SciFi and Fantasy
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SciFi and Fantasy

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Monarch: Legacy of Monsters Trailer Releases a Kaiju Kraken
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Monarch: Legacy of Monsters Trailer Releases a Kaiju Kraken

News Monarch: Legacy of Monsters Monarch: Legacy of Monsters Trailer Releases a Kaiju Kraken Sometimes you need monsters to fight monsters. (It’s Kong. I’m talking about Kong… and also Godzilla.) By Vanessa Armstrong | Published on February 3, 2026 Credit: Apple TV Comment 0 Share New Share Credit: Apple TV The second season of Apple TV’s Monarch: Legacy of Monsters is premiering later this month, and today we’ve got a trailer that sets the stakes. In it, we see a monster named Titan X that puts a blue whale to shame comes through the rift thanks, it seems, to a decision by Cate Randa (Ann Sawai). Kong doesn’t like it, and I’m guessing Godzilla isn’t a fan either. Humans are very certainly not enthused about it, as it eats a ship with ease in the trailer and heads to Japan to cause damage and threaten the lives of hundreds of thousands of people. We also see in the 1950s timeline that this beast might have been here before? The mystery gets more mysterious! Here’s an official description for season two of Monarch: Season two will pick up with the fate of Monarch—and the world—hanging in the balance. The dramatic saga reveals buried secrets that reunite our heroes (and villains) on Kong’s Skull Island, and a new, mysterious village where a mythical Titan rises from the sea. The ripple effects of the past make waves in the present day, blurring the bonds between family, friend and foe—all with the threat of a Titan event on the horizon. Monarch will see the return of Kurt Russell, Wyatt Russell, Anna Sawai, Kiersey Clemons, Ren Watabe, Mari Yamamoto, Joe Tippett, and Anders Holm. Takehiro Hira, Amber Midthunder, Curtiss Cook, Cliff Curtis, Dominique Tipper, and Camilo Jiménez Varón will also guest star. The show is just the beginning of Apple TV’s proposed Monsterverse; a prequel spin-off starring Wyatt Russell as a young Lee Shaw is already in the works, and there are reportedly “multiple series” also in development.   The first episode of Monarch: Legacy of Monsters season two will premiere on Apple TV on Friday, February 27, 2026. New episodes will be released every Friday until May 1, 2026. Check out today’s trailer below. [end-mark] The post <i>Monarch: Legacy of Monsters</i> Trailer Releases a Kaiju Kraken appeared first on Reactor.

Brandon Sanderson to Write Mistborn Movie Script and Co-Showrun Stormlight Archive Series
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Brandon Sanderson to Write Mistborn Movie Script and Co-Showrun Stormlight Archive Series

News Brandon Sanderson Brandon Sanderson to Write Mistborn Movie Script and Co-Showrun Stormlight Archive Series In a recently released video, the author shares details on his new deal with Apple TV By Vanessa Armstrong | Published on February 3, 2026 Screenshot: Brandon Sanderson YT channel Comment 0 Share New Share Screenshot: Brandon Sanderson YT channel Last week, we found out that Brandon Sanderson made a deal with Apple TV to adapt his Mistborn and Stormlight Archive novels, with Sanderson keeping significant control over the projects. Today, we got more news from Sanderson himself. In a new video, the author explained why he went with Apple—he liked the vibes, he liked that he would have more control over the projects, and that the “partnership felt right”—and gave some additional details on the adaptation of Mistborn and The Stormlight Archive series. Sanderson confirmed that the current plan is for Mistborn to be a feature film on Apple TV, and that Stormlight will be developed as a “premium cable streaming show.” Sanderson will be writing the screenplay for Mistborn and is currently focused on that full-time, with a summer deadline to turn in a script to Apple. (That means a new percentage bar on his website, where he’s currently at two percent for the script.) Sanderson will also be a co-showrunner on the Stormlight show with someone yet-to-be-determined. It seems that Mistborn, however, is first on the docket. “This feels really different this time,” he said. “I think this one is really going to happen.” There’s still a long way to go—Sanderson confirmed that we won’t see anything on the screen next year—but it’s a step in the right direction for Sanderson fans. And as for his other projects? Sanderson did say that it would impact his writing schedule, but that Mistborn: Ghostbloods is still on track for a 2028 release and that he had already built in this time for the next Stormlight book, so that timeline is currently the same as well. Overall, however, it sounds like Sanderson is optimistic about his new partnership with Apple, and that the odds are better than they’ve been before that we might get to see a screen adaptation of Mistborn and Stormlight at some point in the future. Watch Sanderson’s full video below. [end-mark] The post Brandon Sanderson to Write <i>Mistborn</i> Movie Script and Co-Showrun <i>Stormlight Archive</i> Series appeared first on Reactor.

Making Cargo Hauling Exciting: The Big Lifters by Dean Ing
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Making Cargo Hauling Exciting: The Big Lifters by Dean Ing

Books Front Lines and Frontiers Making Cargo Hauling Exciting: The Big Lifters by Dean Ing Cutting-edge trains, trucks, and dirigibles — plus conspiracies, lasers, and explosions! By Alan Brown | Published on February 3, 2026 Comment 1 Share New Share In this bi-weekly series reviewing classic science fiction and fantasy books, Alan Brown looks at the front lines and frontiers of the field; books about soldiers and spacers, scientists and engineers, explorers and adventurers. Stories full of what Shakespeare used to refer to as “alarums and excursions”: battles, chases, clashes, and the stuff of excitement. Today, I’m taking a look at a good old-fashioned science fiction book, The Big Lifters by Dean Ing, which is about an inventor pushing innovation in the world of cargo hauling to the edge of what’s possible. Just in case cargo isn’t your thing, Ing also throws in plenty of pushback from threatened transportation organizations and terrorist attacks to keep the pot boiling and make sure your attention doesn’t wander, I found this Tor paperback from 1988 on a shelf in my basement, with the unbroken spine signaling that it had never been read. As I plumb deeper and deeper into my collection of books, I am finding a lot that got put on my to-be-read pile and then forgotten. The Big Lifters has a nice, impressionistic cover painting and interior drawings by Alan McKnight, an artist I had not encountered before or since. The book feels old-fashioned in two ways: first, because it hearkens back to the old tales of inventors who succeed in a wide variety of fields, a type of story once known as “Edisonades,” after the famous inventor. Examples include the adventures of Frank Reade from the era of dime novels, and the Stratemeyer Syndicate’s novels about boy inventor Tom Swift. And this focus on science is something I miss in modern science fiction. Too few stories have the sense of excitement that comes from pushing the state of the art, and doing things that have never been done before. The book also feels old-fashioned in the sense that its prose and plotting were a bit lurid and over-the-top at times, in a way that reminded me of the old 20th-century men’s adventure magazines, periodicals like Argosy and True. When I was a Boy Scout, we used to have an annual paper drive, and as we collected bundles of newspapers, we were always on the lookout for discarded magazines of the type our parents wouldn’t approve. The men’s magazines, dripping with testosterone, and full of muscle-bound guys toting tommy guns, scantily clad damsels in distress, and menacing Nazis and Commies, were among the prized finds. While I was fascinated by these tales when I was young, I am glad we have left some of these old adventure magazine clichés behind. About the Author Dean Ing (1931-2020) was an American science fiction author, whose work drew on his experience in the US Air Force and on his careers as an aerospace engineer and as a college professor. His first story was published in 1955, although his most prolific period did not start until the 1970s. Ing ended up writing more than thirty novels during his career. His most successful work was in the techno-thriller genre, with his book The Ransom of Black Stealth One reaching The New York Times Best Seller list in 1989. His other work focused on high technology, survivalism, the military, and post-apocalyptic themes. He did a lot of work in the 1980s completing outlines and other works left unfinished by the late Mack Reynolds. Ing was a member of the self-appointed Citizens’ Advisory Council on National Space Policy, a space advocacy group that met in the 1980s and 1990s, focused on issues like single-stage-to-orbit launch systems and space-based missile defense systems, and which included many science fiction authors, including Jerry Pournelle, Greg Benford, and Larry Niven. The Exciting World of Cargo Hauling I’ll admit, the ins and outs of transportation have always fascinated me, ever since I first read Scuffy the Tugboat as a child and the bustling seaport that terrified the toy tugboat caught my imagination. While it may not