rickitikitarr: (call me darling)
Ricki Tarr ([personal profile] rickitikitarr) wrote2015-03-08 10:47 am

1. video

[Ricki Tarr, latest inmate arrival, is still getting his feet under him. He's been on board for a little while now, but let's face it, he's a field agent from the 1970s, getting used to graphical user interfaces of his messenger has put up a bit of a roadblock in terms of his making contact.

By the time he's confident enough with the flimsy, cheeping little device to make a video post, his stomach is growling, so the very first message is a simple video shot.

It's poorly framed, he has no real idea of how to centre himself in the lens, and the light in his room is dark and low and terrible for any sort of filming. But from the dark, what's visible of his half-in-the-frame expression is still and steady;]



The first living creature to orbit the earth was a little Russian mongrel named Laika. She was a pretty thing, with a clever cast to her eyes and pricked up, pointed ears. On the fourtieth anniversary of the Bolshevik revolution they flung the little thing into the sky.

In fact, the Russians had been launching dogs into suborbital flights for a few years before, but none attained the notoriety or captured the imaginations of the world like little Laika. I was rather young when she was sent to space, but recall thinking the entire proceedings terribly inhumane.

The Soviets say that she was euthanized before her oxygen ran out. The British and Americans question whether that is true. The Russians question whether that questioning is deliberately spread propaganda meant to make them seem monstrous. In the time since, I think both sides have lost track of the original truth of the matter. But the question of her ultimate cause of death aside, I wondered whether she might be hungry, thirsty or afraid, uncomprehending of how it was possible to see stars all around her... I actually can't recall reading whether Sputnik 2 was like this ship, with windows or not. Laika may not have seen stars spinning in the sky, but I'm sure the sounds and sudden lack of gravity must have been rather frightening for such a little dog.

[His voice is low and steady, the pictures his paints are matter-of-fact and vivid. He accent is an odd, old one, London tempered by a childhood racing through Penang streets and other colonial holds. He takes his time with the story before concluding;]

Which is all to say, given the apparent flexibility of space and time on this vessel, if we see her while we're out here, I must simply insist that we make a stop.
maytakecenturies: (now there's gravel in our voices)

[personal profile] maytakecenturies 2015-03-11 01:01 pm (UTC)(link)
[The smile, however slight, makes her wary. It was fair presumption at home that a Human smiling meant something poor for a non-Terran; here, she never knows what to assume.]

You come from the 1970s? [It's an approximation from his story. She knows about Laika. No one was concerned for the creature's health in her Earth's history.]
maytakecenturies: (thought I would grow old)

[personal profile] maytakecenturies 2015-03-11 01:10 pm (UTC)(link)
The mid twenty-second century.

I have a question about your home. If you do not mind. [That grates to add. She almost manages to hide it.]
maytakecenturies: (to tie up loose ends)

[personal profile] maytakecenturies 2015-03-11 02:18 pm (UTC)(link)
Is slavery still in practice in America?
maytakecenturies: (Default)

[personal profile] maytakecenturies 2015-03-11 02:35 pm (UTC)(link)
[She looks - not dismayed by the idea, but certainly it puts her off balance in some way. She's growing increasingly certain she's the only representative from her universe here, and that she will remain so.

Which doesn't exactly bother her, but she has no basis for dealing with courtesy, either.]

I understand. Thank you. [That grates, too.]
maytakecenturies: (Default)

[personal profile] maytakecenturies 2015-03-11 03:30 pm (UTC)(link)
From a separate universe. Slavery continued well into the the twenty-first century in Earth's history.

[She speaks neutrally, as if it has no bearing on her. In a way, it doesn't: she doesn't care at all about Humans enslaving other Humans.]
maytakecenturies: (in this tug of war)

[personal profile] maytakecenturies 2015-03-13 05:51 am (UTC)(link)
[She's not sure how much she believes it, but then - she's not sure how much she believes of anything Humans do, here.]

It was natural. Humanity is not content unless it's striving for domination. [There's an edge to her voice; she's struggling to control her hatred for the entire species.]