of the rack above the fireplace. "Let's do it together."
Together, father and son stepped out onto the front porch and sat down in the few chairs that were there.
"I'll get the switch," Adam flipped a switch and part of the roof retracted, revealing the stars and Ehilend, the lone moon.
"So, she was at Reach," Alan said as he pulled the relic of a bygone era apart and began to clean it. "Can you tell me where that is in relation to us here on Eridanus II?"
"It should be about… There!" Adam pointed to a lone star amidst the millions of pinpricks.
"You're close," Alan glanced up. "But you're a few stars off. Still, great job," he ruffled his son's hair. "But we don't know where her ship has been moved to, so she could be at any one of those stars."
"I know," Adam sighed, his face seemingly older than he actually was for a few seconds before he noticed what his father was doing.
"Are we going to the range soon?" he asked.
"No," his father replied as he finished stripping the M1911 and began cleaning it. "I just have a bad feeling."
"Then why clean that instead of the other guns?" Adam asked.
"Because history is important," Alan smiled. "This weapon doesn't compare to the weapons that we use today, it's old, not as efficient, and doesn't hit as hard. But, this has been in our family for six hundred years and it's saved more than one life in that time period. This is a relic of our past, but it's also a symbol. Do you remember the first lesson I taught you and your sisters about the farm?"
"Take care of your tools, and your animals and they'll take care of you," Evelyn stepped outside, with her sister, a light jacket wrapped around her as she and Jasmine joined the two boys.
"That's right," Alan smiled at his children. "It's one of the most important lessons I have to teach y'all. And this, as well as everything else in the safe is another tool that we have available to use."
The three then lounged around their father as he explained the family history, of how the generations of Heathcliffes had passed down the important lessons, of self-sufficiency, of taking responsibility for your own actions, and of caring for your family.
And eventually, they all fell asleep. The pile of them snoring underneath the stars while Alan held vigil.
But as he looked out in the darkness of the night, he felt it in his bones, something dark was coming, and right below the stump of his left leg, where the prosthetic met flesh, he could feel the pain coming back as if the injury were new.
Grimacing, he grabbed onto an old wooden crucifix and looked towards the stars once more. He whispered a prayer and shifted into a more comfortable position.
Tonight was a night for his family. And it didn't matter where they lay their heads for the night as long as they were together.