Princess of the Void Ch 41 - Eqtora
Added 2025-03-25 20:53:16 +0000 UTC“All right, gals.” Waian's voice emerges from the speakers wired to her console. She’s doing that weird metal-hand connection thing again, to better control the deck's subsystems; her fleshy body’s mouth doesn’t move. “Meet the Eqtorans.”
The holoprojector on the command deck’s table flares to light.
In the flickering holofield, a humanoid shape forms from the base up. A woman, Grant realizes, sleek and muscular. Or shaped like a woman, at least, in a way that brings a bit of heat to his face. The Eqtoran has a thick blubbery tail and a blunt snout like a shark’s. A frilly crest rises from her head like a punk’s mohawk. Even discounting it, she’s pushing six-and-a-half feet.
“Is that life size?” Vora asks, eyes widening.
“Yep,” Waian says. A male and female Taiikari shape in wireframe appear in neutral stances. About three feet and five feet tall, respectively. The heights that Grant has gotten used to, more or less (although outside the Pike he still needs to watch his head on door frames).
“Oop.” Waian’s mechanical hand buzzes. “Let me put up the Grantyde size comparison, too.” A wireframe human appears at the end of the lineup. His head barely clears the Eqtoran’s shoulder.
Grant’s brow furrows. “You gals programmed a size comparison for me?”
“Sure.” Waian tugs her hand from her console and reanimates. She jerks her metal thumb down to the bridge crew. “Had it for a bit, actually. The ladies are all curious how far up they measure. More than a few gents, too.”
“Chief Engineer.” Sykora’s face twists. “Let’s not let the crew stand next to the Grantyde size comparison any more.”
Waian chuckles. “Why not?”
“Because the Void Princess said so.” Sykora crosses her arms.
Grant examines the silhouettes. “I was getting used to being the tallest guy in the room.”
“Yes.” Hyax cranes her neck. “They are…quite large. That’s for sure.” The Brigadier looks intrigued as she stares at the Eqtoran facsimile. “Take me to the system map, Waian.”
“Aye-aye.” Waian plugs back into the display. The size comparison menagerie fades out and is replaced by a solar system. Seven planets orbiting an orange dwarf. The fourth planet out flashes gold. “That there’s Eqtora.”
“The homeworld of a theocratic republic,” Hyax says. “Divided into two hundred sections called temples, each of which elects a high ecclesiast, or so our translators have called them. That council of two hundred, as far as we can tell, governs unchallenged, and has for roughly five kilo-Cs now. It’s under their guiding hand that the Eqtorans achieved homeworld unification and struck out across their solar system.”
Lines arc from Eqtora and populate its moon and its neighboring worlds.
“A pre-light religious schism of some kind slowed them down,” Hyax continues. “Our monitor equipment wasn’t good enough yet to tell us exactly how that went. But after a decacycle of conflict, they’ve been enjoying a lengthy period of stability, and working toward the sweep. Which they’ve finally managed. First in secret and now in limited public displays.”
“That’s Harok and Taiqan. Settled pre-sweep.” Vora points to the golden planets that neighbor Eqtora itself. “Each has about a hundredth of their homeworld’s population. They’re terraforming both, but their methods are rather rudimentary and will take a kilocycle to finish, at least. The rest of the worlds in the solar system have limited colonies. Mostly resource extraction and science outposts.”
Sykora paces through the holographic worlds. Their amber grids shine across her face.
“What do you think, Majesty?” Vora says. “It’s between us and Glory Banner, so if we don’t take it, Princess Narika will. And its tranche comes with a good number of additional systems. It’d be a tantalizing parcel for further exploration.”
“What I think,” Sykora says, “is that we’ll let Glory Banner have it.”
Vora blinks. “We will?”
Sykora folds her hands behind her back. “Narika can handle this one. Right of first contact and ownership of the surrounding territory goes to Glory Banner. I’m content to make this her problem.”
Waian frowns as she and Hyax exchange a glance. “You sure about that, Majesty? Do you want some time to think about it?”