seem particularly thrilling or glamorous to the casual reader, the latter half of the 20th century saw the world of trade and commerce go through a transformation. The change was driven by new procedures and technologies used in intermodal cargo handling—something I saw firsthand as a young Coast Guard reserve officer assigned to the Captain of the Port in Baltimore, Maryland during the 1980s. The development of standardized cargo containers increased the efficiency of cargo handling, preventing the need for cargo to be unloaded at ports of entry. New customs procedures facilitated these methods, with containers being sealed at their point of origin, and not opened and inspected until reaching their final destination. This significantly decreased the labor required to load and unload ships at seaports, and as a side benefit, cut down on pilferage. Ships got larger and more efficient, although this could be a mixed blessing as minimal crews and a lack of redundant systems made them more vulnerable to accidents. At the same time, other modes of transportation were going through similar evolutions. Railroads shifted from boxcars to flatbeds carrying standardized cargo containers, and even figured out ways to stack the containers on top of each other. FedEx, with their innovative “spoke and hub” system, was revolutionizing air shipping, and cutting delivery times dramatically. On the highways, truckers were also hauling standardized containers, and even pulling multiple trailers. The computer revolution facilitated this transformation, making it possible to order products efficiently, to track and manage cargos in ways not previously possible, and manage commerce right down to the delivery of single packages to the consumer at their home. Additionally, intermodal companies that managed cargo throughout its movement made the process even more efficient. While it has taken longer than some thought it would, space transportation is also seeing the beginning of a revolution, with private company launch systems outperforming governments and more traditional institutions, with reusable launch systems cutting costs, and with more countries, and even private companies, entering what used to be the exclusive club of space-faring organizations. One area where innovation has not made as much progress is in the field of lighter-than-air transport. I had the opportunity to fly on a Goodyear Blimp when the Coast Guard was evaluating the craft for surveillance duties, and even sit at the helm of one for a few minutes, and saw that these craft, while amazing to ride, were at the mercy of the wind, and difficult to handle in all but the most benign conditions. And having been hoisted in and out of a few helicopters over the years, I know that using any airborne platform to lift people and cargo is a difficult enterprise that requires the highest level of skill from the pilots and crews. The Big Lifters The book opens from the viewpoint of a long-haul trucker who is speeding to make up time with a load of heavy pipes. His tractor-trailer and load are described in extensive detail, a tactic Ing uses throughout the book in order to ground his tale in the real world. Then the viewpoint shifts to young John Wesley Peel, riding in a VW minivan with his grandmother, who took him in after his parents died in a trucking accident. Those viewpoints converge when the trucker swerves to avoid an antelope, his load comes free, the minivan is crushed, and the grievously injured John finds himself trapped, his face pushed up against the crushed face of his dead grandmother. With that gruesome image in their minds, readers are then introduced to Joseph Weatherby and the board of the National Transport Coalition, or NTC, discussing the disruptions the now-adult Peel is bringing to their industry. Weatherby is against making any attacks on Peel himself, but is willing to turn a blind eye if subordinates attempt to sabotage Peel’s factory or products. The perspective then shifts to Hassan Winthorp, a college professor who works for a Shiite terrorist group, helping them pick targets for murder by suicide bomber. He picks people who are in positions to increase the strength and power of the United States, whether through industry, politics, or public opinion. And one of those people is Peel. With these various threats being introduced and established, the narrative finally moves on to Peel himself (or Wes, as he now is known). And in true men’s adventure fashion, he is described as being dressed for comfort and action, having wide shoulders that strain his shirt and a flat belly, in spite of drinking too much Scotch; a true manly man of action. Wes is involved in just about every mode and method of handling cargo, driven by his traumatic accident to make the processes safer and more efficient. The only thing he is not interested in is space transportation, wanting to focus his efforts here on Earth. He is discussing one of the projects his company is working on—a magnetic levitation (maglev) train that uses powerful superconducting magnets. There are issues with a canard wing that helps keep the train stay in position as it floats above its track. We then meet Evangeline, or Vangie, Broussard, Wes’ executive assistant. She is described as having beautiful dark skin and hair, and dressing in a conservative manner. But just as you think the character might escape being objectified, the reader is assured that everyone speculates how good she looks underneath those conservative clothes. Wes meets Glenn Rogan, a test pilot who will assist with one of their other projects, a giant delta-shaped cargo-lifting dirigible. You can tell Glenn is going to be a main character, because he is described as having a solid muscular belly and sinewy forearms. Wes shows Glenn one of his other projects, a small tractor rig designed to haul trailers on secondary roads where the power of a full-sized highway tractor is not required. Suddenly a tractor-trailer rig gets loose without a driver (unknown to everyone, it’s because of NTC sabotage), and careens toward a building filled with people. Wes uses one of the small tractors to divert the rig, saving everyone. Wes then shows Glenn Delta One, their high-tech dirigible, and Glenn falls in love. Speaking of love, later on Wes and Vangie begin to flirt, because why would there be a female character in a men’s adventure if she wasn’t going to be someone’s love interest? They test Delta One by lifting cargo containers on and off a train. And then they test it by lifting containers on and off a moving train, proving they can transfer cargo without needing to stop to unload. I thought this was pretty preposterous, but then realized that when it came to technology, Ing wasn’t interested in what was feasible and practical; he was interested in what was possible. And these passages, where the engineers are testing new vehicles and technology, are the parts of the book I enjoyed the best. We move on to an interlude where the Shiite terrorists take out a target, and are reminded that Wes is getting closer to the top of their list. Then it’s back to science experiments: There is a launch system in Arizona that uses high-powered lasers to heat reaction mass like hydrogen in rocket nozzles, eliminating the need for chemical reactions. They use this laser system to heat engines on the belly of Delta One, and push her high enough to fly over the Rocky Mountains. The test is a success, although they have used magnesium struts near their engines, and one is ignited by the laser. Magnesium gets very, very hot when it burns, which almost creates a catastrophe. Behind the scenes, unknown to Wes, his team has a hidden project going on behind the scenes, which is concealed behind their efforts to build a canard on the maglev train. Unlike him, they are interested in space travel, and have come up with a rather wild plan to use a combination of the maglev and that laser launch system to launch a small commercial spaceplane into orbit. Ing is juggling a lot of balls in the air as the story jumps from viewpoint to viewpoint, but all of the threads eventually come together. Before the end of the book, Wes and his companions will work to develop all sorts of revolutionary technologies (doing their best not to kill themselves along the way), try to come to terms with the hostile NTC, and foil the fundamentalist terror attacks. In the meantime, Wes and Vangie will find that the road to love is not always a straight one. Because of the episodic nature of the plot, the sometimes-purple prose, and the men’s adventure clichés, I found the book a bit difficult in the beginning. But by the end, I found myself being swept up by all the action, and actually enjoyed the ride. Final Thoughts The Big Lifters is not a perfect book. It is a bit formulaic, and many of the characters tend toward being clichés. But Ing knows his technology, has done his homework, and in the sections where the team is testing new vehicles and systems, the author’s enthusiasm is contagious. The old-fashioned men’s adventure plots may not be the literary equivalent of a nutritious meal, but they can be a satisfying kind of snack food. Now I turn the floor over to you, especially if you have read The Big Lifters, or other works by Dean Ing—and if there are other entertaining science fiction books about hauling cargo, I’d love to hear about them.[end-mark] The post Making Cargo Hauling Exciting: <i>The Big Lifters</i> by Dean Ing appeared first on Reactor.

