Read Celestial Spheres: Part Two: Can I Fly Page 2


  This creature is taller and fatter than me, has a white body and large shiny head with no eyes visible. It has wider arms and legs than any man I have seen. Its movements are slow, I am faster, but I hope it doesn’t get any closer.

  Crackling, what sounds like voices are received by my spacesuit. Could it be trying to communicate?

  Unable to understand it, I access the suit’s synaptic-translator.

  “That's one small step for man,” the creature says. “One giant leap for mankind.”

  Sounds like an explorer. My suit identifies it as human, registering another still inside the ship with a third in orbit.

  No, there are more; many more. My readings identify 3.6 billion on a planet within 200,000 lengths of my position. The Celestial Spheres don’t have that many humans, just a few million spread across many worlds.

  I’m outside our Spheres, in the unknown Universe. That’s why I can’t fly. I wished to see the cosmos, but now I’m terrified. I don’t have any power here, wherever here is.

  The depressing statistics from my suit continue onto the superimposed visual display. Apparently, many species populate the nearby world, but not a single Potent, Scient or Present. A world where humans are free to rule is not a safe place for me. If they were to discover what our kind does to them, they might kill me. I feel vulnerable away from my home.

  These 3.6 billion humans are too advanced and should be brought under the control of our people. Stopped before they grow stronger; I’m sure my teachers would agree with my appraisal.

  My head goes light. The starlight fades. I faint.