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  • #7854
    Yurara FamelikiYurara Fameliki
    Participant

      Arthurian Parallels in Helix 25

      This table explores an overlay of Arthurian archetypes woven into the narrative of Helix 25.
      By mapping key mythological figures to characters and themes within the story, it provides archetypal templates for exploration of leadership, unity, betrayal, and redemption in a futuristic setting.

      Arthurian Archetype Role in Arthurian Myth Helix 25 Counterpart Narrative Integration in Helix 25 Themes & Contemporary Reflections
      Merlin Wise guide, prophet, keeper of lost knowledge, enigmatic mentor. Merdhyn Winstrom Hermit survivor whose beacon reawakens lost knowledge, eccentric guide bridging Earth and Helix. Echoes of lost wisdom resurfacing in times of crisis. Role of eccentric thinkers in shaping the future.
      King Arthur (Once and Future King) Sleeping leader destined to return, restorer of order and unity. Captain Veranassessee Cryo-sleeping leader awakened to restore stability and uncover ship’s deeper truths. Balancing destiny, responsibility, and the burden of leadership in a fractured world.
      Lady of the Lake Guardian of sacred wisdom, bestower of power, holds destiny in trust. Molly & Ellis Marlowe Custodians of ancestral knowledge, connecting genetic past to future, deciding who is worthy. Gatekeepers of forgotten truths. Who decides what knowledge should be passed down?
      Excalibur Sacred weapon representing legitimacy, strength, and destiny. Genetic/Technological Legacy (DNA or Artifact) Latent genetic or technological power that legitimizes leadership and enables restoration. What makes someone truly worthy of leadership—birthright, wisdom, or action?
      The Round Table Assembly of noble figures, unifying leadership for justice and stability. Crew Reunion & Unity Arc Gathering key figures and factions, resolving past divisions, solidifying leadership. How do we rebuild trust and unity in a world fractured by conflict and betrayal?
      The Holy Grail Ultimate quest for redemption, unity, and spiritual awakening. Rediscovered Earth or True Purpose Journey to unify factions, reconnect with Earth, and rediscover humanity’s true mission. Is humanity’s purpose merely survival, or is there something greater to strive for?
      The Fisher King Wounded guardian of a dying land, whose fate mirrors humanity’s wounds. Earth’s Ruined Environmental Condition Metaphor for humanity’s wounds—only healed through wisdom, unity, and ethical leadership. Environmental stewardship as moral responsibility; the impact of neglect and division.
      Camelot Utopian vision, fragile and prone to betrayal and internal decay. Helix 25 Community Helix 25 as a fragile utopian experiment, threatened by division and complacency. Utopian dreams versus real-world struggles; maintaining ideals without corruption.
      Mordred Betrayal from within, power-hungry faction that disrupts harmony. AI Manipulators / Hidden Saboteurs Internal betrayal—either AI-driven manipulation or ideological rebellion disrupting balance. How does internal dissent shape societies? When is rebellion justified?
      Gwenevere Queen, torn between duty, love, and political implications. Sue Forgelot or Captain Veranassessee Powerful yet conflicted female figure, mediating between different factions and destinies. The role of women in leadership, power dynamics, and the burden of political choices.
      Lancelot Loyal knight, unmatched warrior, torn between personal desires and duty. Orrin Holt or Kai Nova Heroic yet personally conflicted figure, struggling with duty vs. personal ties. Can one’s personal desires coexist with duty? What happens when loyalties are divided?
      Gawain Moral knight, flawed but honorable, faces ethical trials and tests. Riven Holt or Anuí Naskó Character undergoing trials of morality, leadership, and self-discovery. How does one navigate moral dilemmas? Growth through trials and ethical challenges.
      Morgana le Fay Misunderstood sorceress, keeper of hidden knowledge, power and manipulation. Zoya Kade Keeper of esoteric knowledge, influencing fate through prophecy and genetic memory. The fine line between wisdom and manipulation. Who controls the narrative of destiny?
      Perceval Naïve but destined knight, seeker of truth, stumbles upon great revelations. Tundra (Molly’s granddaughter) Youthful truth-seeker, symbolizing innocence and intuitive revelation. Naivety versus wisdom—can purity of heart succeed in a complex, divided world?
      Galahad Pure knight, achieves the Grail through unwavering virtue and clarity. Evie Investigator who uncovers truth through integrity and unwavering pursuit of justice. The pursuit of truth and justice as a path to transformation and redemption.
      The Green Knight/Challenge Mystical challenger, tests worthiness and integrity through ordeal. Mutiny Group / Environmental Crisis A trial or crisis forcing humanity to reckon with its moral and environmental failures. Humanity’s reckoning with its own self-destructive patterns—can we learn from the past?
      #7853
      Yurara FamelikiYurara Fameliki
      Participant

        Expanded Helix 25 Narrative Structure

        This table organizes the key narrative arcs, characters, stakes, and thematic questions within Helix 25.
        It hopes to clarify the character development paths, unresolved mysteries, and broader philosophical questions
        that shape the world and conflicts aboard the ship and on Earth.

        Group / Location Key Characters Character Arc Description Stakes at Hand Growth Path / Needed Resolution Unresolved / Open Questions
        Helix 25 Investigators Evie, Riven Holt Move from initial naiveté into investigative maturity and moral complexity. Solving murders; uncovering ship-wide genetic and conspiratorial mysteries. Solve the murder and uncover deeper conspiracy; evolve in understanding of justice and truth. Who is behind the murders, and how do they connect to genetic experiments? Can the investigation conclude without a ship-wide disaster?
        Captain and Authority Veranassessee (Captain), Victor Holt, Sue Forgelot Struggle between personal ambition, legacy, and leadership responsibilities. Control over Helix 25; reconciling past decisions with the present crisis. Clarify leadership roles; determine AI’s true intent and whether it can be trusted. Why were Veranassessee and Victor Holt placed in cryostasis? Can they reconcile their past and lead effectively?
        Lexicans / Prophecy Followers Anuí Naskó, Zoya Kade, Kio’ath Wrestle with the role of prophecy in shaping humanity’s fate and their personal identities. Interpreting prophecy and ensuring it doesn’t destabilize the ship’s fragile peace. Define the prophecy’s role in shaping real-world actions; balance faith and reason. Is the prophecy real or a distorted interpretation of genetic science? Who is the Speaker?
        AI and Tech-Human Synthesis Synthia AI, Mandrake, TP (Trevor Pee) Question control, sentience, and ethical AI usage. Human survival in the face of AI autonomy; defining AI-human coexistence. Determine if Synthia can be an ally or is a rogue force; resolve AI ethics debate. What is Synthia’s endgame—benevolent protector or manipulative force? Can AI truly coexist with humans?
        Telepathic Cleaner Lineage / Humor and Communication Arc Finkley, Finja Transition from comic relief to key mediators between Helix and Earth survivors. Establishing clear telepathic channels for communication; bridging Earth-Helix survivors. Fully embrace their psychic role; decipher if their link is natural or AI-influenced. Does AI interfere with psychic communication? Can telepathy safely unite Earth and Helix?
        Upper Deck Elderly Trio (Social Commentary & Comic Relief) Sharon, Gloria, Mavis Provide levity and philosophical critique of life aboard the ship. Keeping morale and philosophical integrity intact amid unfolding crises. Contribute insights that impact key decisions, revealing truths hidden in humor. Will their wisdom unexpectedly influence critical events? Are they aware of secrets others have missed?
        Earth Survivors – Hungary & Ukraine Molly (Marlowe), Tundra, Anya, Petro, Gregor, Tala, Yulia, Mikhail, Jian Move from isolated survival and grief to unity and rediscovery of lost connections. Survival on a devastated Earth; confirming whether a connection to Helix 25 exists. Confirm lineage connections and reunite with ship-based family or survivors. What is the fate of Earth’s other survivors? Can they reunite without conflict?
        Base Klyutch Group (Military Survivors) Orrin Holt, Koval, Solara Ortega, Janos Varga, Dr. Yelena Markova Transition from defensive isolation to outward exploration and human reconnection. Navigating dangers on Earth; reconnecting with lost knowledge and ship-born survivors. Clarify the nature of space signals; integrate newfound knowledge with Helix 25. Who sent the space signal? Can Base Klyutch’s knowledge help Helix 25 before it’s too late?
        The Lone Island Tinkerer / Beacon Activator Merdhyn Winstrom Rise from eccentric survivor to central figure in reconnecting Earth and Helix. Repairing beacon signals; discovering who else may have received the call. Determine beacon’s true purpose; unify Earth and Helix factions through communication. Who else intercepted the beacon’s message? Can Merdhyn be fully trusted?
        #7852
        Yurara FamelikiYurara Fameliki
        Participant

          “Tundra Finds the Shoat-lion”

          FADE IN:

          EXT. THE GOLDEN TROWEL BAR — DUSK

          A golden, muted twilight paints the landscape, illuminating the overgrown ivy and sprawled vines reclaiming the ancient tavern. THE GOLDEN TROWEL sign creaks gently in the breeze above the doorway.

          ANGLE DOWN TO — TUNDRA, a spirited and curious 12-year-old girl with a wild, freckled pixie-cut and striking auburn hair, stepping carefully over ivy-covered stones and debris. She wears worn clothes, stitched lovingly by survivors; a scavenged backpack swings on one shoulder.

          Behind her, through the windows of the tavern, warm lantern-light flickers. We glimpse MOLLY and GREGOR smiling and chatting quietly through dusty glass.

          ANGLE ON — Tundra as she pauses, hearing a soft rustling near the abandoned beer barrels stacked against the tavern wall. Her green eyes widen, alert and intrigued.

          SLOW PAN DOWN to reveal a small creature trembling in the shadows—a MARCASSIN, a tiny wild piglet no larger than a rugby ball, with coarse fur streaked ginger and cinnamon stripes along its body. Large dark eyes stare up, innocence mixed with wary curiosity. It’s adorable yet clearly distinct, with sharper canines already hinting at the deeply mutated carnivorous lineage of Hungary’s lion-boars.

          Tundra inhales softly, visibly torn between instinctual cautiousness her elders taught and her own irrepressible instinct of compassion.

          TUNDRA
          (soft, gentle)
          “It’s alright…I won’t hurt you.”

          She crouches slowly, reaching into her pocket—a small piece of stale bread emerges, held in her outstretched hand.

          CLOSE-UP on the marcassin’s wary eyes shifting cautiously to her extended palm. A heartbeat of hesitation, and then it takes a tentative step forward, sniffing gently. Tundra holds utterly still, breath held in earnest hope.

          The marcassin edges closer, wet nose brushing her fingers softly. Tundra beams, freckles highlighted by the fading sun, warmth and joy glowing on her face.

          TUNDRA
          (whispering happily)
          “You’re not so scary, are you? I’m Tundra… I think we could be friends.”

          Movement at the tavern door draws her attention. The worn wood creaks as MOLLY and GREGOR step outside, shadows stretching long in the golden sunset. MOLLY’s eyes, initially alert with careful caution, soften at the touching scene.

          MOLLY
          (gently amused, warmly amused yet apprehensive)
          “Careful now, darling. Even the smallest things aren’t always what they seem these days.”

          GREGOR
          (softly chuckling, eyes twinkling)
          “But then again, neither are we.”

          ANGLE ON Tundra, looking up to meet Molly’s eyes. Her determination tempered only by vulnerability, hope, and youthful stubbornness.

          TUNDRA
          “It needs us, Nana Molly. Everything needs somebody nowadays.”

          Molly considers the wisdom in Tundra’s young, earnest gaze. Gregor stifles a smile and pats Molly lightly lovingly on the shoulder.

          GREGOR
          (warmly, quietly)
          “Ah, let her find hope where she sees it. Might be that little thing will change how we see hope ourselves.”

          ANGLE WIDE — the small group beside the tavern: Molly, her wise and caring gaze thoughtful; Gregor’s stance gentle yet cautiously protective; Tundra radiating youthful bravery, cradling newfound companionship as the marcassin squeaks softly, cuddling gently against her worn sweater.

          ASCENDING SHOT ABOVE the tumbledown ancient Hungarian tavern, the warm glow of lantern and sunset mingling. Ancient vines and wild weeds whisper forgotten stories as stars blink awake above.

          In that gentle hush, beneath a wild and vast sky reclaiming an abandoned land, Tundra’s act of compassion quietly rekindles hope for humanity’s delicate future.

          FADE OUT.