“No,” Sykora says. “No, I’m decided. Thank you, everyone. Return to your posts. Vora, Hyax, I’ll see you at nineteen hundred for our tributary review.”
She turns on her heel. Her tail hooks gently around Grant’s wrist.
He follows her uncertainly off the command deck.
***
Evening comes, borne on the back of the many meetings and debriefs and working groups that take up most of Sykora’s day. Grant’s taken to attending most of these; he wants to learn what he can about the Black Pike, and he enjoys touching his wife, and he’s given plenty of opportunities to do both.
He goes with her to the munitions deck for a demonstration of their gunnery team’s proposed deterrence load-out and watches her confer with her engineers on the formations that might minimize ambient overheat. He stands by her side in the conference room to hear a blistering disagreement between the executives of the sector’s two foremost cereal brands. He follows her to a pastel-colored kindergarten in the hab level, where she patiently answers questions from a gobsmacked class of multicolored preschoolers about what their parents do aboard her warship.
He rubs her back in zero-G as the lift takes them back to the crown of the vessel. “Big day,” he says.
She sighs under his kneading touch. “They’re all big. At least I took the biggest problem off my plate.”
They return to their silk-hung cabin and get as cozy as possible. For Grant, that means a set of silk drawstring PJs. For Sykora, that means one of the t-shirts that Grant had in his go-bag the night she abducted him. A Jeff Rosenstock tour shirt with a list of cities on it that Grant will never see again. It fits his tiny wife like a dress. She has never, to Grant’s recollection, laundered it.
Grant pulls his guitar out from its alcove in the trophy room and Sykora plops on the floor in the middle of a sea of fabric patterns. These she carefully lays across bolts of cloth, cutting and stitching with the help of a bulky handheld tool that reminds Grant of a Nintendo super scope.
He watches her work while he plays. It’s the first Taiikari song he’s ever tried to learn, an intricately laid-out tune by a band called Tremorlocc. The music’s an interesting combination of foot-stomper and operatic. Dark and propulsive. Not exactly major, not exactly minor. Dorian, maybe? He doesn’t know his modes well enough to recognize them without the internet. He likes it. Judging by his wife’s tail thumping rhythmically on the floor as she crawls around working on her project, she does too.
He simplifies the verse into blocky chords so he can talk and play at the same time. “What are you making?”
“I am making you a shirt,” she says.
“What’s the occasion?”
“The occasion is I like my husband’s face when I give him nice things.” She traces a stitch across two panels. “And I like his tummy in tight clothes.”
He grins. She looks over her shoulder and grins back. Her spine arches. Her tail lifts; the hem of her stolen shirt tents on it and rises to show off the lower curve of her butt. “Hi, Grant,” she says.
“Hi, Batty,” he says.
They take an enjoyable break from their hobbies, which takes them from the floor to the nearby table to lying in one another’s arms in the bed. Grant fumbles around with the cabin’s remote control until he figures out how to put on the actual song he’s been chopping away at.
Sykora takes up her preferred position as the little spoon. “I like your version better, you know.”
“It’s so intricate.” He drapes his arm across her curled-up body. “I’m having trouble with the chorus.”
“There are four musicians playing that chorus, dove,” Sykora says. “You and that guitar are doing their work by yourself.”
“Well, that’s not anything special in me. Just the difference between monophonic and polyphonic instruments.”
“I am taking it on faith,” she says, “that the translator is working fine. And I just don’t know what those words mean.”
She purrs contentedly as his palm rests on her heart. He feels its triple-part beat. His wife has relaxed, he decides. He can bring this up. “Do you want to talk about it, baby?”
Her ear flickers. “Talk about…?”
“You know.”
She sighs. “The Eqtora thing.”
“If it’s just a casual decision, or if you don’t want to talk about it, that’s okay. But I’m here to listen if you do.”
“I appreciate your concern, dove. But I really am all right.” Sykora turns over so they’re face to face. “Plenty of things calling for my attention besides these new aliens. Much to be done.”
