We will... Face the odds against us, and run into the fear we run from.
-Lieutenant [REDACTED], shuttle pilot for Operation Hearth, moments before being reprimanded for breaking radio silence.
_________
The Inheritors
It wasn't often that something entered Sol.
It was an occurrence so rare, that it had been practically unheard of for more than
seven millennia.
Many were comfortable with it staying that way, seeing as things entering Sol had a tendency to decimate the native population of Earth whenever they happen to enter the system. As observed with the descent of the White Giant and the plague it brought, not to mention the ongoing Alien Invasion and the subsequent occupation of the planet by their vile creation, the Machines.
The Androids, the ever-faithful creation of Mankind that had been waging an endless war to return their creators to their rightful place, were hard-pressed dealing with these threats as it was. The only good news they had gotten out of war was that the Aliens had been slaughtered to a man at the hands of their own creation, but it had come with the downside that the 'evolved machines' that had driven their masters to extinction because of their supposed stagnancy, now turned their eyes to the remaining humans out of some misguided fascination.
Not that the Androids would ever let the vile machines get close to their beloved creators, of course! But they weren't exactly in an advantageous position, especially since the machines were becoming self-aware. They had the numbers and the resources to keep that advantage indefinitely, they had the defensive advantage by having the planet, they had greater prowess in the realm of technological espionage.
Their significantly greater expertise in individual strength was one of the only things that kept them from losing, along with their greater flexibility and tactical planning. It helped that they also had orbital supremacy, even if they couldn't take full advantage of it, but who knew how long that would last with the machines gaining intelligence and looked to finally ending the conflict for good by going for the moon.
And wasn't that a startling thought, the Androids had been making gains recently, and even the knowledge that the Machines had gained sentience hadn't overshadowed the huge morale boost that came with the information that the wretched Aliens had finally got what was coming to them, but who knew if they would last if the Machines threw their all against a final confrontation.
Commander White could feel the end approaching, even before she had seen the cause of the alarm that was blaring throughout the Bunker. She could plainly see that the others thought so too. She could imagine what they were feeling; fear that their victories had been a fluke, just like the news about the Aliens' death, that they were coming to discipline their wayward creations before finally sweeping them aside and destroying the last remnants of humanity.
There was a healthy amount of despair for that reason too, she was just content with the notion that it was impossible for them to do so. That didn't mean she believed the panicked speculations of her soldiers of course, but neither did it mean she willing to let Project YoRHa be compromised so early of course, there was still much to be done before it could be called a success.
But the end
was approaching.
"Order all Units to abandon their current missions and converge on Alpha Base, and dispatch a scout to the source of the signal." She ordered, her uncompromising tone cutting through the haze of fear and breathing back life to the vaunted discipline of her Androids, "Mobilize all available assets as well, and order them to reinforce the Base." Everyone was fast at work now, "Prepare to evacuate all units from the Orbital Stations here and ready the Bunker for the Contingency Order 1."
That signal...
"And get a Scanner Unit to scout out that signal!"
She didn't know what it was about, but it was better to be safe than sorry when the future of Earth was at stake.
Satisfied now that her orders were given, she quietly sighed and watched it all unfold, prepared to give a guiding hand.
In all the commotion, no one noticed a small, nearly invisible blip on the radar shooting past their location within the blink of an eye...
__________
The Predecessors...
The tension inside the shuttle was palpable.
It was a startling difference compared to the air of levity that had existed moments before they were addressed by the Grand Marshal. The speech given by the highest ranking official within the Ascendancy had made even the less serious participants of Operation Hearth sober up with the recognition of the sheer importance of their role, performing an instant transformation to serious determination that ruled them all now...
Well, almost all of them.
Demir never did get used to the customary tense shuttle ride he had to suffer through each mission.
That their shuttle did not exactly have anything that could distract them from the tension did not help his mood one bit.
A radio silence had been enforced on anything that was not hidden behind layers upon layers of encryption, which also happened to extend to both the comms and the external speakers of their sound-insulated helmets. They had been ordered to keep them on at all costs, seeing as the possibility of them suffering an unfortunate incident and having to crash land on the planet's surface was unfortunately not out of the question.
Demir's shudder at that thought was only invisible because his armor hid it well.