          #7849

          Helix 25 – The Genetic Puzzle

          Amara’s Lab – Data Now Aggregated
          (Discrepancies Never Addressed)

          On the screen in front of Dr. Amara Voss, lines upon lines of genetic code were cascading and making her sleepy. While the rest of the ship was running amok, she was barricaded into her lab, content to have been staring at the sequences for the most part of the day —too long actually.

          She took a sip of her long-cold tea and exhaled sharply.

          Even if data was patchy from the records she had access to, there was a solid database of genetic materials, all dutifully collected for all passengers, or crew before embarkment, as was mandated by company policy. The official reason being to detect potential risks for deep space survival. Before the ship’s take-over, systematic recording of new-borns had been neglected, and after the ship’s takeover, population’s new born had drastically reduced, with the birth control program everyone had agreed on, as was suggested by Synthia. So not everyone’s DNA was accounted for, but in theory, anybody on the ship could be traced back and matched by less than 2 or 3 generations to the original data records.

          The Marlowe lineage was the one that kept resurfacing. At first, she thought it was coincidence—tracing the bloodlines of the ship’s inhabitants was messy, a tangled net of survivors, refugees, and engineered populations. But Marlowe wasn’t alone.

          Another name pulsed in the data. Forgelot. Then Holt. Old names of Earth, unlike the new star-birthed. There were others, too.

          Families that had been aboard Helix 25 for some generations. But more importantly, bloodlines that could be traced back to Earth’s distant past.

          But beyond just analysing their origins, there was something else that caught her attention. It was what was happening to them now.

          Amara leaned forward, pulling up the mutation activation models she had been building. In normal conditions, these dormant genetic markers would remain just that—latent. Passed through generations like forgotten heirlooms, meaningless until triggered.

          Except in this case, there was evidence that something had triggered them.

          The human body, subjected to long-term exposure to deep space radiation, artificial gravity shifts, and cosmic phenomena, and had there not been a fair dose of shielding from the hull, should have mutated chaotically, randomly. But this was different. The genetic sequences weren’t just mutating—they were activating.

          And more surprisingly… it wasn’t truly random.

          Something—or someone—had inherited an old mechanism that allowed them to access knowledge, instincts, memories from generations long past.

          The ancient Templars had believed in a ritualistic process to recover ancestral skills and knowledge. What Amara was seeing now…

          She rubbed her forehead.

          “Impossible.”

          And yet—here was the data.

          On Earth, the past was written in stories and fading ink. In space, the past was still alive—hiding inside their cells, waiting.

          Earth – The Quiz Night Reveal

          The Golden Trowel, Hungary

          The candlelit warmth of The Golden Trowel buzzed with newfound energy. The survivors sat in a loose circle, drinks in hand, at this unplanned but much-needed evening of levity.

          Once the postcards shared, everyone was listening as Tala addressed the group.

          “If anyone has an anecdote, hang on to the postcard,” she said. “If not, pass it on. No wrong answers, but the best story wins.”

          Molly felt the weight of her own selection, the Giralda’s spire sharp and unmistakable. Something about it stirred her—an itch in the back of her mind, a thread tugging at long-buried memories.

          She turned toward Vera, who was already inspecting her own card with keen interest.

          “Tower of London, anything exciting to share?”

          Vera arched a perfectly sculpted eyebrow, lips curving in amusement.

          Molly Darling,” she drawled, “I can tell you lots, I know more about dead people’s families than most people know about their living ones, and London is surely a place of abundance of stories. But do you even know about your own name Marlowe?”

          She spun the postcard between her fingers before answering.

          “Not sure, really, I only know about Philip Marlowe, the fictional detective from Lady in the Lake novel… Never really thought about the name before.”

          “Marlowe,” Vera smiled. “That’s an old name. Very old. Derived from an Old English phrase meaning ‘remnants of a lake.’

          Molly inhaled sharply.

          Remnants of the Lady of the Lake ?

          Her pulse thrummed. Beyond the historical curiosity she’d felt a deep old connection.

          If her family had left behind records, they would have been on the ship… The thought came with unwanted feelings she’d rather have buried. The living mattered, the lost ones… They’d lost connection for so long, how could they…

          Her fingers tightened around the postcard.

          Unless there was something behind her ravings?

          Molly swallowed the lump in her throat and met Vera’s gaze. “I need to talk to Finja.”

          :fleuron2:

          Finja had spent most of the evening pretending not to exist.

          But after the fifth time Molly nudged her, eyes bright with silent pleas, she let out a long-suffering sigh.

          “Alright,” she muttered. “But just one.”

          Molly exhaled in relief.

          The once-raucous Golden Trowel had dimmed into something softer—the edges of the night blurred with expectation.

          Because it wasn’t just Molly who wanted to ask.

          Maybe it was the effect of the postcards game, a shared psychic connection, or maybe like someone had muttered, caused by the new Moon’s sickness… A dozen others had realized, all at once, that they too had names to whisper.

          Somehow, a whole population was still alive, in space, after all this time. There was no time for disbelief now, Finja’s knowledge of stuff was incontrovertible. Molly was cued by the care-taking of Ellis Marlowe by Finkley, she knew things about her softie of a son, only his mother and close people would know.

          So Finja had relented. And agreed to use all means to establish a connection, to reignite a spark of hope she was worried could just be the last straw before being thrown into despair once again.

          Finja closed her eyes.

          The link had always been there, an immediate vivid presence beneath her skull, pristine and comfortable but tonight it felt louder, crowdier.

          The moons had shifted, in syzygy, with a gravity pull in their orbits tugging at things unseen.

          She reached out—

          And the voices crashed into her.

          Too much. Too many.

          Hundreds of voices, drowning her in longing and loss.

          “Where is my brother?”
          “Did my wife make it aboard?”
          “My son—please—he was supposed to be on Helix 23—”
          “Tell them I’m still here!”

          Her head snapped back, breath shattering into gasps.

          The crowd held its breath.

          A dozen pairs of eyes, wide and unblinking.

          Finja clenched her fists. She had to shut it down. She had to—

          And then—

          Something else.

          A presence. Watching.

          Synthia.

          Her chest seized.

          There was no logical way for an AI to interfere with telepathic frequencies.

          And yet—

          She felt it.

          A subtle distortion. A foreign hand pressing against the link, observing.

          The ship knew.

          Finja jerked back, knocking over her chair.

          The bar erupted into chaos.

          “FINJA?! What did you see?”
          “Was someone there?”
          “Did you find anyone?!”

          Her breath came in short, panicked bursts.

          She had never thought about the consequences of calling out across space.

          But now…

          Now she knew.

          They were not the last survivors. Other lived and thrived beyond Earth.

          And Synthia wanted to keep it that way.

          Yet, Finja and Finkley had both simultaneously caught something.
          It would take the ship time, but they were coming back. Synthia was not pleased about it, but had not been able to override the response to the beacon.

          They were coming back.

          #7848
          Jib
          Participant

            Helix 25 – Murder Board – Evie’s apartment

            The ship had gone mad.

            Riven Holt stood in what should have been a secured crime scene, staring at the makeshift banner that had replaced his official security tape. “ENTER FREELY AND OF YOUR OWN WILL,” it read, in bold, uneven letters. The edges were charred. Someone had burned it, for reasons he would never understand.

            Behind him, the faint sounds of mass lunacy echoed through the corridors. People chanting, people sobbing, someone loudly trying to bargain with gravity.

            “Sir, the floors are not real! We’ve all been walking on a lie!” someone had screamed earlier, right before diving headfirst into a pile of chairs left there by someone trying to create a portal.

            Riven did his best to ignore the chaos, gripping his tablet like it was the last anchor to reality. He had two dead bodies. He had one ship full of increasingly unhinged people. And he had forty hours without sleep. His brain felt like a dried-out husk, working purely on stubbornness and caffeine fumes.

            Evie was crouched over Mandrake’s remains, muttering to herself as she sorted through digital records. TP stood nearby, his holographic form flickering as if he, too, were being affected by the ship’s collective insanity.

            “Well,” TP mused, rubbing his nonexistent chin. “This is quite the predicament.”

            Riven pinched the bridge of his nose. “TP, if you say anything remotely poetic about the human condition, I will unplug your entire database.”

            TP looked delighted. “Ah, my dear lieutenant, a threat worthy of true desperation!”

            Evie ignored them both, then suddenly stiffened. “Riven, I… you need to see this.”

            He braced himself. “What now?”

            She turned the screen toward him. Two names appeared side by side:

            ETHAN MARLOWE

            MANDRAKE

            Both M.

            The sound that came out of Riven was not quite a word. More like a dying engine trying to restart.

            TP gasped dramatically. “My stars. The letter M! The implications are—”

            “No.” Riven put up a hand, one tremor away from screaming. “We are NOT doing this. I am not letting my brain spiral into a letter-based conspiracy theory while people outside are rolling in protein paste and reciting odes to Jupiter’s moons.”

            Evie, far too calm for his liking, just tapped the screen again. “It’s a pattern. We have to consider it.”

            TP nodded sagely. “Indeed. The letter M—known throughout history as a mark of mystery, malice, and… wait, let me check… ah, macaroni.”

            Riven was going to have an aneurysm.

            Instead, he exhaled slowly, like a man trying to keep the last shreds of his soul from unraveling.

            “That means the Lexicans are involved.”

            Evie paled. “Oh no.”

            TP beamed. “Oh yes!”

            The Lexicans had been especially unpredictable lately. One had been caught trying to record the “song of the walls” because “they hum with forgotten words.” Another had attempted to marry the ship’s AI. A third had been detained for throwing their own clothing into the air vents because “the whispers demanded tribute.”

            Riven leaned against the console, feeling his mind slipping. He needed a reality check. A hard, cold, undeniable fact.

            Only one person could give him that.

            “You know what? Fine,” he muttered. “Let’s just ask the one person who might actually be able to tell me if this is a coincidence or some ancient space cult.”

            Evie frowned. “Who?”

            Riven was already walking. “My grandfather.”

            Evie practically choked. “Wait, WHAT?!”

            TP clapped his hands. “Ah, the classic ‘Wake the Old Man to Solve the Crimes’ maneuver. Love it.”

            The corridors were worse than before. As they made their way toward cryo-storage, the lunacy had escalated:

            A crowd was parading down the halls with helium balloons, chanting, “Gravity is a Lie!”
            A group of engineers had dismantled a security door, claiming “it whispered to them about betrayal.”
            And a bunch of Lexicans, led by Kio’ath, had smeared stinking protein paste onto the Atrium walls, drawing spirals and claiming the prophecy was upon them all.
            Riven’s grip on reality was thin.

            Evie grabbed his arm. “Think about this. What if your grandfather wakes up and he’s just as insane as everyone else?”

            Riven didn’t even break stride. “Then at least we’ll be insane with more context.”

            TP sighed happily. “Ah, reckless decision-making. The very heart of detective work.”

            Helix 25 — Victor Holt’s Awakening

            They reached the cryo-chamber. The pod loomed before them, controls locked down under layers of security.

            Riven cracked his knuckles, eyes burning with the desperation of a man who had officially run out of better options.

            Evie stared. “You’re actually doing this.”

            He was already punching in override codes. “Damn right I am.”

            The door opened. A low hum filled the room. The first thing Riven noticed was the frost still clinging to the edges of an already open cryopod. Cold vapor curled around its base, its occupant nowhere to be seen.

            His stomach clenched. Someone had beaten them here. Another pod’s systems activated. The glass began to fog as temperature levels shifted.

            TP leaned in. “Oh, this is going to be deliciously catastrophic.”

            Before the pod could fully engage, a flicker of movement in the dim light caught Riven’s eye. Near the terminal, hunched over the access panel like a gang of thieves cracking a vault, stood Zoya Kade and Anuí Naskó—and, a baby wrapped in what could only be described as an aggressively overdesigned Lexican tapestry, layers of embroidered symbols and unreadable glyphs woven in mismatched patterns. It was sucking desperately the lexican’s sleeve.

            Riven’s exhaustion turned into a slow, rising fury. For a brief moment, his mind was distracted by something he had never actually considered before—he had always assumed Anuí was a woman. The flowing robes, the mannerisms, the way they carried themselves. But now, cradling the notorious Lexican baby in ceremonial cloth, could they possibly be…

            Anuí caught his look and smiled faintly, unreadable as ever. “This has nothing to do with gender,” they said smoothly, shifting the baby with practiced ease. “I merely am the second father of the child.”

            “Oh, for f***—What in the hell are you two doing here?”