“Sure. But you hate Narika.”
“I do.”
“So why are you willing to give this thing up to her?”
Sykora chews her lip. “It’s a republic, Grantyde. You lived in a republic, yes?”
“I did. I mean…” Grant hesitates. “Depending on who you asked. It had its issues. But we voted.”
“So does Eqtora,” Sykora says. “And I’d be taking it apart in front of you, dove. Putting it back together as a vassal for my Empress. Without offering an alternative.”
The skin on Grant’s scalp tingles. “Not just a first contact, then. A conquest.”
“Yes. We’d arrive, and welcome them to the wider firmament, and introduce them to their brand new Princess and their brand new Empress. And if—when—they have a problem with that…” Her shrug does lovely things to her chest. “We’d remove the problem. I will not make you take part in that. Not yet, anyway. You married a villainess. But you’re owed a longer period to get used to the chilly waters, step-by-step. This one would be a cannonball.”
“I’d hate to think of you passing this up because of me, baby.” He tucks her unruly hair behind her pointy ear. “You looked excited at Vora’s.”
“It’s not just because of you, dove. I swear. First contacts often end up more trouble than they’re worth. The Kovikans were the last major civilization to be uplifted, and they welcomed us with open arms. Shaky, fearful open arms. But open nonetheless. And even in that case, there was so much friction it nearly sank the Void Princess who did it.”
She tips him gently onto his back and lays her chin on his chest.
“These people? The Eqtorans? I’m presuming they would be doubly zealous—for their representative government and for their deities. It bears all the hallmarks of a long, painful integration.” She shakes her head. The point of her chin kneads his pec. “I’m all right leaving this to Narika. Really, I am. Your first First Contact can be some kind of autocracy. Plenty of those to go around. We can have a blast knocking over some solar dictator’s sandcastle.”
“All right. If you’re sure.”
“I’m quite sure. And besides.” Her tone sweetens. “It’s about time we took a little vacation. A—what did you call it?” She bounces her brows. “Honey Moon, right?”
“Correct.”
She snickers. “Maekyonites have such a fixation on honey. I should ask Kymai to start slathering it on everything.”
“Well. If we’re talking about slathering.” Grant puts his hands under Sykora’s armpits and pulls her the rest of the way onto him. “There’s a few things I’d enjoy licking honey off.”
“Grant.” She giggles as his palms cup her butt. “We’d get so sticky.”
“We always get sticky.”
Her tail wags little question mark shapes in the air. “Maybe I can—”
The same insistent tri-tone that rang in Vora’s cabin now sounds again, muting the music Grant was playing.
“Argh. One second.” Sykora rolls off of her husband. “Audio only. Answer.”
“Majesty.” Vora’s voice, treble with anxiety, fills the cabin. “We were about to send word to Glory Banner that you recuse yourself from the Eqtora situation, but, uh—a problem has come up.”
“What kind of problem?” Sykora’s tail straightens out across the bedspread.
“Would you be all right taking this call… privately?”
“No,” Sykora says. “Proceed.”
Vora’s sigh crackles the connection. “Okay. We’ve been reviewing the boundaries of the Eqtora tranche. And, uh—Maekyon is within it.”
Sykora’s ears flatten. “What?”
“Outer edge.” That’s Hyax’s gruff voice. “Vora checked and re-checked. Whoever gets Eqtora gets Maekyon. If you leave this first contact to the Glory Banner, then the Prince Consort’s entire species will be the subjects of Void Princess Narika.”
Comments
You use wenzai in the beginning when you meant to use waian
RepossessedSoul
2025-06-29 03:06:32 +0000 UTCeven a folk-recording oldies dude like Grantyde has to bow to the power of pop punk here and there
Alex
2025-03-31 02:32:22 +0000 UTCOh shit, Jeff Ronsenstock! Many music industries bombed, nice taste Grant.
Criss Invid
2025-03-31 02:21:29 +0000 UTCRip, I guess no sandcastles for them.
Eon
2025-03-26 11:37:20 +0000 UTC