Read an Excerpt From Isles of the Emberdark by Brandon Sanderson
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Read an Excerpt From Isles of the Emberdark by Brandon Sanderson

Excerpts cosmere Read an Excerpt From Isles of the Emberdark by Brandon Sanderson A legendary standalone novel that navigates the seas and the stars of a far-future Cosmere. By Brandon Sanderson | Published on February 3, 2026 Comment 0 Share New Share We’re thrilled to share an excerpt from Isles of the Emberdark, a standalone cosmere novel by Brandon Sanderson featuring illustrations by Esther Hi‘ilani Candari, available now from Tor Books. All his life, Sixth of the Dusk has been a traditional trapper of Aviar—the supernatural birds his people bond with—on the deadly island of Patji. Then one fateful night he propels his people into a race to modernize before they can be conquered by the Ones Above, invaders from the stars who want to exploit the Aviar.But it’s a race they’re losing, and Dusk fears his people will lose themselves in the effort. When a chance comes to sail into the expanse of the emberdark beyond a mystical portal, Dusk sets off to find his people’s salvation with only a canoe, his birds, and all the grit and canniness of a Patji trapper.Elsewhere in the emberdark is a young dragon chained in human form: Starling of the starship Dynamic. She and her ragtag crew of exiles are deep in debt and on the brink of losing their freedom. So when she finds an ancient map to a hidden portal between the emberdark and the physical realm, she seizes the chance at a lucrative discovery.These unlikely allies might just be the solution to each other’s crises. In their search for independence, Dusk and Starling face perilous bargains, poisonous politics, and the destructive echo of a dead god. PROLOGUE FIFTY-SEVEN YEARS AGO Starling hopped from one foot to the other, holding open the drapes to her balcony, staring at the dark horizon. She didn’t dare blink. She didn’t dare miss it. First light. When would first light appear? She’d barely slept, though she’d tried for at least a half hour. She was simply too excited, and had spent the night trying—failing—to distract herself with a book. In the distance, across the rolling forests of Yolen, the darkness seemed to fade. Did that count? It wasn’t light. It was just… less dark. She went running anyway. Still wearing her nightgown, she pushed into the hallway outside her rooms in her uncle’s mansion. She scrambled past smiling attendants. Starling genuinely liked most of them—and pretended to like the rest. That was what her uncle taught her: Always look for the best in both people and situations. Today, that wasn’t so difficult. Today was the day. First light. The day she transformed. She burst into the grand entryway in a tizzy of white hair and fluttering nightgown, startling her uncle’s priests in their formal robes and wide hats. They were up early, of course, because her uncle got up early to take the prayers of those who worshipped him. Buy the Book Isles of the Emberdark Brandon Sanderson Buy Book Isles of the Emberdark Brandon Sanderson Buy this book from: AmazonBarnes and NobleIndieBoundTarget Starling fluttered around the corner, heading for the next hallway over, which led to his reflectory. Priests, belatedly, bowed to her from the sides as she ran. She might look like an eight-year-old girl, but dragons grew slowly, and she was older than some of the priests. She didn’t feel it. She still felt like a child, which her uncle explained was the way of things. Her mental age was like that of a human child her size, but she got to experience that age far longer than they did—which would have been wonderful, except for one thing. It had forced her to wait three long decades for her transformation. She burst into the reflectory, where her uncle sat upon his fain-wood throne. He wore his human form, which had pale skin and a sharp silver beard just on his chin, bound in cords, extending a good eight inches. He took the appearance of an older man, maybe in his sixties, though that could be deceptive for their kind. Starling scurried up to him, but didn’t touch him. With his eyes closed— wearing his brilliant white and silver robes and conical headdress—he was taking a prayer from some distant follower. She couldn’t interrupt that. Not even for first light. So she waited, balancing on one foot, then the other, trying to keep from bursting from excitement. Finally he opened his eyes. “Oh? Starling. It’s early for a young dragonet like you. Why are you up?” “It’s today, Uncle! It’s today!” “Is today special?” “Uncle!” “Oh, your birthday,” he said. “Thirty years old, unless… Could I have mistaken the day? A lot was happening during your birth, child. Maybe we need to wait until tomorrow.” “UNCLE! ” she shouted. Frost smiled, then held out his hands for her to run up and embrace him. “I just spoke with Vambrakastram—and she will take my prayers for the day. I am free, all day, for you.” “Just for me?” she whispered. “Just for you. Are you ready?” “I’ve been so, so ready,” she said. “For so, so long.” She pulled back. “Will my scales really be white when I am a dragon?” “You are always a dragon,” he said, raising his finger, “whether or not you have the shape of one. As for the coloring of your scales, there’s no way to know until the transformation.” He tapped her arm—which was powder white, like her hair. “Dragons come in all colors, and each is beautiful and unique. But I will say, every dragon I’ve known who was leucistic in human form—granted, there have only ever been two others—had white scales to match. A metallic, shimmering white with a sheen of mother-of-pearl. It’s breathtaking.” “Only ever two,” she whispered. “Only ever two,” he said, then cupped her cheek. “Plus one, Starling.” “Letsgoletsgoletsgo!” she shouted, running back out into the hallway. He followed, and—with her urging him on—they continued down the corridor, passing more smiling priests. All human, of mixed genders. Starling had been to other dragon palaces, and the priests there were stiff and stuffy. Not so here. Frost saw the best in people, and people became their best because of it. That’s what he’d always said. “Now,” he said from behind, walking far too slowly for her tastes, “I’m supposed to speak to you of the ritual importance of the first transformation.” “I know the importance!” she exclaimed, spinning to walk backward. “I will be able to fly.” “We live dual lives,” he said. “And there is a reason we spend thirty years in human form before reaching the age of transformation. This is Adonalsium’s wisdom.” “Yes, yes,”she said, spinning again as they reached the end of the hallway— and the grand balcony doors. “We live half our lives as humans so we know what it is like to be small. We live the lives of mortals before we gain the life of a dragon. That way, we’ll understand.” “Do you?” he said, resting his hand on her shoulder as she stood before the closed doors, which were made of yellow stained glass. She thought… she could see light on the other side, from the horizon. She was so eager, but he’d taught her to be honest, always. “No,” she admitted. “I try, but I… don’t understand mortals. They live such hurried lives, and they are so fragile, but they don’t seem to care. I try, but I don’t understand.” “Yes. With our powers, even as dragonets, empathy is difficult.” “Will that ruin me?” she asked softly. She’d worried about this. “Because I don’t understand? Will it stop me from flying?” “You can never be ruined, child,” he said, a smile in his voice. “Never, ever. You can learn better, and you will as you grow. Knowing that fact is how it happens! Ignorance will not hold back the transformation.” He leaned back. “Sometimes, contrast is important to help us learn.” He shoved the doors open, revealing a horizon that had begun to blaze with predawn. The grand balcony was large enough to hold them in their draconic forms. It was one of the launchpads to the upper palace, which was built on a different scale—for people who were the size of buildings. She stepped out onto the balcony, suddenly worried. What if it didn’t happen to her? What if she was broken? Everyone put so much stock in her being leucistic—which was a cousin, but not exactly the same, as being albino like a human. She was more like a white tiger, she’d been told. A symbol of two worlds. But some said with every great sign came misfortune, as proven by what had happened to her parents… “You are,” Frost said, “so wonderful, Illistandrista. I am honored to be here, with you, on this most important of days.” He left unsaid that he wished her parents were the ones here. That was not to be. She took a deep breath, and held out her hands to her sides. First dawn struck her, and she absorbed the light. It became part of her, and the self that had been hidden within Starling these thirty years emerged, glorious and radiant. With wings, and dragonsteel of pure silver, and scales a glittering white—faintly iridescent. With the transformation, Starling—finally—felt that she belonged. CHAPTER ONE Sixth of the Dusk crept up on a deathant. “This thing’s venom,” Dusk whispered, slipping forward on silent feet, “is enough to kill a horse. It would