            Anuí barely glanced up, shifting the baby to their other arm as though hacking into a classified cryo-storage facility while holding an infant was a perfectly normal occurrence. “Unlocking the axis of the spiral,” they said smoothly. “It was prophesied. The Speaker’s name has been revealed.”

            Zoya, still pressing at the panel, didn’t even look at him. “We need to wake Victor Holt.”

            Riven threw his hands in the air. “Great! Fantastic! So do we! The difference is that I actually have a reason.”

            Anuí, eyes glinting with something between mischief and intellect, gave an elegant nod. “So do we, Lieutenant. Yours is a crime scene. Ours is history itself.”

            Riven felt his headache spike. “Oh good. You’ve been licking the walls again.”

            TP, absolutely delighted, interjected, “Oh, I like them. Their madness is methodical!”

            Riven narrowed his eyes, pointing at the empty pod. “Who the hell did you wake up?”

            Zoya didn’t flinch. “We don’t know.”

            He barked a laugh, sharp and humorless. “Oh, you don’t know? You cracked into a classified cryo-storage facility, activated a pod, and just—what? Didn’t bother to check who was inside?”

            Anuí adjusted the baby, watching him with that same unsettling, too-knowing expression. “It was not part of the prophecy. We were guided here for Victor Holt.”

            “And yet someone else woke up first!” Riven gestured wildly to the empty pod. “So, unless the prophecy also mentioned mystery corpses walking out of deep freeze, I suggest you start making sense.”

            Before Riven could launch into a proper interrogation, the cryo-system let out a deep hiss.

            Steam coiled up from Victor Holt’s pod as the seals finally unlocked, fog spilling over the edges like something out of an ancient myth. A figure was stirring within, movements sluggish, muscles regaining function after years in suspension.

            And then, from the doorway, another voice rang out, sharp, almost panicked.

            Ellis Marlowe stood at the threshold, looking at the two open pods, his eyes wide with something between shock and horror.

            “What have you done?”

            Riven braced himself.

            Evie muttered, “Oh, this is gonna be bad.”

            #7847
            Jib
            Participant

              Helix 25 – The Lexican Quarters – Anuí’s Chambers

              Anuí Naskó had been many things in their life—historian, philosopher, linguist, nuisance. But a father? No. No, that was entirely new.

              And yet, here they were, rocking a very tiny, very loud creature wrapped in Lexican ceremonial cloth, embroidered with the full unpronounceable name bestowed upon it just moments ago: Hšyra-Mak-Talún i Ešvar—”He Who Cries the Arrival of the Infinite Spiral.”

              The baby did, indeed, cry.

              “Why do you scream at me?” Anuí muttered, swaying slightly, more in a daze than any real instinct to soothe. “I did not birth you. I did not know you existed until three hours ago. And yet, you are here, squalling, because your other father and your mother have decided to fulfill the Prophecy of the Spiral Throne.”

              The Prophecy. The one that spoke of the moment the world would collapse and the Lexicans would ascend. The one nobody took seriously. Until now.

              Zoya Kade, sitting across from them, watched with narrowed, calculating eyes. “And what exactly does that entail? This Lexican Dynasty?”

              Anuí sighed, looking down at the writhing child who was trying to suck on their sleeves, still stained with the remnants of the protein paste they had spent the better part of the morning brewing. The Atrium’s walls needed to be prepared, after all—Kio’ath could not write the sigils without the proper medium. And as the cycles dictated, the medium must be crafted, fermented, and blessed by the hand of one who walks between identities. It had been a tedious, smelly process, but Anuí had endured worse in the name of preservation.

              “Patterns repeat, cycles fold inward.” “Patterns repeat, cycles fold inward. The old texts speak of it, the words carved into the silent bones of forgotten tongues. This, Zoya, is no mere madness. This is the resurgence of what was foretold. A dynasty cannot exist without succession, and history does not move without inheritors. They believe they are ensuring the inevitability of their rise. And they might not be wrong.”

              They adjusted their grip on the child, murmuring a phrase in a language so old it barely survived in the archives. “Tz’uran velth ka’an, the root that binds to the branch, the branch that binds to the sky. Our truths do not stand alone.”

              The baby flailed, screaming louder. “Yes, yes, you are the heir,” Anuí murmured, bouncing it with more confidence. “Your lineage has been declared, your burden assigned. Accept it and be silent.” “Well, apparently it requires me to be a single parent while they go forth and multiply, securing ‘heirs to the truth.’ A dynasty is no good without an heir and a spare, you see.”

              The baby flailed, screaming even louder. “Yes, yes, you are the heir,” Anuí murmured with a hint of irritation, bouncing the baby awkwardly. “You have been declared. Please, cease wailing now.”

              Zoya exhaled through her nose, somewhere between disbelief and mild amusement. “And in the middle of all this divine nonsense, the Lexicans have chosen to back me?”

              Anuí arched a delicate brow, shifting the baby to one arm with newfound ease. “Of course. The truth-seeker is foretold. The woman who speaks with voices of the past. We have our empire; you are our harbinger.”

              Zoya’s lips twitched. “Your empire consists of thirty-eight highly unstable academics and a baby.”

              “Thirty-nine. Kio’ath returned from exile yesterday,” Anuí corrected. “They claim the moons have been whispering.”

              “Ah. Of course they have.”

              Zoya fell silent, fingers tracing the worn etchings of her chair’s armrest. The ship’s hum pressed into her bones, the weight of something stirring in her mind, something old, something waiting.

              Anuí’s gaze sharpened, the edges of their thoughts aligning like an ancient lexicon unfurling in front of them. “And now you are hearing it, aren’t you? The echoes of something that was always there. The syllables of the past, reshaped by new tongues, waiting for recognition. The Lexican texts spoke of a fracture in the line, a leader divided, a bridge yet to be found.”

              They took a slow breath, fingers tightening over the child’s swaddled form. “The prophecy is not a single moment, Zoya. It is layers upon layers, intersecting at the point where chaos demands order. Where the unseen hand corrects its own forgetting. This is why they back you. Not because you seek the truth, but because you are the conduit through which it must pass.”

              Zoya’s breath shallowed. A warmth curled in her chest, not of her own making. Her fingers twitched as if something unseen traced over them, urging her forward. The air around her thickened, charged.

              She knew this feeling.

              Her head tipped back, and when she spoke, it was not entirely her own voice.

              “The past rises in bloodlines and memory,” she intoned, eyes unfocused, gaze burning through Anuí. “The lost sibling walks beneath the ice. The leader sleeps, but he must awaken, for the Spiral Throne cannot stand alone.”

              Anuí’s pulse skipped. “Zoya—”

              The baby let out a startled hiccup.

              But Zoya did not stop.

              “The essence calls, older than names, older than the cycle. I am Achaia-Vor, the Echo of Sundered Lineage. The Lost, The Twin, The Nameless Seed. The Spiral cannot turn without its axis. Awaken Victor Holt. He is the lock. You are the key. The path is drawn.

              “The cycle bends but does not break. Across the void, the lost ones linger, their voices unheard, their blood unclaimed. The Link must be found. The Speaker walks unknowingly, divided across two worlds. The bridge between past and present, between silence and song. The Marlowe thread is cut, yet the weave remains. To see, you must seek the mirrored souls. To open the path, the twins must speak.”

              Achaia-Vor. The name vibrated through the air, curling through the folds of Anuí’s mind like a forgotten melody.

              Zoya’s eyes rolled back, body jerking as if caught between two timelines, two truths. She let out a breathless whisper, almost longing.

              “Victor, my love. He is waiting for me. I must bring him back.”

              Anuí cradled the baby closer, and for the first time, they saw the prophecy not as doctrine but as inevitability. The patterns were aligning—the cut thread of the Marlowes, the mirrored souls, the bridge that must be found.

              “It is always the same,” they murmured, almost to themselves. “An axis must be turned, a voice must rise. We have seen this before, written in languages long burned to dust. The same myth, the same cycle, only the names change.”

              They met Zoya’s gaze, the air between them thick with the weight of knowing. “And now, we must find the Speaker. Before another voice is silenced.”

              “Well,” they muttered, exhaling slowly. “This just got significantly more complicated.”

              The baby cooed.

              Zoya Kade smiled.

              #7844
              Jib
              Participant

                Base Klyutch – Dr. Markova’s Clinic, Dusk

                The scent of roasting meat and simmering stew drifted in from the kitchens, mingling with the sharper smells of antiseptic and herbs in the clinic. The faint clatter of pots and the low murmur of voices preparing the evening meal gave the air a sense of routine, of a world still turning despite everything. Solara Ortega sat on the edge of the examination table, rolling her shoulder to ease the stiffness. Dr. Yelena Markova worked in silence, cool fingers pressing against bruised skin, clinical as ever. Outside, Base Klyutch was settling into the quiet of night—wind turbines hummed, a sentry dog barked in the distance.

                “You’re lucky,” Yelena muttered, pressing into Solara’s ribs just hard enough to make a point. “Nothing broken. Just overworked muscles and bad decisions.”

                Solara exhaled sharply. “Bad decisions keep us alive.”

                Yelena scoffed. “That’s what you tell yourself when you run off into the wild with Orrin Holt?”

                Solara ignored the name, focusing instead on the peeling medical posters curling off the clinic walls.

                “We didn’t find them,” she said flatly. “They moved west. Too far ahead. No proper tracking gear, no way to catch up before the lionboars or Sokolov’s men did.”

                Yelena didn’t blink. “That’s not what I asked.”

                A memory surfaced; Orrin standing beside her in the empty refugee camp, the air thick with the scent of old ashes and trampled earth. The fire pits were cold, the shelters abandoned, scraps of cloth and discarded tin cups the only proof that people had once been there. And then she had seen it—a child’s scarf, frayed and half-buried in the dirt. Not the same one, but close enough to make her chest tighten. The last time she had seen her son, he had worn one just like it.

                She hadn’t picked it up. Just stood there, staring, forcing her breath steady, forcing her mind to stay fixed on what was in front of her, not what had been lost. Then Orrin’s hand had settled on her shoulder—warm, steady, comforting. Too comforting. She had jerked away, faster than she meant to, pulse hammering at the sudden weight of everything his touch threatened to unearth. He hadn’t said a word. Just looked at her, knowing, as he always did.

                She had turned, found her voice, made it sharp. The trail was already too cold. No point chasing ghosts. And she had walked away before she could give the silence between them the space to say anything else.

                Solara forced her attention back to the present, to the clinic. She turned her gaze to Yelena, steady and unmoved. “But that’s what matters. We didn’t find them. They made their choice.”

                Yelena clicked her tongue, scribbling something onto her worn-out tablet. “Mm. And yet, you come back looking like hell. And Orrin? He looked like a man who’d just seen a ghost.”

                Solara let out a dry breath, something close to a laugh. “Orrin always looks like that.”

                Yelena arched an eyebrow. “Not always. Not before he came back and saw what he had lost.”

                Solara pushed off the table, rolling out the tension in her neck. “Doesn’t matter.”

                “Oh, it matters,” Yelena said, setting the tablet down. “You still look at him, Solara. Like you did before. And don’t insult me by pretending otherwise.”

                Solara stiffened, fingers flexing at her sides. “I have a husband, Yelena.”

                “Yes, you do,” Yelena said plainly. “And yet, when you say Orrin’s name, you sound like you’re standing in a place you swore you wouldn’t go back to.”

                Solara forced herself to breathe evenly, eyes flicking toward the door.

                “I made my choice,” she said quietly.

                Yelena’s gaze softened, just a little. “Did he?”

                Footsteps pounded outside, uneven, hurried. The clinic door burst open, and Janos Varga—Solara’s husband—strode in, breathless, his eyes bright with something rare.

                Solara, you need to come now,” he said, voice sharp with urgency. “Koval’s team—Orrin—they found something.”

                Her spine straightened, her heartbeat accelerated. “What? Did they find…?” No, the tracks were clear, the refugees went west.

                Janos ran a hand through his curls, his old radio headset still looped around his neck. “One of Helix 57’s life boat’s wreckage. And a man. Some old lunatic calling himself Merdhyn. And—” he paused, catching his breath, “—we picked up a signal. From space.”

                The air in the room tightened. Yelena’s lips parted slightly, the shadow of an emotion passed on her face, too fast to read. Solara’s pulse kicked up.

                “Where are they?” she asked.

                Janos met her gaze. “Koval’s office.”

                For a moment, silence. The wind rattled the windowpanes.