It was all very understandable, but made for a poor trip when you were sitting on basically what amounted to nothing more than a floating block of metal that didn't even have any windows outside the cockpit to look out of because some egghead decided that 'structural integrity' was more important than passenger comfort. Seriously... Would it have killed them to at least install some screens in this thing?
He couldn't even get up and pace the length of the shuttle because they had to be strapped down until touchdown, which only exacerbated his anxiety about this whole thing! It wasn't like he had other things to be jittery about, like the very important existential mission they were about to have,
oh no... If he survived this thing he was going to have some
words with a couple of engineers.
Focus! There are not the thoughts you should be having before this mission...
Demir was very well aware that his very-valid trepidation with tense shuttle rides toward potentially hostile territory (and wasn't just the most comforting and ironic thing to think about
Mother Earth) was affecting his perception of what was actually a pretty calm shuttle ride for most, judging by how many seemed to be perfectly fine inside what may very well be their pre-made at state-expense metal coffin.
The shuttle took that moment to rumble and shake violently.
Fuckinghell-
It was a moment filled with dread that mercifully ended soon after a few seconds, the thrice-damned shuttle somewhat stabilizing as the shaking shrunk to a more manageable level. Demir took a moment to extract his buried fingers from the metal of the harness he was bound to before looking around to check if anybody had caught him in his moment of weakness.
The answer was yes, and he was once again left astonished by Theodora's prodigious ability to somehow make a simple stare from a faceless helmet look smug as she could...
At least the others hadn't seen it.
ATMOSPHERE BREACHED, ETA TO LANDFALL TWENTY MINUTES
He couldn't wait...
This shuttle ride was swiftly becoming one of the worst ones he had to suffer through yet...
__________
Humanity had finally returned to Earth.
It wasn't a momentous occasion like the Auspicious Discovery, achieved by a ragtag crew of plucky underdogs, in a simple ship who was considered most unlikely to ever to bring such a thing, to bring about the return of the Lost Ones to their beloved Mother Earth. In a way, one should not be surprised, as this account is similar to most success stories in Humanity's history, yet it is always shocking when it happens because no one ever suspects it.
Nor was this return a glorious scene like the Greater Solar Homecoming, a Grand Fleet made up of hundreds of state-of-the-art ships, manned by the descendants of the very best humanity had to offer, led by its larger-than-life Marshal as it paraded into the system one by one behind a glorious flagship, ready to find out what had happened to their exalted homeworld...
In comparison to them, The Return was a rather lackluster affair. A comparably tiny shuttle whizzing its way into the atmosphere of the planet, filled with silent faceless soldiers who were grimly focused on the mission given to them, that they were the best soldiers humanity had to offer was the only pomp and circumstance present in this entire affair up until the landing.
As the shuttle landed on the depths of what had once historically been known as the Black Forest in Old Germany, and the praised Venatores filed out of the ship, it is known that the officer in charge of the squad of Venatores, one Captain Alan Greene was the first one to set foot in the grass, all the declassified accounts that could be gathered from the operatives who'd been on the mission testify that he'd quoted the iconic line that were etched into the memory of every human alive.
"That's one small step for a man, one giant leap for mankind."
And what a leap it was...
They had been the unwilling exiles that had been ripped from their homes so suddenly, they had been the fearful prey of a hungry swarm of monsters that saw them as nothing more than sustenance, they had been the divided people who had desperately united under a hero that led them to victory, they had been the united ones who had subjugated entire star systems. They had been the ones who had not stopped for two hundred years until they finally managed to claw their way back home...
Only to find that it had changed, that it was still, that it was silent.
Their home had not been idle when they had gone away. To this day, no one to fully knows what happened to Earth, but it was obvious that they had not been the only ones the Universe unleashed lifetimes of torment on. Yet... For all the bleakness that one sees when they look at the surface, life always manages to shine a helpful light on things that make everything a bit better.
Humanity had suffered through numerous trials, but it has always managed to survive them, and it has always managed to thrive and surpass the ones that would come after. They were too resourceful for the Universe to simply crush them and let them be forgotten in the annals of time, and even the ones that had found the odds were too stacked against them would find a way to leave their mark on the Universe.
And a mark they had left...
Humanity's gift to itself would reshape the very balance of the Universe...
-The Unending Tale of Humanity: Volume 6, An Invaluable Gift