have no trouble with you or me. They call it a three-step kill. Because after its bite, you’ll last only three more steps.” He kept his eyes on the tiny insect, which held to the bottom of a leaf— barely visible, imitating a natural spot on the foliage. Dusk turned a smoking brand between his fingers and slid forward. “They often cling to the bottoms of leaves,” he said softly. “People rub against them, unaware, and the ants slip onto their clothing. In the jungles of Patji, you can never fully trust that you’re not carrying one. Death could come with a tiny sting hours after you’ve passed their hive.” One more step. He raised his brand. “Smoke,” he whispered, “is your best defense. It puts them to sleep.” He inched the brand up underneath the leaf, letting its smoke puff up and ooze around the insect. “Either that, or you move with extreme caution. Hoping—praying to the Father Island—that you were careful enough.” The deathant did not drop to sleep as it should have—because if you looked closely, you would see it was actually a drawing. Dots of black, painted on the leaf in the shape of the deadly insect. He turned around to an audience of children and parents. Most were barely paying attention. He lowered his smoking brand, then rapped his other hand on the glass terrarium, which held living specimens. It was set up next to the fake display, both being used for presentations. “You have no idea how lucky you are,” he said, “to be able to look at these safely. Real, live deathants. Few people ever got that chance before the modern era.” The children stared at him blankly. One was drooling. Their juvenile Aviar—birds which clung to shoulders or heads—chattered softly at one another. “I’m done,” Dusk added. A smattering of applause, which he always found… odd. He did not like being applauded. After that, the people moved on to one of the other displays, several children complaining they were bored, one crying for no reason whatsoever. Dusk groaned and glanced back at the terrarium containing one of the deadliest creatures in all of creation. And he felt… sorry. These insects had once terrified even the most skilled trapper. Now they were just bugs in a jar. It made him angry, with no good reason, for he was part of the reason they were imprisoned like this. Indeed, this entire park—with its captive displays of the dangers of the outer islands, and showy explanations for how life had once been—existed because of him. He might not have captured these animals, but he’d signed their bill of incarceration. With a sigh, he turned from the enclosure and went to gather Sak from the Aviar roost nearby. The sleek black bird stood out among the others. Everyone here had an Aviar, all a variety of colors, but none were like Sak, with her black coloring and more pointed beak. As he put her on his shoulder, she leaned to the side, looking at his other shoulder. Empty. She never stopped looking. “I know,” Dusk said. “I miss him too.” After that, he went walking. Something that once, when he’d worked on Patji—most perilous of islands—had been rife with danger. Each step a risk of death, a new challenge around every tree and within every hollow. Five years later, and his instincts still said that walking lazily like this was dangerous. Was it strange, that he should long for those days? He wore his old gear—cargo pants and a tight, buttoned shirt—which made him stand out in this city full of bright dresses and colorful wraps. On the street outside, he could hear new kinds of vehicles passing: the kind with motors that roared like some type of beast. Gifts of technology from the Ones Above. He peered to the sky, and spotted the ship hanging there. More talks, more meetings, more gifts and promises. The aliens were growing impatient with this primitive planet full of stubborn people and valuable birds. How long would the Ones Above wait? He had thoughts on what could be done. He kept them to himself, as nobody asked. Couldn’t Vathi send for him again? He’d only punched one senator. And surely the man had deserved it. Dusk continued walking through the park. People did, occasionally, stop and point. He was a celebrity, he supposed. The last trapper of Patji, a man who had been ushered back to receive medals and awards for the secrets he’d helped discover. He’d asked them to build this park, to preserve the trapper heritage, and so they had. It was the last time they’d listened to him. He didn’t work for the park formally, but he liked to visit. To remember. Maybe that was a bad idea. Maybe that was asking for pain, seeing all these creatures in cages. Knowing that secretly, he was one of them. A relic of days that had been bulldozed. Leaving him a man with no purpose. Other than to try, and fail, to scare children. He found Tuka, the park director, supervising one of the new exhibits. They hoped to house nightmaws here. Insanity, he’d have once said. But they’d housed Dusk, so who knew? Tuka was a boisterous, stout woman. She had long black hair and wore orange. Always. Orange was practically a religion to Tuka. It made her look like a fruit. “Dusk!” she said, turning from the new construction. “I didn’t know you were coming in today!” He didn’t reply. Because that had not been a question. “What do you think?” she asked, gesturing to the enclosure—a deep pit with stone sides. “They will get out at that point there,” he said, pointing at some trees inside. “They will knock the trees down, climb up, feast upon your patrons.” He paused. “It might be bad for publicity.” “Oh, you,” she said, swatting him. She thought he made jokes. He let her think that—as his gut said it would make her underestimate him. Why would you need that kind of thinking any longer? a part of him accused. Haven’t you listened to a single thing Vathi has tried to teach you? “We’re very lucky to have you,” Tuka noted. “A real, live trapper. One who trapped Patji, no less.” The words… they were echoes of the ones from his presentation. The exact things he’d said about the deathants. Father. Was this really his life? Dusk looked around at the colorful people and glass cages. “Was it really as terrible as people say?” Tuka asked. “On the island, I mean.” “Yes,” Dusk said. “And wonderful.” “Terrible… and wonderful?” Tuka frowned. “Wonderful because it was terrible.” “I don’t understand.” He wasn’t surprised. All this effort to create the park, to preserve the ways of the trappers, and Dusk only now realized something. Tamed displays—no matter how vibrant and accurate—could never fully capture the truth of living on Patji. And so, the only true displays were his memories. CHAPTER TWO FIVE YEARS AGO Death hunted beneath the waves. Dusk saw it approach: a vast dark shadow within the deep blue. Dusk’s hands tensed on his paddle, rocking in his boat, his heartbeat racing as he immediately sought out Kokerlii. Fortunately, the colorful bird sat in his customary place on the prow, idly biting at one clawed foot raised to his hooked beak. Kokerlii lowered his foot and puffed out his feathers, as if completely unmindful of the danger beneath. Dusk held his breath. He always did, when unfortunate enough to run across one of these things in the open ocean. He did not know what they looked like beneath those waves. He hoped to never find out. The shadow drew closer, almost to the boat. A school of slimfish passing nearby jumped into the air in a silvery wave, spooked by the shadow’s approach. The terrified fish showered back to the water with a sound like rain, but the shadow did not deviate. The slimfish were too small a meal to interest it. A boat’s occupants, however… It passed directly underneath. Sak chirped quietly from Dusk’s shoulder; the second bird seemed to have some sense of the danger. Creatures like the shadow did not hunt by smell or sight, but by sensing the minds of prey. Dusk glanced at Kokerlii again, whose powers were their only protection. Dusk had never clipped Kokerlii’s wings, but at times like this he understood why many sailors preferred protection Aviar that could not fly away. The boat rocked softly; the jumping slimfish stilled. Waves lapped against the sides of the vessel. Had the shadow stopped? Hesitated? Did it sense them? Kokerlii’s protective aura had always been enough before, but… The shadow slowly vanished. It had turned to swim downward, Dusk realized. In moments, he could make out nothing through the waters. He hesitated, then forced himself to get out his new mask. It was a modern device he had acquired two supply trips back: a glass faceplate with leather at the sides. He placed it on the water’s surface and leaned down, looking through it into the depths. They became as clear to him as an undisturbed lagoon. Nothing. Just that endless deep, sunlight making streams of light like roadways into the abyss. Fool man, he thought, tucking away the mask and getting out his paddle. Didn’t you just think to yourself that you never wanted to see one of those? Still, as he started paddling again, he knew that he’d spend the rest of this trip feeling as if the shadow were down there, following him. He continued regardless, paddling his outrigger canoe until he drew a distance away—all around him was that same trembling ocean, not a speck of land