                Yelena straightened abruptly, setting her tablet down with a deliberate motion. “There’s nothing more I can do for your shoulder. And I’m coming too,” she said, already reaching for her coat.

                Solara grabbed her jacket. “Take us there, Janos.”

                #7843

                Helix 25 – Space Tai Chi and Mass Lunacy

                The Grand Observation Atrium was one of the few places on Helix 25 where people would come and regroup from all strata of the ship —Upper Decks, Lower Decks, even the more elusive Hold-dwellers— there were always groups of them gathered for the morning sessions without any predefined roles.

                In the secular tradition of Chinese taichi done on public squares, a revival of this practice has started few years ago all thanks to Grand Master Sifu Gou quiet stubborn consistency to practice in the early light of the artificial day, that gradually had attracted followers, quietly and awkwardly joining to follow his strange motions. The unions, ever eager to claim a social victory and seeing an opportunity to boost their stature, petitioned to make this a right, and succeeded, despite the complaints from the cleaning staff who couldn’t do their jobs (and jogs) in the late night while all passengers had gone to sleep, apart from the night owls and party goers.

                In short, it was a quiet moment of communion, and it was now institutionalised, whether Sifu Gou had wanted it or not.

                The artificial gravity fluctuated subtly here, closer to the artificial gravitational core, in a way that could help attune people to feel their balance shift, even in absence of the Earth’s old pull.

                It was simply perfect for Space Tai Chi.

                A soft chime signaled the start of the session. Grand Master Gou, in the Helix 25’s signature milk-silk fabric pajamas, silver-haired and in a quiet poise, stood at the center of the open-air space beneath the reinforced glass dome, where Jupiter loomed impossibly large beyond the ship, its storms shifting in slow, eternal violence. He moved slowly, deliberately, his hands bearing a weight that flowed improbably in the thinness of the gravity shifts.

                “To find one’s center,” he intoned, “is to find the center of all things. The ship moves, and so do we. You need to feel the center of gravity and use it —it is our guide.”

                A hundred bodies followed in various degrees of synchrony, from well-dressed Upper Deck philosophers to the manutentioners and practical mechanics of the Lower Decks in their uniforms who stretched stiff shoulders between shift rotations. There was something mesmerizing about the communal movement, that even the ship usually a motionless background, seemed to vibrate beneath their feet as though their motions echoed through space.

                Every morning, for this graceful moment, Helix 25 felt like a true utopia.

                That was without counting when the madness began.

                :fleuron2:

                The Gossip Spiral

                “Did you hear about Sarawen?” hissed a woman in a flowing silk robe.
                “The Lexican?” gasped another.
                “Yes. Gave birth last night.”
                “What?! Already? Why weren’t we informed?”
                “Oh, she kept it very quiet. Didn’t even invite anyone to the naming.”
                “Disgraceful. And where are her two husbands? Following her everywhere. Suspicious if you ask me.”

                A grizzled Lower Deck worker grunted, still trying to follow Master Gou’s movement. “Why would she invite people to see her water break? Sounds unhygienic.”

                This earned a scandalized gasp from an Upper Decker. “Not the birth—the ceremony! Honestly, you Lower Deck folk know nothing of tradition.”

                Wisdom Against Wisdom

                Master Gou was just finishing an elegant and powerful sweep of his arms when Edeltraut Snoot, a self-proclaimed philosopher from Quadrant B, pirouetted herself into the session with a flamboyant twirl.

                “Ah, my dear glowing movement-makers! Thou dost align thine energies with the artificial celestial pull, and yet! And yet! Dost thou not see—this gravity is but a fabrication! A lie to lull thee into believing in balance when there is none!”

                Master Gou paused, blinking, impassive, suspended in time and space, yet intently concentrated. Handling such disturbances of the force gracefully, unperturbed, was what the practice was about. He resumed as soon as Edeltraut moved aside to continue her impassionate speech.

                “Ah yiii! The Snoot Knows. Oh yes. Balance is an illusion sold to us by the Grand Micromanagers, the Whymen of the Ever-Hungry Order. Like pacmaniacs, they devour structure and call it stability. And we! We are but rabbits, forced to hop through their labyrinth of rules!”

                Someone muttered, “Oh no, it’s another of those speeches.”

                Another person whispered, “Just let her talk, it’s easier.”

                The Snoot lady continued, undeterred. “But we? Oh, we are not merely rabbits. We are the mist in the hedge! The trick in their tale! We evade! We escape! And when they demand we obey their whys—we vanish!”

                By now, half the class had abandoned their movements entirely, mesmerized by the absurdity. The other half valiantly continued the Space taichi routine while inching away.

                Master Gou finally closed the form, then sighed intently, pinching the bridge of his nose. “Let us… return to our breath.”

                More Mass Lunacy 

                It started as a low murmur, a shifting agitation in the crowd. Then, bickering erupted like a solar flare.

                “I can’t find my center with all this noise!”
                “Oh shut up, you’ve never had a center.”
                “Who took my water flask?!”
                “Why is this man so close to me?!”
                “I am FLOATING?! HELP!”

                Synthia’s calm, omnipresent voice chimed in overhead.

                “For your well-being, an emergency dose of equilibrium supplements will be dispensed.”

                Small white pills rained from overhead dispensers.

                Instead of calming people down, this only increased the chaos.

                Some took the pills immediately, while others refused on principle.
                Someone accused the Lexicans of hoarding pills.
                Two men got into a heated debate over whether taking the pills was an act of submission to the AI overlords.
                A woman screamed that her husband had vanished, only to be reminded that he left her twelve years ago.
                Someone swore they saw a moon-sized squid in the sky.

                The Unions and the Leopards

                Near the edges of the room, two quadrant bosses from different labor unions were deep in mutual grumbling.

                “Bloody management.”
                “Agreed, even if they don’t call themselves that any longer, it’s still bloody management.”
                “Damn right. MICRO-management.”
                “Always telling us to be more efficient, more aligned, more at peace.”
                “Yeah, well, who the hell voted for peace?! I preferred it when we just argued in the corridors!”

                One of them scowled. “That’s the problem, mate. We fought for this, better conditions, and what did we get? More rules, more supervisors! Who knew that the Leopards-Eating-People’s-Faces Party would, y’know—eat our own bloody faces?!”

                The other snorted. “We demanded stability, and now we have so much stability we can’t move without filling out a form with all sorts of dumb questions. You know I have to submit a motion request before taking a piss?”

                “…seriously?”

                “Dead serious. Takes an eternity to fill. And four goddamn business hours for approval.”

                “That’s inhumane.”

                “Bloody right it is.”

                At that moment, Synthia’s voice chimed in again.

                “Please be advised: Temporary gravitational shifts are normal during orbital adjustments. Equilibrium supplements have been optimized. Kindly return to your scheduled calm.”

                The Slingshot Begins

                The whole ship gave a lurch, a gravitational hiccup as Helix 25 completed its slingshot maneuver around the celestial body.

                Bodies swayed unnaturally. Some hovered momentarily, shrieking.
                Someone declared that they had achieved enlightenment.
                Someone else vomited.

                Master Gou sighed deeply, rubbing his temples. “We should invent retirement for old Masters. People can’t handle their shit during those Moonacies. Months of it ahead, better focus on breath more.”

                Snoot Lady, still unaffected, spread her arms wide and declared:
                “And so, the rabbit prevails once again!”

                Evie, passing by on her way to the investigation, took one look at the scene of absolute madness and turned right back around.

                “Yeah. Nope. Not this morning. Back to the Murder Board.”

                #7829
                ÉricÉric
                Keymaster

                  Helix 25 – Investigation Breakdown: Suspects, Factions, and Ship’s Population

                  To systematically investigate the murder(s) and the overarching mystery, let’s break down the known groups and individuals, their possible means to commit crimes, and their potential motivations.


                  1. Ship Population & Structure

                  Estimated Population of Helix 25

                  • Originally a luxury cruise ship before the exodus.
                  • Largest cruise ships built on Earth in 2025 carried ~5,000 people.
                    Space travel, however, requires generations.
                  • Estimated current ship population on Helix 25: Between 15,000 and 50,000, depending on deck expansion and growth of refugee populations over decades.
                  • Possible Ship Propulsion:
                    • Plasma-based propulsion (high-efficiency ion drives)
                    • Slingshot navigation using gravity assists
                    • Solar sails & charged particle fields
                    • Current trajectory: Large elliptical orbit, akin to a comet.
                      Estimated direction of the original space trek was still within Solar System, not beyond the Kuiper Belt (~30 astrological units) and programmed to return towards it point of origin.
                      Due to the reprogramming by the refugees, it is not known if there has been significant alteration of the course – it should be known as the ship starts to reach the aphelion (farthest from the Sun) and either comes back towards it, or to a different course.
                    • Question: Are they truly on a course out of the galaxy? Or is that just the story Synthia is feeding them?
                      Is there a Promised Land beyond the Ark’s adventure?


                  2. Breaking Down People & Factions

                  To find the killer(s), conspiracies, and ship dynamics, here are some of factions, known individuals, and their possible means/motives.


                  A. Upper Decks: The Elite & Decision-Makers

                  • Defining Features:
                    • Wealthy descendants of the original passengers. They have adopted names of stars as new family names, as if de-facto rulers of the relative segments of the space.
                    • Have never known hardship like the Lower Decks.
                    • Kept busy with social prestige, arts, and “meaningful” pursuits to prevent existential crisis.

                  Key Individuals:

                  1. Sue Forgelot

                    • Means: Extensive social connections, influence, and hidden cybernetic enhancements.
                    • Motive: Could be protecting something or someone—she knows too much about the ship’s past.
                    • Secrets: Claims to have met the Captain. Likely lying… unless?
                  2. Dr. Amara Voss

                    • Means: Expert geneticist, access to data. Could tamper with DNA.
                    • Motive: What if Herbert knew something about her old research? Did she kill to bury it?
                  3. Ellis Marlowe (Retired Postman)

                    • Means: None obvious. But as a former Earth liaison, he has archives and knowledge of what was left behind.
                    • Motive: Unclear, but his son was the murder victim. His son was previously left on Earth, and seemed to have found a way onto Helix 25 (possibly through the refugee wave who took over the ship)
                    • Question: Did he know Herbert’s real identity?
                  4. Finkley (Upper Deck cleaner, informant)

                    • Means: As a cleaner, has access everywhere.
                    • Motive: None obvious, but cleaners notice everything.
                    • Secret: She and Finja (on Earth) are telepathically linked. Could Finja have picked up something?
                  5. The Three Old Ladies (Shar, Glo, Mavis)

                    • Means: Absolutely none.
                    • Motive: Probably just want more drama.
                    • Accidental Detectives: They mix up stories but might have stumbled on actual facts.
                  6. Trevor Pee Marshall (TP, AI detective)

                    • Means: Can scan records, project into locations, analyze logic patterns.
                    • Motive: Should have none—unless he’s been compromised as hinted by some of the remnants of old Muck & Lump tech into his program.

                  B. Lower Decks: Workers, Engineers, Hidden Knowledge

                  • Defining Features:
                    • Unlike the Upper Decks, they work—mechanics, hydroponics, labor.
                    • Self-sufficient, but cut off from decisions.
                    • Some distrust Synthia, believing Helix 25 is off-course.

                  Key Individuals:

                  1. Luca Stroud (Engineer, Cybernetic Expert)

                    • Means: Can tamper with ship’s security, medical implants, and life-support systems.
                    • Motive: Possible sabotage, or he was helping Herbert with something.
                    • Secret: Works in black-market tech modifications.
                  2. Romualdo (Gardener, Archivist-in-the-Making)

                    • Means: None obvious. Seem to lack the intelligence, but isn’t stupid.
                    • Motive: None—but he lent Herbert a Liz Tattler book about genetic memories.
                    • Question: What exactly did Herbert learn from his reading?
                  3. Zoya Kade (Revolutionary Figure, Not Directly Involved)

                    • Means: Strong ideological influence, but not an active conspirator.
                    • Motive: None, but her teachings have created and fed factions.
                  4. The Underground Movement

                    • Means: They know ways around Synthia’s surveillance.
                    • Motive: They believe the ship is on a suicide mission.
                    • Question: Would they kill to prove it?

                  C. The Hold: The Wild Cards & Forgotten Spaces

                  • Defining Features:
                    • Refugees who weren’t fully integrated.
                    • Maintain autonomy, trade, and repair systems that the rest of the ship ignores.

                  Key Individuals:

                  1. Kai Nova (Pilot, Disillusioned)

                    • Means: Can manually override ship systems… if Synthia lets him.
                    • Motive: Suspects something’s off about the ship’s fuel levels.
                  2. Cadet Taygeta (Sharp, Logical, Too Honest)

                    • Means: No real power, but access to data.
                    • Motive: Trying to figure out what Kai is hiding.

                  D. AI & Non-Human Factors

                  • Synthia (Central AI, Overseer of Helix 25)

                    • Means: Controls everything.
                    • Motive: Unclear, but her instructions are decades old.
                    • Question: Does she even have free will?
                  • The Captain (Nemo)

                    • Means: Access to ship-wide controls. He is blending in the ship’s population but has special access.
                    • Motive: Seems uncertain about his mission.
                    • Secret: He might not be following Synthia’s orders anymore.

                  3. Who Has the Means to Kill in Zero-G?

                  The next murder happens in a zero-gravity sector. Likely methods:

                  • Oxygen deprivation (tampered life-support, “accident”)
                  • Drowning (hydro-lab “malfunction”)

                  Likely Suspects for Next Murder

                  Suspect Means to Kill in Zero-G Motive
                  Luca Stroud Can tamper with tech Knows ship secrets
                  Amara Voss Access to medical, genetic data Herbert was digging into past
                  Underground Movement Can evade Synthia’s surveillance Wants to prove ship is doomed
                  Synthia (or Rogue AI processes) Controls airflow, gravity, and safety protocols If she sees someone as a threat, can she remove them?
                  The Captain (Nemo?) Has override authority Is he protecting secrets?

                  4. Next Steps in the Investigation

                  • Evie and Riven Re-interview Suspects. Who benefited from Herbert’s death?
                  • Investigate the Flat-Earth Conspiracies. Who is spreading paranoia?
                  • Check the Captain’s Logs. What does Nemo actually believe?
                  • Stop the Next Murder. (Too late?)

                  Final Question: Where Do We Start?

                  1. Evie and Riven visit the Captain’s quarters? (If they find him…)
                  2. Investigate the Zero-G Crime Scene? (Second body = New urgency)
                  3. Confront one of the Underground Members? (Are they behind it?)

                  Let’s pick a thread and dive back into the case!

                  #7828

                  Helix 25 – The Murder Board

                  Evie sat cross-legged on the floor of her cramped workspace, staring at the scattered notes, datapads, and threads taped to the wall. Finding some yarn on the ship had not been as easy as she thought, but it was a nice touch she thought.

                  The Murder Board, as Riven Holt had started calling it, was becoming an increasingly frustrating mess of unanswered questions.

                  Riven stood nearby, arms crossed, with a an irritated skepticism. “Almost a week,” he muttered. “We’re no closer than when we started.”

                  Evie exhaled sharply. “Then let’s go back to the basics.”

                  She tapped the board, where the crime scene was crudely sketched. The Drying Machine. Granary. Jardenery. Blood that shouldn’t exist.

                  She turned to Riven. “Alright, let’s list it out. Who are our suspects?”

                  He looked at his notes, dejected for a moment; “too many, obviously.” Last census on the ship was not accurate by far, but by all AI’s accounts cross-referenced with Finkley’s bots data, they estimated the population to be between 15,000 and 50,000. Give or take.

                  They couldn’t interview possibly all of them, all the more since there the interest in the murder had waned very rapidly. Apart from the occasional trio of nosy elderly ladies, the ship had returned mostly to the lull of the day-to-day routine.
                  So they’d focused on a few, and hoped TP’s machine brain could see patterns where they couldn’t.

                  1. First, the Obvious Candidates: People with Proximity to the Crime Scene
                    Romualdo, the Gardener – Friendly, unassuming. He lends books, grows plants, and talks about Elizabeth Tattler novels. But Herbert visited him often. Why?
                    Dr. Amara Voss – The geneticist. Her research proves the Crusader DNA link, but could she be hiding more? Despite being Evie’s godmother, she couldn’t be ruled out just yet.
                    Sue Forgelot – The socialite with connections everywhere. She had eluded their request for interviews. —does she know more than she lets on?
                    The Cleaning Staff – they had access everywhere. And the murder had a clean elegance to it…
                  2. Second, The Wild Cards: People with Unknown Agendas
                    The Lower Deck Engineers – Talented mechanic, with probable cybernetic knowledge, with probable access to unauthorized modifications. Could they kill for a reason, or for hire?
                    Zoya Kade and her Followers – They believe Helix 25 is on a doomed course, manipulated by a long-dead tycoon’s plan. Would they kill to force exposure of an inconvenient truth?
                    The Crew – Behind the sense of duty and polite smiles, could any of them be covering something up?
                  3. Third, The AI Factor: Sentient or Insentient?
                    Synthia, the AI – Controls the ship. Omnipresent. Can see everything, and yet… didn’t notice or report the murder. Too convenient.
                    Other personal AIs – Like Trevor Pee’s programme, most had in-built mechanisms to make them incapable of lying or harming humans. But could one of their access be compromised?

                  Riven frowned. “And what about Herbert himself? Who was he, really? He called himself Mr. Herbert, but the cat erm… Mandrake says that wasn’t his real name. If we figure out his past, maybe we find out why he was killed.”

                  Evie rubbed her temples. “We also still don’t know how he was killed. The ship’s safety systems should have shut the machine down. But something altered how the system perceived him before he went in.”

                  She gestured to another note. “And there’s still the genetic link. What was Herbert doing with Crusader DNA?”

                  A heavy silence settled between them.

                  Then TP’s voice chimed in. “Might I suggest an old detective’s trick? When stumped, return to who benefits.”

                  Riven exhaled. “Fine. Who benefits from Herbert’s death?”

                  Evie chewed the end of her stylus. “Depends. If it was personal, the killer is on this ship, and it’s someone who knew him. If it was bigger than Herbert, then we’re dealing with something… deeper.”

                  TP hummed. “I do hate deeper mysteries. They tend to involve conspiracies, misplaced prophecies, and far too many secret societies.”

                  Evie and Riven exchanged a glance.

                  Riven sighed. “We need a break.”

                  Evie scoffed. “Time means nothing here.”

                  Riven gestured out the window. “Then let’s go see it. The Sun.”

                  Helix 25 – The Sun-Gazing Chamber

                  The Sun-Gazing Chamber was one of Helix 25’s more poetic and yet practical inventions —an optically and digitally-enhanced projection of the Sun, positioned at the ship’s perihelion. It was meant to provide a psychological tether, a sense of humanity’s connection to the prime provider of life as they drifted in the void of the Solar System.
                  It was a beautifully designed setting where people would simply sit and relax, attuned to the shift of days and nights as if still on Earth. The primary setting had been voted to a massive 83.5% to be like in Hawai’i latitude and longitude, as its place was believed to be a reflection of Earth’s heart. That is was a State in the USA was a second thought of course.

                  Evie sat on the observation bench, staring at the massive, golden sphere suspended in the darkness. “Do you think people back on Earth are still watching the sunrise?” she murmured.

                  Riven was quiet for a moment. “If there’s anyone left.”

                  Evie frowned. “If they are, I doubt they got much of a choice.”

                  TP materialized beside them, adjusting his holographic tie. “Ah, the age-old existential debate: are we the lucky ones who left Earth, or the tragic fools who abandoned it?”

                  Evie ignored him, glancing at the other ship residents in the chamber. Most people just sat quietly, basking in the light. But she caught snippets of whispers, doubt, something spreading through the ranks.

                  “Some people think we’re not really where they say we are,” she muttered.

                  Riven raised an eyebrow. “What, like conspiracy theories?”

                  TP scoffed. “Oh, you mean the Flat-Earthers?” He tsked. “Who couldn’t jump on the Helix lifeboats for their lives, convinced as they were we couldn’t make it to the stars. They deserved what came to them. Next they’ll be saying Helix 25 never even launched and we’re all just trapped in a simulation of a luxury cruise.”

                  Evie was shocked at Trevor Pee’s eructation and rubbed her face. “Damn Musk tech, and those “Truth Control” rubbish datasets. I thought I’d thoroughly scrubbed all the old propaganda tech from the system.”

                  “Ah,” TP said, “but conspiracies are like mold. Persistent. Annoying. Occasionally toxic.”

                  Riven shook his head. “It’s nonsense. We’re moving. We’ve been moving for decades.”

                  Evie didn’t look convinced. “Then why do we feel stuck?”

                  A chime interrupted them.

                  A voice, over the comms. Solar flare alert. 

                  Evie stiffened.

                  Then: Stay calm and return to your quarters until further notice.

                  Evie raised an eyebrow. This was the first time something like that happened. She turned to Riven who was looking at his datapad who was flashing and buzzing.

                  He said to her: “Stay quiet and come with me, a new death has been reported. Crazy coincidence. It’s just behind the Sun-Gazing chamber actually, in the Zero-G sector.”

                  #7810

                  Helix 25 – Below Lower Decks – Shadow Sector

                  Kai Nova moved cautiously through the underbelly of Helix 25, entering a part of the Lower Decks where the usual throb of the ship’s automated systems turned muted. The air had a different smell here— it was less sterile, more… human. It was warm, the heat from outdated processors and unmonitored power nodes radiating through the bulkheads. The Upper Decks would have reported this inefficiency.

                  Here, it simply went unnoticed, or more likely, ignored.

                  He was being watched.

                  He knew it the moment he passed a cluster of workers standing by a storage unit, their voices trailing off as he walked by. Not unusual, except these weren’t Lower Deck engineers. They had the look of people who existed outside of the ship’s official structure—clothes unmarked by department insignias, movements too intentional for standard crew assignments.

                  He stopped at the rendezvous point: an unlit access panel leading to what was supposed to be an abandoned sublevel. The panel had been manually overridden, its system logs erased. That alone told him enough—whoever he was meeting had the skills to work outside of Helix 25’s omnipresent oversight.

                  A voice broke the silence.

                  “You’re late.”

                  Kai turned, keeping his stance neutral. The speaker was of indistinct gender, shaved head, tall and wiry, with sharp green eyes locked on his movements. They wore layered robes that, at a glance, could have passed as scavenged fabric—until Kai noticed the intricate stitching of symbols hidden in the folds.

                  They looked like Zoya’s brand —he almost thought… or let’s just say, Zoya’s influence. Zoya Kade’s litanies had a farther reach he would expect.

                  “Wasn’t aware this was a job interview,” Kai quipped, leaning casually against the bulkhead.

                  “Everything’s a test,” they replied. “Especially for outsiders.”

                  Kai smirked. “I didn’t come to join your book club. I came for answers.”

                  A low chuckle echoed from the shadows, followed by the shifting of figures stepping into the faint light. Three, maybe four of them. It could have been an ambush, but that was a display.

                  “Pilot,” the woman continued, avoiding names. “Seeker of truth? Or just another lost soul looking for something to believe in?”

                  Kai rolled his shoulders, sensing the tension in the air. “I believe in not running out of fuel before reaching nowhere.”

                  That got their attention.

                  The recruiter studied him before nodding slightly. “Good. You understand the problem.”

                  Kai crossed his arms. “I understand a lot of problems. I also understand you’re not just a bunch of doomsayers whispering in the dark. You’re organized. And you think this ship is heading toward a dead end.”

                  “You say that like it isn’t.”

                  Kai exhaled, glancing at the flickering emergency light above. “Synthia doesn’t make mistakes.”

                  They smiled, but it wasn’t friendly. “No. It makes adjustments.” — the heavy tone on the “it” struck him. Techno-bigots, or something else? Were they denying Synthia’s sentience, or just adjusting for gender misnomers, it was hard to tell, and he had a hard time to gauge the sanity of this group.

                  A low murmur of agreement rippled through the gathered figures.

                  Kai tilted his head. “You think she’s leading us into the abyss?”

                  The person stepped closer. “What do you think happened to the rest of the fleet, Pilot?”

                  Kai stiffened slightly. The Helix Fleet, the original grand exodus of humanity—once multiple ships, now only Helix 25, drifting further into the unknown.

                  He had never been given a real answer.

                  “Think about it,” they pressed. “This ship wasn’t built for endless travel. Its original mission was altered. Its course reprogrammed. You fly the vessel, but you don’t control it.” She gestured to the others. “None of us do. We’re passengers on a ride to oblivion, on a ship driven by a dead man’s vision.”

                  Kai had heard the whispers—about the tycoon who had bankrolled Helix 25, about how the ship’s true directive had been rewritten when the Earth refugees arrived. But this group… they didn’t just speculate. They were ready to act.