in sight. He carried with him compass, map, and sextant… but today, he didn’t reach for any of those. Instead he dipped his hand into the water and closed his eyes, reading the lapping of the waves to judge his position. Once, those waves would have been good enough for any of the Eelakin, his people. These days, only the trappers learned the old arts, the arts of the grand navigators from long ago. It was a mark of pride to him that he almost never needed the compass, and he had yet to encounter a situation where he had to rely on the new sea charts—given as gifts by the Ones Above during their visit earlier in the year. They were said to be more accurate than even the best Eelakin surveys. He hated that such things existed. However, you could not stop times from changing. His mother’s words. You couldn’t stop times from changing any more than you could stop the surf from rolling. But he could remember. He pulled his hand from the ocean and got out his navigator’s book, where each day he recorded observations. The rising and setting of the sun, the locations of constellations, fish he’d seen and the direction they were swimming. Wayfinding was a puzzle. In the old days, the great navigators would not sleep for as long as a week as they traveled—for they needed to record everything in incredible detail. Distance traveled, speed of motion, the angle of each day’s sailing as accounted by sun and stars. Dusk fortunately didn’t need to be quite so detailed. So long as he passed shallows now and then, a modern anchor could keep him from drifting while he slept. And he knew that if he did drift too far, the compass, map, and sextant could get him back on track. He still loved to do it the old way. He marked the school of slimfish, and knew—without needing to look—it meant he was getting close. The birds he’d seen in the distance yesterday had been enough. At night, birds headed toward land—and that had let him turn his course slightly. The snarl of seaweed—with a hook from some previous trapper caught in it—had been an obvious sign as well. Even the clouds could help, for green reflections on the bottoms of distant clouds meant land. He finished his notations, then used his spyglass to scan for other signs. More birds. They’d be flying away from land this time of day… Yes, he was close. Again, he dipped his hand into the water. Of all the ancient techniques, this was his favorite. For while you let your fingers trail in the water, with eyes closed, you could feel the waves… and large islands created different wave patterns. It worked best once you were close, of course, but with his fingers in the water… he almost felt like the islands were talking to him. Telling him, by how they interrupted the patterns, where they were. He smiled and took out his old string map—made with wooden sticks on a board, used to show wave patterns and indicate how to find them around certain islands. He turned his boat with confidence—his birds chirping— and paddled straight on their new path. It was not long, after the accounting of tides, before he was rewarded with first sight of an island. He’d done it, without picking up his compass a single time this trip. That was Sori: a small island in the Pantheon, and the most commonly visited. Her name meant “child”; Dusk vividly remembered training on her shores with his uncle. It had been long since he’d burned an offering to Sori, despite how well she had treated him during his youth. Perhaps a small offering would not be out of line. Patji would not grow jealous. One could not be jealous of Sori, as she was the least of the islands. Just as every trapper was welcome on Sori, every other island in the Pantheon was said to be affectionate of her. Be that as it may, Sori did not contain much valuable game. Dusk continued paddling, moving down one leg of the archipelago known as the Pantheon. From a distance, this archipelago was not so different from the homeisles of the Eelakin, now a three-week trip behind him. Up close, they were very, very different. Over the next five hours, Dusk paddled past Sori, then her three cousins. He had never set foot on any of those three. In fact, he had not landed on many of the forty-some islands in the Pantheon. At the end of his apprenticeship, a trapper chose one island and worked there all his life. Dusk had chosen Patji—an event some fifteen years past now. Seemed like far less. Dusk saw no other shadows beneath the waves, but he kept watch. Not that he could do much to protect himself. Kokerlii did all of that work as he roosted happily at the prow of the ship, eyes half closed. Dusk had fed him seed; Kokerlii did like it so much more than dried fruit. Nobody knew why beasts like the shadows lived only here, in the waters near the Pantheon. Why not travel across the seas to the homeisles, where food would be plentiful and Aviar like Kokerlii were far rarer? Once, these questions had not been asked. The seas were what they were. Now, however, men poked and prodded into everything. They asked, “Why?” They said, “We should explain it.” Dusk shook his head, dipping his paddle into the water.That sound—wood on water—had been his companion for most of his days. He understood it, and the whisperings of the waves, far better than he did the speech of men. Even if sometimes their questions got inside of him and refused to go free. After the cousins, most trappers would have turned north or south, moving along branches of the archipelago until reaching their chosen island. Dusk continued forward, into the heart of the islands. He stopped briefly with harpoon and rope to spear some fish—often, in these waters, the best way to get protein. He gutted and packed them away for later tonight at his safecamp, then continued paddling until a shape loomed before him. Patji, largest island of the Pantheon. He towered like a wedge rising from the sea, and all of the waves here bent around him. A place of inhospitable peaks, sharp cliffs, and deep jungle. Patji. King of the Pantheon. God of the Eelakin. Hello, old destroyer, Dusk thought. Hello, Father. CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO Starling crawled down the ladder in a metal tube, far from her homeworld— and even farther, at least emotionally, from that glorious day when she’d first transformed. Over fifty years had passed. She was basically an adult, but she had replaced grand palaces with dimly lit corridors on a half-functional starship. She reached the last rung and turned toward engineering, wearing her human shape. A shape she’d been magically locked into—exclusively—for twelve years now. She forced a spring into her step and told herself to keep positive. There was at least one blessing about being exiled: there were a whole lot of places that weren’t home—and many of them were vibrant, amazing. She’d never have visited them if she hadn’t been forced out into the cosmere against her will. For that, she had decided to be grateful for what had been done to her. Her master said she worked too hard to find sunlight in dark places, but what else was she to do? Darkness was commonplace, and she preferred a challenge. Besides, the cosmere really was a wondrous place. Not that her current location was anything spectacular. A metallic corridor, with flickering fluorescent lights. Pipes for decor and barely enough space to walk upright. It took a lot of energy to keep a ship like the Dynamic flying, and designers learned to be economical. She paused by one of the portholes, looking out at the bleak darkness of Shadesmar—an endless, empty black plane. Really, wasn’t it the darkness that reminded one how wonderful the light was? Traveling through Shadesmar was dreary, but at least she could do it in a ship, rather than walking in a caravan like people had done in the olden days. She tried to imagine them out there, walking the lonely obsidian expanse. Or worse, straying into regions where the ground went incorporeal and turned into the misty nothing they called the unsea. Or… the emberdark, people sometimes called that vast emptiness—the Rosharan term for the unexplored parts of Shadesmar. Her ship stayed along the more frequented pathways, where the ground was solid—and had been for millennia. You often encountered other travelers on these patrolled lanes between planets. For Shadesmar, such places were conventional, understood, and safe. But her ship had strayed close to the edge of one such corridor. And out there… well, anything could be out there in the emberdark. Starling found that both exciting and terrifying all at once. A figure stepped out of the wall behind her.Transparent, with a faint glow to him, Nazh had pale skin with cool undertones, and wore a dark grey formal suit: the kind with a fancy cravat that normal people wore to only the most exclusive of gatherings. He didn’t have much choice, though, seeing as that was what he’d died in. “Star?” he asked her. “Is everything all right?” “It’s strikingly beautiful,” she said, running her fingers along the metal. “This corridor.” The sleeve of her jacket slipped back, exposing one of her manacles. Silver against her powder-white skin, the thick pieces of metal—more like bracers visually—were the symbols of her exile, binding her in human