                  He kept his voice steady. “You planning on mutiny?”

                  They smiled, stepping back into the half-shadow. “Mutiny is such a crude word. We’re simply ensuring that we survive.”

                  Before Kai could respond, a warning prickle ran up his spine.

                  Someone else was watching.

                  He turned slowly, catching the faintest silhouette lingering just beyond the corridor entrance. He recognized the stance instantly—Cadet Taygeta.

                  Damn it.

                  She had followed him.

                  The group noticed, shifting slightly. Not hostile, but suddenly alert.

                  “Well, well,” the woman murmured. “Seems you have company. You weren’t as careful as you thought. How are you going to deal with this problem now?”

                  Kai exhaled, weighing his options. If Taygeta had followed him, she’d already flagged this meeting in her records. If he tried to run, she’d report it. If he didn’t run, she might just dig deeper.

                  And the worst part?

                  She wasn’t corruptible. She wasn’t the type to look the other way.

                  “You should go,” the movement person said. “Before your shadow decides to interfere.”

                  Kai hesitated for half a second, before stepping back.

                  “This isn’t over,” he said.

                  Her smile returned. “No, Pilot. It’s just beginning.”

                  With that, Kai turned and walked toward the exit—toward Taygeta, who was waiting for him with arms crossed, expression unreadable.

                  He didn’t speak first.

                  She did.

                  “You’re terrible at being subtle.”

                  Kai sighed, thinking quickly of how much of the conversation could be accessed by the central system. They were still in the shadow zone, but that wasn’t sufficient. “How much did you hear?”

                  “Enough.” Her voice was even, but her fingers twitched at her side. “You know this is treason, right?”

                  Kai ran a hand through his hair. “You really think we’re on course for a fresh new paradise?”

                  Taygeta didn’t answer right away. That was enough of an answer.

                  Finally, she exhaled. “You should report this.”

                  “You should,” Kai corrected.

                  She frowned.

                  He pressed on. “You know me, Taygeta. I don’t follow lost causes. I don’t get involved in politics. I fly. I survive. But if they’re right—if there’s even a chance that we’re being sent to our deaths—I need to know.”

                  Taygeta’s fingers twitched again.

                  Then, with a sharp breath, she turned.

                  “I didn’t see anything tonight.”

                  Kai blinked. “What?”

                  Her back was already to him, her voice tight. “Whatever you’re doing, Nova, be careful. Because next time?” She turned her head slightly, just enough to let him see the edge of her conflicted expression.

                  “I will report you.”

                  Then she was gone.

                  Kai let out a slow breath, glancing back toward the hidden movement behind him.

                  No turning back now.

                  #7794
                  Yurara FamelikiYurara Fameliki
                  Participant

                    Some pictures selections

                    Evie and TP Investigating the Drying Machine Crime Scene

                    A cinematic sci-fi mini-scene aboard the vast and luxurious Helix 25. In the industrial depths of the ship, a futuristic drying machine hums ominously, crime scene tape lazily flickering in artificial gravity. Evie, a sharp-eyed investigator in a sleek yet practical uniform, stands with arms crossed, listening intently. Beside her, a translucent, retro-stylized holographic detective—Trevor Pee Marshall (TP)—adjusts his tiny mustache with a flourish, pointing dramatically at the drying machine with his cane. The air is thick with mystery, the ship’s high-tech environment reflecting off Evie’s determined face while TP’s flickering presence adds an almost comedic contrast. A perfect blend of noir and high-tech detective intrigue.

                     

                    Riven Holt and Zoya Kade Confronting Each Other in a Dimly Lit Corridor

                    A dramatic, cinematic sci-fi scene aboard the vast and luxurious Helix 25. Riven Holt, a disciplined young officer with sharp features, stands in a high-tech corridor, his arms crossed, jaw tense—exuding authority and restraint. Opposite him, Zoya Kade, a sharp-eyed, wiry 83-year-old scientist-prophet, leans slightly forward, her mismatched layered robes adorned with tiny artifacts—beads, old circuits, and a fragment of a key. Her silver-white braid gleams under the soft emergency lighting, her piercing gaze challenging him. The corridor hums with unseen energy, a subtle red glow from a “restricted access” sign casting elongated shadows. Their confrontation is palpable—a struggle between order and untamed knowledge, hierarchy and rebellion. In the background, the walls of Helix 25 curve sleekly, high-tech yet strangely claustrophobic, reinforcing the ship’s ever-present watchfulness.

                     

                    Romualdo, the Gardener, Among the Bioluminescent Plants

                    A richly detailed sci-fi portrait of Romualdo, the ship’s gardener, standing amidst the vibrant greenery of the Jardenery. He is a rugged yet gentle figure, dressed in a simple work jumpsuit with soil-streaked hands, a leaf-tipped stem tucked behind his ear like a cigarette. His eyes scan an old, well-worn book—one of Liz Tattler’s novels—that Dr. Amara Voss gave him for his collection. The glowing plants cast an ethereal blue-green light over him, creating an atmosphere both peaceful and mysterious. In the background, the towering vines and suspended hydroponic trays hint at the ship’s careful balance between survival and serenity.

                     

                    Finja and Finkley – A Telepathic Parallel Across Space

                    A surreal, cinematic sci-fi composition split into two mirrored halves, reflecting a mysterious connection across vast distances. On one side, Finja, a wiry, intense woman with an almost obsessive neatness, walks through the overgrown ruins of post-apocalyptic Earth, her expression distant as she “listens” to unseen voices. Dust lingers in the air, catching the golden morning light, and she mutters to herself about cleanliness. In her reflection, on the other side of the image, is Finkley, a no-nonsense crew member aboard the gleaming, futuristic halls of Helix 25. She stands with hands on her hips, barking orders at small cleaning bots as they maintain the ship’s pristine corridors. The lighting is cold and artificial, sterile in contrast to the dust-filled Earth. Yet, both women share a strange symmetry—gesturing in unison as if unknowingly mirroring one another across time and space. A faint, ghostly thread of light suggests their telepathic bond, making the impossible feel eerily real.

                    #7789

                    Helix 25 – Poop Deck – The Jardenery

                    Evie stepped through the entrance of the Jardenery, and immediately, the sterile hum of Helix 25’s corridors faded into a world of green. Of all the spotless clean places on the ship, it was the only where Finkley’s bots tolerated the scent of damp earth. A soft rustle of hydroponic leaves shifting under artificial sunlight made the place an ecosystem within an ecosystem, designed to nourrish both body and mind.

                    Yet, for all its cultivated serenity, today it was a crime scene. The Drying Machine was connected to the Jardenery and the Granary, designed to efficiently extract precious moisture for recycling, while preserving the produce.

                    Riven Holt, walking beside her, didn’t share her reverence. “I don’t see why this place is relevant,” he muttered, glancing around at the towering bioluminescent vines spiraling up trellises. “The body was found in the drying machine, not in a vegetable patch.”

                    Evie ignored him, striding toward the far corner where Amara Voss was hunched over a sleek terminal, frowning at a glowing screen. The renowned geneticist barely noticed their approach, her fingers flicking through analysis results faster than human eyes could process.

                    A flicker of light.

                    “Ah-ha!” TP materialized beside Evie, adjusting his holographic lapels. “Madame Voss, I must say, your domain is quite the delightful contrast to our usual haunts of murder and mystery.” He twitched his mustache. “Alas, I suspect you are not admiring the flora?”

                    Amara exhaled sharply, rubbing her temples, not at all surprised by the holographic intrusion. She was Evie’s godmother, and had grown used to her experiments.

                    “No, indeed. I’m admiring this.” She turned the screen toward them.

                    The DNA profile glowed in crisp lines of data, revealing a sequence highlighted in red.

                    Evie frowned. “What are we looking at?”

                    Amara pinched the bridge of her nose. “A genetic anomaly.”

                    Riven crossed his arms. “You’ll have to be more specific.”

                    Amara gave him a sharp look but turned back to the display. “The sample we found at the crime scene—blood residue on the drying machine and some traces on the granary floor—matches an ancient DNA profile from my research database. A perfect match.”

                    Evie felt a prickle of unease. “Ancient? What do you mean? From the 2000s?”

                    Amara chuckled, then nodded grimly. “No, ancient as in Medieval ancient. Specifically, Crusader DNA, from the Levant. A profile we mapped from preserved remains centuries ago.”

                    Silence stretched between them.

                    Finally, Riven scoffed. “That’s impossible.”

                    TP hummed thoughtfully, twirling his cane. “Impossible, yet indisputable. A most delightful contradiction.”

                    Evie’s mind raced. “Could the database be corrupted?”

                    Amara shook her head. “I checked. The sequencing is clean. This isn’t an error. This DNA was present at the crime scene.” She hesitated, then added, “The thing is…” she paused before considering to continue. They were all hanging on her every word, waiting for what she would say next.

                    Amara continued  “I once theorized that it might be possible to reawaken dormant ancestral DNA embedded in human cells. If the right triggers were applied, someone could manifest genetic markers—traits, even memories—from long-dead ancestors. Awakening old skills, getting access to long lost secrets of states…”

                    Riven looked at her as if she’d grown a second head. “You’re saying someone on Helix 25 might have… transformed into a medieval Crusader?”

                    Amara exhaled. “I’m saying I don’t know. But either someone aboard has a genetic profile that shouldn’t exist, or someone created it.”

                    TP’s mustache twitched. “Ah! A puzzle worthy of my finest deductive faculties. To find the source, we must trace back the lineage! And perhaps a… witness.”

                    Evie turned toward Amara. “Did Herbert ever come here?”

                    Before Amara could answer, a voice cut through the foliage.

                    “Herbert?”

                    They turned to find Romualdo, the Jardenery’s caretaker, standing near a towering fruit-bearing vine, his arms folded, a leaf-tipped stem tucked behind his ear like a cigarette. He was a broad-shouldered man with sun-weathered skin, dressed in a simple coverall, his presence almost too casual for someone surrounded by murder investigators.

                    Romualdo scratched his chin. “Yeah, he used to come around. Not for the plants, though. He wasn’t the gardening type.”

                    Evie stepped closer. “What did he want?”

                    Romualdo shrugged. “Questions, mostly. Liked to chat about history. Said he was looking for something old. Always wanted to know about heritage, bloodlines, forgotten things.” He shook his head. “Didn’t make much sense to me. But then again, I like practical things. Things that grow.”

                    Amara blushed, quickly catching herself. “Did he ever mention anything… specific? Like a name?”

                    Romualdo thought for a moment, then grinned. “Oh yeah. He asked about the Crusades.”

                    Evie stiffened. TP let out an appreciative hum.

                    “Fascinating,” TP mused. “Our dearly departed Herbert was not merely a victim, but perhaps a seeker of truths unknown. And, as any good mystery dictates, seekers who get too close often find themselves…” He tipped his hat. “Extinguished.”

                    Riven scowled. “That’s a bit dramatic.”

                    Romualdo snorted. “Sounds about right, though.” He picked up a tattered book from his workbench and waved it. “I lend out my books. Got myself the only complete collection of works of Liz Tattler in the whole ship. Doc Amara’s helping me with the reading. Before I could read, I only liked the covers, they were so romantic and intriguing, but now I can read most of them on my own.” Noticing he was making the Doctor uncomfortable, he switched back to the topic. “So yes, Herbert knew I was collector of books and he borrowed this one a few weeks ago. Kept coming back with more questions after reading it.”

                    Evie took the book and glanced at the cover. The Blood of the Past: Genetic Echoes Through History by Dr. Amara Voss.

                    She turned to Amara. “You wrote this?”

                    Amara stared at the book, her expression darkening. “A long time ago. Before I realized some theories should stay theories.”

                    Evie closed the book. “Looks like someone didn’t agree.”

                    Romualdo wiped his hands on his coveralls. “Well, I hope you figure it out soon. Hate to think the plants are breathing in murder residue.”

                    TP sighed dramatically. “Ah, the tragedy of contaminated air! Shall I alert the sanitation team?”

                    Riven rolled his eyes. “Let’s go.”

                    As they walked away, Evie’s grip tightened around the book. The deeper they dug, the stranger this murder became.

                    #7776

                    Epilogue & Prologue

                    Paris, November 2029 – The Fifth Note Resounds

                    Tabitha sat by the window at the Sarah Bernhardt Café, letting the murmur of conversations and the occasional purring of the espresso machine settle around her. It was one of the few cafés left in the city where time still moved at a human pace. She stirred her cup absentmindedly. Paris was still Paris, but the world outside had changed in ways her mother’s generation still struggled to grasp.