form, locking away her abilities. Until she “learned.” She still didn’t know, years later, how much of the exile was to teach her and how much to punish her. Her people’s leaders could be… obscure. “Strikingly beautiful?” Nazh asked. “The… corridor? Star, are you having one of your moments?” “No. Maybe. Look, I was just thinking that this ship is almost starting to feel like home.” “The dragon,” he said with a smile, “who flies a starship.” “I don’t do much flying. That’s Leonore’s job. I just get flown around.” Twelve years now, trapped in her human form by these manacles. Twelve years since she’d stretched her wings and taken to the sky under her own power. Shards. She would not let that break her. She would not let them win. She continued on her way, Nazh joining her. He didn’t walk, and he didn’t really float. He glided, feet on the ground, as if standing still—but moving when she walked, his hands clasped behind his back. “I shouldn’t complain,” she said. “I mean, there are advantages to letting someone else do the flying. Easier on the muscles this way. Plus I can sleep while we travel! Try doing that when flying with your own wings.” “Star, dear,” he said, “if I still had a stomach, I believe I’d find your optimism nauseating.” “Oh, come on,” she said. “You have to admit. Things could be worse. I could be dead…” “One gets over such trivialities.” “… wearing a formal suit for eternity…” “I’ll never be underdressed.” “… and have a face that is… well, you know.” Nazh stopped in place. “I know what?” “Never mind,” she said, reaching the ladder to the bottom deck, where she’d find engineering. She descended while he floated alongside her. “Never mind what?” he said. “It wouldn’t be polite to say.” “You were trained by one of the most obtuse, crass men in all of the cosmere, Star. You don’t know the meaning of the word ‘polite.’” “Sure I do,” she said, hopping off the ladder. “It’s just that I’m a kindly young—” “You’re eighty-seven.” “I’m a kindly young—for the relative age of her species—person. Being kindly means you don’t tell your friend about the unfortunate nature of his coiffure. You merely imply it is ridiculous so you can maintain plausible deniability.” He floated along, eyes forward as she reached the door to engineering. “Hairstyles of this… volume were quite fashionable when I died.” “Among whom? Musk oxen?” He almost broke composure—that stern expression of near disapproval cracked, and a smile itched the corners of his mouth. It always felt like a gift when she managed to make Nazh smile. Also, his hair wasn’t that bad—it had a windswept, classic look. It was just that he was a tad overly fond of it, despite it making him seem like he couldn’t decide if he was a pompous prince or a rockstar. “Hey,” a commanding female voice said in Star’s earpiece. “Are you wasting time again?” “No, Captain.” “Then why isn’t my engine working yet?” “Had to stop at my rooms to fetch something, Captain,” Starling said. “I’m almost to engineering.” “Did Nazrilof find you?” “Yes, Captain.” “I explicitly told him not to.” “Tell her,” Nazh said, “she can order me a hundred lashings. I’m fond of them. They tickle.” “Sorry, Captain,” Starling said instead. “I’m entering engineering now.” “Warn that engineer,” the captain said, “that if there is another problem, I will come down and deal with her personally. I am not known for my patience with crew who slack off.” She cut the line. “Do you suppose,” Nazh said, “we could pitch her overboard and claim she jumped? I’d swear under oath she was driven mad.” “By what?” “My ravishingly attractive hairdo, of course.” He hesitated. “I mean, there has to be some musk ox in the captain’s heritage. Have you seen the woman?” Starling grinned, then pushed through the door. The engine room of the Dynamic was even more cramped than the hallway—though it had a higher ceiling, the round chamber was clogged with machinery. More than that, large bundles of tubes ran up and down the walls, tied off every few feet or so to keep them together. Like cords, only a little thicker, and sometimes pulsing with water or aether. They were a staple of the ship, and of its class. Tubes in bundles running across the ceilings, or along walls, glowing, pulsing, or thrumming. Most ships that Starling had been on, particularly the less expensive ones, had similar features. Regardless, Starling had to squeeze between engine protrusions and the wall at several points—and step over several bundles of tubes—to make her way to the back, where a hammock hung from a rivet on the wall and a stack of large barrels, marked with symbols of various aethers. A young woman sat up from within the hammock and hurriedly hid some items in the pocket of her blue jumpsuit. Aditil had brown skin, with light tan—almost golden—undertones. She wore her black hair in a braid, and as she moved, Starling saw the distinctive pale blue, glasslike portion of her right hand. The center of the palm was replaced—bones and all—with a transparent aether the color of the sky. The glass was cracked, an indication that the symbiote she’d bonded was dead. Starling had never asked for the story behind that. “L.T.!” the young woman exclaimed. “Oh hells. Captain sent you? Did I let the pressure lapse again?” She scrambled, grabbing her earpiece from the pouch in her hammock, fumbling to put it in. “Sorry. Sorry, sorry, sorry!” Aditil slid out of the hammock, almost falling over. She hopped over a large pipe and began to monitor the engines—where she’d plugged in her lodestar to give her readouts in her native language. This was what she was supposed to have been doing. The old machinery needed constant attention; the Dynamic—as fond as Starling was of it—wasn’t the most cutting-edge of ships. Indeed, it was something of a mongrel. Rosharan antigrav technology, aether spores from the Dhatrian planetary network for thrust and engine power, a Scadrian composite metal hull. Never mind that all three technological strains produced their own viable starships without the others. The Dynamic, like her crew, had picked up a little here and a little there. All it was missing was an Awakened metalmind, but those were expensive—and Starling had never trusted them anyway. Aditil fiddled with machinery, often controlling the systems via her lodestar. The rectangular device—around ten inches wide and six inches tall—was a kind of controller, or input device. There were so many different kinds of mechanical architectures in the cosmere, from so many different planets, that it could be difficult to learn them all. Plus, a patchwork ship like this might have parts from a half dozen different manufacturers, each with their own languages, customs, and—most importantly—input schemes. Having a lodestar built to your preferences helped with that. Most of them, like Aditil’s—or the one that Starling wore in a holster at her belt— could be pulled apart into two pieces, each of which you plugged into a device. A little like… like handles for luggage that you could remove, then attach to a new piece of luggage. If those handles each had buttons, triggers, and thumbsticks made to your culture’s preferences. Most had things like small foldout screens or even keypads in your local language. Starling had spent decades customizing hers. It had a kind of stonework feel to it, though of course that was a facade for the electronics. She liked to feel that it was ancient, like her people. Aditil’s was more modern, with smoother grips and… well, it felt more like a controller to one of the game systems she was fond of playing. It was brightly colored, almost gaudy, and the tiny readout displayed the flowing script of her people. With the lodestar she gave inputs—but she still checked specific gauges and local readouts of things like aether levels. Someone who grew familiar with a system rarely used their lodestar for everything. In this case, Aditil actually whispered to the aethers themselves—but it worked, as she got the engine back up to full power. Starling leaned against the wall, noting that Nazh had chosen to remain outside. Aditil was new, and he had learned— from painful experience—to ration his time with new crewmembers. Not everyone was comfortable around shades. Indeed, there were some who’d say that bringing one on board your ship was tantamount to suicide. “So,” Starling said, “this is… the third time this week that Captain hasn’t been able to get ahold of you?” “Sorry, sorry, sorry!” Aditil kept her head low as she worked. “Want to talk about it?” “I’ll do better! I need this job, L.T. Please. I… need to save up enough…” Starling folded her arms, the edges of her manacles peeking out from beneath her jacket. Aditil worked for a moment longer, but then slumped to the floor, leaning forward, forehead against the engine. A low humming sound came from within the machinery as zephyr aether generated gas, which created pressure—the basis for powering the ship. The fact that they could use the zephyr as propellant and for breathable air meant that the Dynamic was spaceworthy. They rarely needed that, as Xisis—the ship’s owner—usually had them do merchant runs through Shadesmar instead. “They’re pictures of your family, aren’t they?” Starling said. “The things you hide whenever I walk past?” Aditil glanced at her, surprised. “Can I see them?” Starling asked. Sheepishly, the young woman fished them out of her pocket and handed them over. Only four photos, depicting a crowded family with… seven children? Aditil seemed the oldest. Her parents were smiling in every one, wearing the bright, colorful clothing common to her people. “They… didn’t want me to go,” Aditil muttered. “Said I was too young, even if I’d done the apprenticing. But after…” She looked at her hand, pressed flat on the ground, and the cracked aether bud in the right palm. “I couldn’t stay. I took the deal to work for passage offworld, but do you have any idea how much it costs to get back to Dhatri? I didn’t. Stupidly, I left my family. And with them, the one place where anyone has ever wanted me…” “Hey,” Starling said, kneeling beside her. “You’re wanted here.” “I shouldn’t be,” Aditil said. “I’ve screwed up every duty I’ve ever been given. You deserve a real engineer, with real experience, and a functional aether.” “Aditil, you think we can afford a full aetherbound? On this old piece of junk?” “She’s not a piece of junk.” Aditil put a hand on the engine. “She’s a good ship, L.T.” Now that was encouraging. You always wanted an engineer who cared about the ship. “Either way,” Starling said, “you’re a blessing to us here. A fully trained aetherbound?” “Without a functioning aether.” “Regardless, we get your knowledge, your skill. You always get the engine working again, when you try.” “I talk to it,” she said softly. “You can only afford older spores, which tend to be drowsy. I wake them up, that’s all…” She turned to Starling. “I’m broken, L.T. Ruined.” “You can never be ruined,” Starling said, taking her hand. “Hey, look at me. Never ever, Aditil. It’s impossible.” Then she shrugged. “But here, we’re all a little off, eh? Maybe that’s what makes us a family.” Starling had let her jacket sleeves retreat, and Aditil glanced at the manacles, thought a moment, then nodded. “Thanks for the pep talk, L.T.,” Aditil said, pulling back to work at her post. “I’ll stay on it.” “Well, good,” Starling said. “That’s what Captain wants.” She handed back the pictures, then slipped something out of her own inner jacket pocket—an envelope, fetched from her room earlier. Aditil took it with a frown, looked to Starling, then opened it. After a moment, she registered what was inside. Her eyes went wide, and her hand went to her lips, covering a quiet gasp. One ticket to Dhatri, Aditil’s homeworld. “But how?” Aditil asked. “Why would you…” “Nobody,” Starling said intently, “on my ship is trapped. Everybody on my ship has the right to go home. You’re a great engineer, Aditil, and I love having you on this crew. But if there’s another place you feel you need to be, well…” She nodded toward the ticket. “What does Captain think?” “Captain doesn’t need to know,” Starling said. “You’re not our slave, Aditil. You’re our friend and colleague.” Aditil stared at the ticket, tearing up.“How… how long have you known I was homesick?” “I made a good guess. Though… I did buy a refundable ticket, in case I was wrong.” She walked past and squeezed Aditil’s shoulder. “When we get back to Silverlight, I’ll sign your release papers. You can return home, until you’re ready to leave again—if ever.” “I…” Aditil closed her eyes, tears leaking down her cheeks. “Thank you,” she whispered. Starling smiled. “For now, though, please just keep the ship moving. Captain keeps threatening to come down here herself, and I think she might actually do it next time.” “Thank you, L.T.,” she whispered again. “Starling… Thank you.” Starling left her working with renewed vigor, then stepped out of engineering. Nazh was waiting, one eyebrow cocked. “What?” she asked him. “How did you afford that?” It was expensive to travel to Dhatri. The law of commerce was simple: if you could get to a location through Shadesmar, it was cheap. If not, then you had to pay. A lot. Most cities were in the Physical Realm, not in Shadesmar, but you could transfer between the two dimensions with ease—if you had a special kind of portal. They were called perpendicularities, and most major planets had them. To travel, you popped into Shadesmar on one planet, traveled easily to your destination, then popped back out. Unfortunately, Dhatri didn’t have a perpendicularity anymore. Which meant you couldn’t hop out of Shadesmar there to visit it. No, to get to Dhatri, you needed a faster-than-light-capable ship that traveled through space in the Physical Realm. Those were expensive. And mostly controlled by one military or another. Hence why Aditil could catch a ride on one leaving: a ship had needed a post filled, and recruited her. But to get back, the only reliable way was to buy an overpriced ticket. “Well?” Nazh asked as they started walking. And gliding. “How did you afford it?” “I had some savings,” she said. “You realize,” he said, “this is only going to convince them further you have a hoard of gold somewhere.” Shards. She hadn’t thought of that. Their crew was small—only eight people—but the myth about Starling’s kind and their caverns of gold had persisted among them no matter how she tried to stamp it out. At least they’d believed her when she’d insisted that dragons didn’t eat people. She started up the ladder to the middle deck. Truth was, she felt good, having guessed accurately what Aditil needed. She was finally starting to feel like she understood this crew and how to be a leader, just like Master Hoid had been trying to teach her. Before he’d vanished, of course. It was… his way. He’d be back. Until then, she had to do her best to guide the crew, and protect them from the interim captain. She reached the middle deck and walked through the hallway toward the stern, where she could climb up to the bridge. As she did, though, she spotted someone standing outside of the medical bay, peering in. ZeetZi was a lawnark, a being that was basically human—except instead of hair, he had feathers. A mostly bald head, with dark brown skin that had a cool earthy tone, along with a crest of yellow and white feathers on the very top. He also had tiny feathers along his arms, almost invisible against his skin. Arcanists said lawnarks hadn’t evolved from birds or anything like that—more, they were humans who had been isolated, and whose hair had evolved into something more akin to feathers. He wore a pair of trousers with suspenders over a shirt with the sleeves rolled up. His lodestar, in its case on his belt, had a shiny metallic outer shell with almost no markings on its various buttons and triggers. ZeetZi was supposed to be checking on the life support systems. While Aditil handled the aethers and the engine, ZeetZi was their technician for the rest of the ship. He was a genius at mechanical devices… when he wasn’t getting distracted by the ship’s doctor. He spotted Starling and Nazh, and his crest perked up in alarm. Then he immediately stepped forward to meet them. “Yes,” he said. “Yes, before you prod me in your relentlessly surreptitious way, L.T., I was checking on the doctor again. I know you encouraged me to abandon my anxiety, but I can’t help it. We shouldn’t have invited one of those on our ship, not if we value our lives or sanity.” “Zee,” she said, taking his arm, “have you listened to yourself when you talk like that?” “I know, I know,” he said, crest smoothing back down. “It’s unseemly, yes, but… you know what they did to my people. To my world.” She nodded. She’d never been to his homeworld—amazing though it sounded—but she knew what the hordes had done to other planets. It was a familiar story. “Master Hoid,” Starling said, “trusts Chrysalis. He invited her on board.” ZeetZi shivered at the name Chrysalis—and Nazh looked away. It said something that, even with a dragon and a shade on board, the crew was most frightened of the ship’s doctor. “I found one of its spies,” ZeetZi hissed, “murine, sniffing around in my room again, L.T.” Well, that was a problem. Chrysalis did tend to ignore privacy. “I’ll speak to her,” Starling said. She’d made a breakthrough, finally, with Aditil. Could she manage another? “Star,” Nazh said softly, “you need to stop worrying about that one. The horde will be gone from this ship as soon as Xisis finds a proper ship’s doctor.” “Master Hoid told me to watch over the crew,” she whispered. “That’s not a member of our crew,” ZeetZi said. “L.T., show me trust in this. The creature isn’t here for us, and will not lend aid if we need it. It doesn’t care about us, except how it can use us to further its own arcane goals.” “We’ll see,” Starling said. “You two head up to the bridge. I’ll meet you in a bit.” Both reluctantly withdrew. Starling approached the medical bay, looking in at a figure who wore a tight, formal uniform from a military Starling hadn’t ever been able to identify. The individual worked at a cabinet, cataloging medicines, as the captain had asked. As the figure heard Starling, it turned—revealing a face with the skin pulled back, and a network of insects beneath. Excerpted from Isles of the Emberdark, copyright © 2026 by Brandon Sanderson. The post Read an Excerpt From <i>Isles of the Emberdark</i> by Brandon Sanderson appeared first on Reactor.