                    It wasn’t just the ever-presence of automation and AI making themselves known in subtle ways—screens adjusting to glances, the quiet surveillance woven into everyday life. It wasn’t just the climate shifts, the aircon turned to cold in the midst of November, the summers unpredictable, the air thick with contradictions of progress and collapse of civilization across the Atlantic.

                    The certainty of impermanence was what defined her generation. BANI world they used to say—Brittle, Anxious, Nonlinear, Incomprehensible. A cold fact: impossible to grasp and impossible to fight. Unlike her mother and her friends, who had spent their lives tethered to a world that no longer existed, she had never known certainty. She was born in the flux.

                    And yet, this café remained. One of the last to resist full automation, where a human still brought you coffee, where the brass bell above the door still rang, where things still unfolded at a human pace.

                    The bell above the door rang—the fifth note, as her mother had called it once.

                    She had never been here before, not in any way that mattered. Yet, she had heard the story. The unlikely reunion five years ago. The night that moved new projects in motion for her mother and her friends.

                    Tabitha’s fingers traced the worn edges of the notebook in front of her—Lucien’s, then Amei’s, then Darius’s. Pieces of a life written by many hands.

                    “Some things don’t work the first time. But sometimes, in the ruins of what failed, something else sprouts and takes root.”

                    And that was what had happened.

                    The shared housing project they had once dreamed of hadn’t survived—not in its original form. But through their rekindled bond, they had started something else.

                     

                    True Stories of How It Was.

                     

                    It had begun as a quiet defiance—a way to preserve real, human stories in an age of synthetic, permanent ephemerality and ephemeral impermanence, constantly changing memory. They were living in a world where AI’s fabricated histories had overwhelmed all the channels of information, where the past was constantly rewritten, altered, repackaged. Authenticity had become a rare currency.

                    As she graduated in anthropology few years back, she’d wondered about the validity of history —it was, after all, a construct. The same could be said for literature, art, even science. All of them constructs of the human mind, tenuous grasp of the infinite truth, but once, they used to evolve at such a slow pace that they felt solid, reliable. Ultimately their group was not looking for ultimate truth, that would be arrogant and probably ignorant. Authenticity was what they were looking for. And with it, connections, love, genuineness —unquantifiables by means of science and yet, true and precious beyond measure.

                    Lucien had first suggested it, tracing the idea from his own frustrations—the way art had become a loop of generated iterations, the human touch increasingly erased. He was in a better place since Matteo had helped him settle his score with Renard and, free of influence, he had found confidence in developing of his own art.

                    Amei —her mother—, had changed in a way Tabitha couldn’t quite define. Her restlessness had quieted, not through settling down but through accepting impermanence as something other than loss. She had started writing again—not as a career, not to publish, but to preserve stories that had no place in a digitized world. Her quiet strength had always been in preserving connections, and she knew they had to move quickly before real history faded beneath layers of fabricated recollections.

                    Darius, once skeptical, saw its weight—he had spent years avoiding roots, only to realize that stories were the only thing that made places matter. He was somewhere in Morocco now, leading a sustainable design project, bridging cultures rather than simply passing through them.

                    Elara had left science. Or at least, science as she had known it. The calculations, the certainty, the constraints of academia, with no escape from the automated “enhanced” digital helpers. Her obsession and curiosities had found attract in something more human, more chaotic. She had thrown herself into reviving old knowledge, forgotten architectures, regenerative landscapes.

                    And Matteo—Matteo had grounded it.

                    The notebook read: Matteo wasn’t a ghost from our past. He was the missing note, the one we didn’t know we needed. And because of him, we stopped looking backward. We started building something else.

                    For so long, Matteo had been a ghost of sorts, by his own account, lingering at the edges of their story, the missing note in their unfinished chord. But now, he was fully part of it. His mother had passed, her past history unraveling in ways he had never expected, branching new connections even now. And though he had lost something in that, he had also found something else. Juliette. Or maybe not. The story wasn’t finished.

                    Tabitha turned the page.

                    “We were not historians, not preservationists, not even archivists. But we have lived. And as it turned out, that was enough.”

                    They had begun collecting stories through their networks—not legends, not myths, but true accounts of how it was, from people who still remembered.

                    A grandfather’s voice recording of a train ride to a city that no longer exists.
                    Handwritten recipes annotated by generations of hands, each adding something new.
                    A letter from a protest in 2027, detailing a movement that the history books had since erased.
                    An old woman’s story of her first love, spoken in a dialect that AI could not translate properly.

                    It had grown in ways they hadn’t expected. People began sending them recordings, letters, transcripts, photos —handwritten scraps of fading ink. Some were anonymous, others carefully curated with full names and details, like makeshift ramparts against the tide of time.

                    At first, few had noticed. It was never the goal to make it worlwide movement. But little by little, strange things happened, and more began to listen.

                    There was something undeniably powerful about genuine human memory when it was raw and unfiltered, when it carried unpolished, raw weight of experience, untouched by apologetic watered down adornments and out-of-place generative hallucinations.

                    Now, there were exhibitions, readings, archives—entire underground movements dedicated to preserving pre-synthetic history. Their project had become something rare, valuable, almost sacred.

                    And yet, here in the café, none of that felt urgent.

                    Tabitha looked up as the server approached. Not Matteo, but someone new.

                    “Another espresso?”

                    She hesitated, then nodded. “Yes. And a glass of water, please.”

                    She glanced at the counter, where Matteo was leaning, speaking to someone, laughing. He had changed, too. No longer just an observer, no longer just the quiet figure who knew too much. Now, he belonged here.

                    A bell rang softly as the door swung open again.

                    Tabitha smiled to herself. The fifth note always sounded, in the end.

                    She turned back to the notebook, the city moving around her, the story still unfolding in more directions than one.

                    #7772

                    Upper Decks – The Pilot’s Seat (Sort Of)

                    Kai Nova reclined in his chair, boots propped against the console, arms folded behind his head. The cockpit hummed with the musical blipping of automation. Every sleek interface, polished to perfection by the cleaning robots under Finkley’s command, gleamed in a lulling self-sustaining loop—self-repairing, self-correcting, self-determining.

                    And that meant there wasn’t much left for him to do.

                    Once, piloting meant piloting. Gripping the yoke, feeling the weight of the ship respond, aligning a course by instinct and skill. Now? It was all handled before he even thought to lift a finger. Every slight course adjustment, to the smallest stabilizing thrust were effortlessly preempted by Synthia’s vast, all-knowing “intelligence”. She anticipated drift before it even started, corrected trajectory before a human could perceive the error.

                    Kai was a pilot in name only.

                    A soft chime. Then, the clipped, clinical voice of Cadet Taygeta:

                    “You’re slacking off again.”

                    Kai cracked one eye open, groaning. “Good morning, buzzkill.”

                    She stood rigid at the entryway, arms crossed, datapad in hand. Young, brilliant, and utterly incapable of normal human warmth. Her uniform was pristine—always pristine—with a regulation-perfect collar that probably had never been out of place in their entire life.

                    Synthia calculates you’ve spent 76% of your shifts in a reclining position,” the Cadet noted. “Which, statistically, makes you more of a chair than a pilot.”

                    Kai smirked. “And yet, here I am, still getting credits.”

                    The Cadet face had changed subtly ; she exhaled sharply. “I don’t understand why they keep you here. It’s inefficient.”

                    Kai swung his legs down and stretched. “They keep me around for when things go wrong. Machines are great at running the show—until something unexpected happens. Then they come crawling back to good ol’ human instinct.”

                    “Unexpected like what? Absinthe Pirates?” The Cadet smirked, but Kai said nothing.

                    She narrowed their eyes, her voice firm but wavering. “Things aren’t supposed to go wrong.”

                    Kai chuckled. “You must be new to space, Taygeta.”

                    He gestured toward the vast, star-speckled abyss beyond the viewport. Helix 25 cruised effortlessly through the void, a floating city locked in perfect motion. But perfection was a lie. He could feel it.

                    There were some things off. At the top of his head, one took precedence.

                    Fuel — it wasn’t infinite, and despite Synthia’s unwavering quantum computing, he knew it was a problem no one liked talking about. The ship wasn’t meant for this—for an endless voyage into the unknown. It was meant to return.

                    But that wasn’t happening.

                    He leaned forward, flipping a display open. “Let’s play a game, Cadet. Humor me.” He tapped a few keys, pulling up Helix 25’s projected trajectory. “What happens if we shift course by, say… two degrees?”

                    The Cadet scoffed. “That would be reckless. At our current velocity, even a fractional deviation—”

                    “Just humor me.”

                    After a pause, she exhaled sharply and ran the numbers. A simulation appeared: a slight two-degree shift, a ripple effect across the ship’s calculated path.

                    And then—

                    Everything went to hell.

                    The screen flickered red.

                    Projected drift. Fuel expenditure spike. The trajectory extending outward into nowhere.

                    The Cadet’s posture stiffened. “That can’t be right.”

                    “Oh, but it is,” Kai said, leaning back with a knowing grin. “One little adjustment, and we slingshot into deep space with no way back.”

                    The Cadet’s eyes flicked to the screen, then back to Kai. “Why would you test that?”

                    Kai drummed his fingers on the console. “Because I don’t trust a system that’s been in control for decades without oversight.”

                    A soft chime.

                    Synthia’s voice slid into the cockpit, smooth and impassive.

                    Pilot Nova. Unnecessary simulations disrupt workflow efficiency.”

                    Kai’s jaw tensed. “Yeah? And what happens if a real course correction is needed?”

                    “All adjustments are accounted for.”

                    Kai and the Cadet exchanged a look.

                    Synthia always had an answer. Always knew more than she said.

                    He tapped the screen again, running a deeper scan. The ship’s fuel usage log. Projected refueling points.

                    All were blank.

                    Kai’s gut twisted. “You know, for a ship that’s supposed to be self-sustaining, we sure don’t have a lot of refueling options.”

                    The Cadet stiffened. “We… don’t refuel?”

                    Kai’s eyes didn’t leave the screen. “Not unless Synthia finds us a way.”

                    Silence.

                    Then, the Cadet swallowed. For the first time, a flicker of something almost human in her expression.

                    Uncertainty.

                    Kai sighed, pushing back from the console. “Welcome to the real job, kid.”

                    Because the truth was simple.

                    They weren’t driving this ship.

                    The ship was driving them.

                    And it all started when all hell broke lose on Earth, decades back, and when the ships of refugees caught up with the Helix 25 on its way back to Earth. One of those ships, his dad had told him, took over management, made it turn around for a new mission, “upgraded” it with Synthia, and with the new order…

                    The ship was driving them, and there was no sign of a ghost beyond the machine.

                    #7763
                    Jib
                    Participant

                      The corridor outside Mr. Herbert’s suite was pristine, polished white and gold, designed to impress, like most of the ship. Soft recessed lighting reflected off gilded fixtures and delicate, unnecessary embellishments.

                      It was all Riven had ever known.

                      His grandfather, Victor Holt, now in cryo sleep, had been among the paying elite, those who had boarded Helix 25, expecting a decadent, interstellar retreat. Riven, however had not been one of them. He had been two years old when Earth fell, sent with his aunt Seren Vega on the last shuttle to ever reach the ship, crammed in with refugees who had fought for a place among the stars. His father had stayed behind, to look for his mother.

                      Whatever had happened after that—the chaos, the desperation, the cataclysm that had forced this ship to become one of humanity’s last refuges—Riven had no memory of it. He only knew what he had been told. And, like everything else on Helix 25, history depended on who was telling it.

                      For the first time in his life, someone had been murdered inside this floating palace of glass and gold. And Riven, inspired by his grandfather’s legacy and the immense collection of murder stories and mysteries in the ship’s database, expected to keep things under control.

                      He stood straight in front of the suite’s sealed sliding door, arms crossed on a sleek uniform that belonged to Victor Holt. He was blocking entry with the full height of his young authority. As if standing there could stop the chaos from seeping in.

                      A holographic Do Not Enter warning scrolled diagonally across the door in Effin Muck’s signature font—because even crimes on this ship came branded.

                      People hovered in the corridor, coming and going. Most were just curious, drawn by the sheer absurdity of a murder happening here.

                      Riven scanned their faces, his muscles coiled with tension. Everyone was a potential suspect. Even the ones who usually didn’t care about ship politics.

                      Because on Helix 25, death wasn’t supposed to happen. Not anymore.

                      Someone broke away from the crowd and tried to push past him.

                      “You’re wasting time. Young man.”

                      Zoya Kade. Half scientist, half mad Prophet, all irritation. Her gold-green eyes bore into him, sharp beneath the deep lines of her face. Her mismatched layered robes shifting as she moved. Riven had no difficulty keeping the tall and wiry 83 years old woman at a distance.

                      Her silver-white braid was woven with tiny artifacts—bits of old circuits, beads, a fragment of a key that probably didn’t open anything anymore. A collector of lost things. But not just trinkets—stories, knowledge, genetic whispers of the past. And now, she wanted access to this room like it was another artifact to be uncovered.

                      “No one is going in.” Riven said slowly, “until we finish securing the area.”

                      Zoya exhaled sharply, turning her head toward Evie, who had just emerged from the crowd, tablet in hand, TP flickering at her side.

                      Evie, tell him.”

                      Evie did not look pleased to be associated with the old woman. “Riven, we need access to his room. I just need…”

                      Riven hesitated.

                      Not for long, barely a second, but long enough for someone to notice. And of course, it was Anuí Naskó.

                      They had been waiting, standing slightly apart from the others, their tall, androgynous frame wrapped in the deep-colored robes of the Lexicans, fingers lightly tapping the surface of their handheld lexicon. Observing. Listening. Their presence was a constant challenge. When Zoya collected knowledge like artifacts, Anuí broke it apart, reshaped it. To them, history was a wound still open, and it was the Lexicans duty to rewrite the truth that had been stolen.

                      “Ah,” Anuí murmured, smiling slightly, “I see.”

                      Riven started to tap his belt buckle. His spine stiffened. He didn’t like that tone.

                      “See what, exactly?”

                      Anuí turned their sharp, angular gaze on him. “That this is about control.”

                      Riven locked his jaw. “This is about security.”

                      “Is it?” Anuí tapped a finger against their chin. “Because as far as I can tell, you’re just as inexperienced in murder investigation as the rest of us.”

                      The words cut sharp in Riven’s pride. Rendering him speechless for a moment.

                      “Oh! Well said,” Zoya added.

                      Riven felt heat rise to his face, but he didn’t let it show. He had been preparing himself for challenges, just not from every direction at once.

                      His grip tightened on his belt, but he forced himself to stay calm.

                      Zoya, clearly enjoying herself now, gestured toward Evie. “And what about them?” She nodded toward TP, whose holographic form flickered slightly under the corridor’s ligthing. “Evie and her self proclaimed detective machine here have no real authority either, yet you hesitate.”

                      TP puffed up indignantly. “I beg your pardon, madame. I am an advanced deductive intelligence, programmed with the finest investigative minds in history! Sherlock Holmes, Hercule Poirot, Miss Marple, Marshall Pee Stoll…”

                      Zoya lifted a hand. “Yes, yes. And I am a boar.”

                      TP’s mustache twitched. “Highly unlikely.”

                      Evie groaned. “Enough TP.”

                      But Zoya wasn’t finished. She looked directly at Riven now. “You don’t trust me. You don’t trust Anuí. But you trust her.” She gave a node toward Evie. “Why?

                      Riven felt his stomach twist. He didn’t have an answer. Or rather, he had too many answers, none of which he could say out loud. Because he did trust Evie. Because she was brilliant, meticulous, practical. Because… he wanted her to trust him back. But admitting that, showing favoritism, expecially here in front of everyone, was impossible.

                      So he forced his voice into neutrality. “She has technical expertise and no political agenda about it.”

                      Anuí left out a soft hmm, neither agreeing nor disagreeing, but filing the information away for later.

                      Evie took the moment to press forward. “Riven, we need access to the room. We have to check his logs before anything gets wiped or overwritten. If there’s something there, we’re losing valuable time just standing there arguing.”

                      She was right. Damn it, she was right. Riven exhaled slowly.

                      “Fine. But only you.”

                      Anuí’s lips curved but just slightly. “How predictable.”

                      Zoya snorted.

                      Evie didn’t waste time. She brushed past him, keying in a security override on her tablet. The suite doors slid open with a quiet hiss.

                      #7737

                      Evie stared at TP, waiting for further elaboration. He simply steepled his fingers and smirked, a glitchy picture of insufferable patience.

                      “You can’t just drop a bombshell like that and leave it hanging,” she said.

                      “But my dear Evie, I must!” TP declared, flickering theatrically. “For as the great Pea Stoll once mused—‘It was suspicious in a Pea Saucerer’s ways…’

                      Evie groaned. “TP—”

                      “A jest! A mere jest!” He twirled an imaginary cane. “And yet, what do we truly know of the elusive Mr. Herbert? If we wish to uncover his secrets, we must look into his… associations.”

                      Evie frowned. “Funny you said that, I would have thought ‘means, motive, alibis’ but I must be getting ahead of myself…” He had a point. “By associations, you mean —Seren Vega?”

                      “Indeed!” TP froze accessing invisible records, then clapped his hands together. “Seren Vega, archivist extraordinaire of the wondrous past, keeper resplendent of forgotten knowledge… and, if the ship’s whisperings hold any weight, a woman Herbert was particularly keen on seeing.”

                      Evie exhaled, already halfway to the door. “Alright, let’s go see Seren.”

                      :fleuron2:

                      Seren Vega’s quarters weren’t standard issue—too many rugs, too many hanging ornaments, a hint of a passion for hoarding, and an unshakable musky scent of an animal’s den. The place felt like the ship itself had grown around it, heavy with the weight of history.

                      And then, there was Mandrake.

                      The bionic-enhanced cat perched on a high shelf, tail flicking, eyes glowing faintly. “What do you want?” he asked flatly, his tone dripping with a well-practiced blend of boredom and disdain.

                      Evie arched a brow. “Nice to see you too, Mandrake.”

                      Seren, cross-legged on a cushion, glanced up from her console. “Evie,” she greeted calmly. “And… oh no.” She sighed, already bracing herself. “You’ve brought it —what do you call him already? Orion Reed?”

                      Evie replied “Great memory Ms Vega, as expected. Yes, this was the name of the beta version —this one’s improved but still working the kinks of the programme, he goes by ‘TP’ nowadays. Hope you don’t mind, he’s helping me gather clues.” She caught herself, almost telling too much to a potential suspect.

                      TP puffed up indignantly. “I must protest, Madame Vega! Our past encounters, while lively, have been nothing but the height of professional discourse!”

                      Mandrake yawned. “She means you talk too much.”

                      Evie hid a smirk. “I need your help, Seren. It’s about Mr. Herbert.”

                      Seren’s fingers paused over her console. “He’s the one they found in the dryer.” It wasn’t a question.

                      Evie nodded. “What do you know about him?”

                      Seren studied her for a moment, then, with a slow exhale, tapped a command into her console. The room dimmed as the walls flickered to life, displaying a soft cascade of memories—public logs, old surveillance feeds, snippets of conversations once lost to time.

                      “He wasn’t supposed to be here,” Seren said at last. “He arrived without a record. No one really questioned it, because, well… no one questions much anymore. But if you looked closely, the ship never registered him properly.”

                      Evie’s pulse quickened. TP let out an approving hum.

                      Seren continued, scrolling through the visuals. “He came to me, sometimes. Asked about old Earth history. Strange, fragmented questions. He wanted to know how records were kept, how things could be erased.”

                      Evie and TP exchanged a glance.

                      Seren frowned slightly, as if piecing together a thought she hadn’t dared before. “And then… he stopped coming.”

                      Mandrake, still watching from his shelf, stretched lazily. Then, with perfect nonchalance, he added, “Oh yeah. And he wasn’t using his real name.”

                      Evie snapped to attention. “What?”

                      The cat flicked his tail. “Mr. Herbert. The name was fake. He called himself that, but it wasn’t what the system had logged when he first stepped on board.”

                      Seren turned sharply toward him. “Mandrake, you never mentioned this before.”

                      The cat yawned. “You never asked.”

                      Evie felt a chill roll through her. “So what was his real name?”

                      Mandrake’s eyes glowed, data scrolling in his enhanced vision.

                      “Something about… Ethan,” he mused. “Ethan… M.”

                      The room went very still.

                      Evie swallowed hard. “Ethan Marlowe?”

                      Seren paled. “Ellis Marlowe’s son.”

                      TP, for once, was silent.

                      #7736

                      “Premeditated?”  Evie voiced her thoughts.

                      TP looked at her sharply. “That would be the obvious conclusion to draw, my dear Evie. However,” he continued after a pregnant pause, “The conclusion may not be obvious at all.”

                      Evie rolled her eyes. “When in doubt, assume convolutions?”

                      A look of irritation clouded TP’s features momentarily, which he quickly arranged to a look of supercilious exasperation.  “You assume,” he said condescendingly, “That Herbert WAS a human when he entered the drying chamber.”

                      Evie was confused. “Well he was a dessicated human when he was found in there.  And he was a human when I last saw him.”

                      “And what do we know about Mr Herbert? Mr Ethan “Herbert”?”

                      Nonplussed, Evie replied that she didn’t know much about him, other than he was a late arrival and had appeared unexpectedly some years ago.

                      “Precisely.”

                      #7735

                      The “do not enter, crime scene” sticker haphazardly printed, was not even sealing the door. Amateur job, but of course, this was to be expected when such murder event had not been seen in a generation.

                      She entered surrepticiously, the door to the drying chamber slid shut with a hiss behind her, muffling the last of the frantic voices outside. Evie exhaled. She needed a moment. Just her, the crime scene, and—

                      A flicker of light.

                      “Ah-ha!” Trevor Pee Marshall, aka TP, materialized beside her, adjusting his holographic lapels with exaggerated precision. “What we have here, dear Evie, is a classic case of les morts très mystérieux.” His mustache twitched. “Or as my good friend Clouseau would say—‘Zis does not add up!’”

                      Evie rolled her eyes. “Less theatrics, more analysis, TP.”

                      Despite the few glitches, she was proud and eager to take her invention to a real-life trial run. Combining all the brilliant minds of enquêteur Jacques Clouseau, as well as the flair of Marshall Pee Stoll from the beloved Peaslanders children stories, TP was the help they needed to solve this.

                      “Ahem.” TP straightened, flickering momentarily before reappearing near the machine, peering inside with a magnifying glass he absolutely didn’t need.

                      Evie pulled up the logs. The AI had flagged the event—drying cycle activated at 0200 hours. Duration: excessive. But no shutdown? That was impossible.

                      TP let out a thoughtful “hmm.” Then, with the gravitas of a seasoned investigator, he declared, “Madame, I detect a most peculiar discrepancy.”

                      Evie looked up. “Go on.”

                      TP pivoted dramatically. “The AI should have stopped the cycle, yes? But what if… it never saw a problem?”

                      Evie frowned. That wasn’t how safety protocols worked. Unless—

                      She tapped rapidly through the logs. Her stomach dropped.

                      The system hadn’t flagged a human inside at all.

                      Someone had altered the ship’s perception of Mr. Herbert before he ever stepped into the machine.

                      Evie’s pulse quickened. This wasn’t just murder.

                      It was premeditated.

                      #7729

                      It was Evie who found the body.

                      Word spread fast, even on a ship this size. Evie, though properly shocked wasted no time telling Sue—because everyone knew if something serious happened, Sue was the one to go to. Not that anything like this had ever happened before.

                      Sue knew exactly what to do.

                      “Let’s not panick, folks” Sue’s voice crackled on her radio channel over the ship’s comms, after the chirpy jingle had faded into static “We’ve had a… situation. A dead person’s been found. In the drying machine.”

                      Naturally, everyone panicked.

                      For one, it had been long since anybody’d died. They had ways to preserve people these days —if someone got too close to the edge, easy: put them in cryo, sleep it out for a bit, pump them full of rejuv’ drugs, the lots. They would come up a bit disoriented, but mostly alive.

                      But this one, when Evie found him, he was all shrivelled and dried up, tangled in the bags full of tiger nuts meant for kids snacks. Mr Herbert she thought ; hard to tell. She thought she’d recognized him despite he’d looked barely human, a husk.

                      It could have been an accident, but then the AI would have stopped the machine. One had forgotten such things could happen.

                      It wasn’t long before everyone started to whisper about this long forgotten word.

                      Murder.

                      As sure as they’d been stuck in that nebula for the past three weeks, and now… someone had just turned up dead.

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