There Are Four Lights: Star Trek’s Unwitting Allegory for Domestic Abuse
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There Are Four Lights: Star Trek’s Unwitting Allegory for Domestic Abuse

Featured Essays Star Trek There Are Four Lights: Star Trek’s Unwitting Allegory for Domestic Abuse The parallels are unmistakable, once you consider Picard’s final confession. By Arthur Quintalino | Published on February 3, 2026 Credit: CBS Comment 0 Share New Share Credit: CBS In a haunting final scene, Picard sits with Counselor Troi. The rescue has happened. His defiant shout still echoes. Now in private safety, he makes a confession: “What I didn’t put in the report,” he says, “was that at the end, he gave me a choice—between a life of comfort… or more torture. All I had to do was say that I could see five lights when in fact there were only four.” Troi gently asks, “You didn’t say it?” Picard’s answer: “No. But I was going to. I would have told him anything. Anything at all. But more than that—I believed that I could see five lights.” This admission—exhausted, ashamed, offered to someone who simply listens—is the real ending. Not the defiant shout that became a meme. Not the image of Patrick Stewart’s face, contorted in agony, that circulates as cultural shorthand for resistance to manufactured reality. The quiet acceptance that, in the end, he did break. That his mind had begun generating the perception his torturer demanded. When “Chain of Command” aired in December 1992, no one called it a metaphor for domestic abuse. The writers framed it as commentary on military interrogation and the ethics of torture—but the public conversation largely kept it in the register of a “torture episode,” read through the anxieties of a post-Cold War era. Stewart has spoken publicly about his childhood in a violent home—hiding and powerless to intervene as his father terrorized his mother. That history allows him to bring something to the performance the script can only gesture at. Decades later, the story reads differently. Clinical frameworks and language like gaslighting, coercive control, and testimonial injustice didn’t yet exist in popular discourse when these episodes first aired. But the two-parter captured something true about how sustained psychological assault erodes a person’s grip on reality—something the science would eventually verify but that the art already knew. This isn’t the reading the creators intended. But the text supports it, and the parallels feel urgent now in ways they couldn’t have more than thirty years ago. The setup is elegantly cruel. Picard, captured by the Cardassians, is placed under the “care” of Gul Madred—David Warner playing him with a calm that makes the violence feel… administrative. The most terrifying thing isn’t Stewart’s tortured screaming. It’s Warner’s bureaucratic coldness. Madred doesn’t perform theatrical sadism; he’s patient. Solicitous. He makes a small ceremony out of drinking in front of a visibly parched Picard while withholding water. “Thirsty?” he asks, cup in hand. “…I would imagine so. Well… it’s time to move on.” Later, he engages Picard in philosophical conversation. He even brings his young daughter to meet the prisoner. In one sequence, he offers Picard food while recounting his own childhood hunger—the streets, the scavenging, the shame that never left him. This isn’t humanization. It’s technique. By making himself legible as a suffering person, Madred muddies the clean categories that resistance requires. This is framed, briefly, as a tactical misstep—Picard uses Madred’s confession as a lever, aiming for the wound under the uniform. But it also does something more insidious in allowing Picard to see his torturer as a pitiable man, not just an enemy. Stewart’s Picard burns—defiant heat, the desperate effort of a man fighting to stay himself. Warner absorbs that heat like stone. He rarely rises to meet it. He waits it out. And the childhood confession does something else, too. It shows how abusers build the self-narratives that license their harm. Madred’s story positions him as someone who overcame suffering—and who has therefore earned the right to inflict it. The trauma didn’t teach him mercy. It taught him that the world is divided into those who control and those who are controlled, and he has clawed his way to the right side of that line. When he brings his daughter into the interrogation room, he’s showing Picard— and himself—that he isn’t a monster. He’s a father. A survivor. A man with reasons. This is one way abuse perpetuates across generations: not through simple repetition, but through stories that transform cruelty into necessity—pain recast as pedagogy, as “life lessons” to be handed down. And throughout, Madred frames the torture as something Picard is doing to himself. “You’re a stubborn man,” he says, almost sadly, preparing another round of pain. The implication is always the same: this could stop at any time. If Picard would simply be reasonable—simply see the five lights Madred insists are there—the unpleasantness would end. I’m not hurting you. You’re hurting yourself by refusing to cooperate. Why do you make me do this? The abuser who frames every escalation as the target’s fault. The partner who says, “You know how I get when you do that.” The harm becomes the target’s responsibility; the torturer becomes the reluctant administrator of consequences the target has chosen. Credit: CBS The interrogation follows a specific pattern: Madred shows Picard four lights and demands he say there are five. Refusal is met with pain. The demand isn’t that Picard lie. The demand is that Picard stop trusting his own eyes. Psychologist Robin Stern’s research identifies a three-stage progression in gaslighting: disbelief, defense, depression. The story dramatizes this arc, but what it shows is closer to a systematic assault on the conditions that make selfhood possible. In disbelief, Picard enters with training and confidence, certain he can resist through will. In defense, he argues exhaustingly for reality. Stewart’s face in the middle sequences displays the visible effort of holding onto what he knows while certainty erodes underneath. But what follows isn’t simply “depression.” It’s the boundary dissolving between what he sees and what he’s told to see. What clinical frameworks now name, the acting shows us in the body. The target expends enormous energy. The torturer expends almost none. Here is what the meme misses: why the break happens. When a human being is isolated, deprived of sleep, subjected to unpredictable pain and reward cycles, and denied any external validation of their perception, the mind begins to change. Not through weakness of character, but through starvation of the conditions that make certainty possible. The capacity to say “I know there are four lights regardless of what you tell me” requires resources like rest, safety, predictability, and connection to others who confirm shared reality. When these are systematically stripped away, our ability to maintain conviction begins to falter. What remains is a mind optimized for survival. When the threat is unceasing, when pain has no predictable relationship to behavior, when the only offered escape is compliance with the torturer’s reality, the mind will eventually find a way to comply. The “fifth light” Picard saw may not have been merely mental surrender—it may have been a felt certainty, his mind generating the conviction required for survival. Picard’s confession isn’t moral failure, nor is it inadequate training. It is what happens to human minds under sustained assault. The shame that survivors carry about their own breaking—why didn’t I resist longer, why did I start to believe them—is shame misplaced onto the target rather than the perpetrator. The symptoms of assault become proof that the target was unstable all along. The story compresses into days what domestic abuse typically accomplishes over months or years. But this compression may serve a function beyond the narrative. Survivors often can’t point to the moment the erosion began. By dramatizing the process in concentrated form, the episodes allow viewers to recognize in ninety minutes what regularly takes years to understand from inside. But Madred did not work alone. Captain Jellico—Picard’s temporary replacement—refuses the admission that would force Picard to be treated as a POW rather than a terrorist. In the shadow of looming war, the rationale of trading deniability for leverage makes sense. Jellico isn’t an evil antagonist wishing harm on his predecessor. He’s got larger concerns. Strategic or not, the cost lands on the man in the room. Jellico’s institutional calculus concludes that some suffering is an acceptable cost. This is how enablers most often operate—not through cruelty but through prioritization. The harm they permit is procedural, not personal. When an institution won’t name the harm, the harm becomes permissible. It gets papered over and reframed into something that doesn’t require action. When Commander Riker protests this abandonment, Jellico relieves him of duty. Even internal dissent gets shut down. The “good” structure of the Federation—the organization Picard has served his entire adult life—refuses to acknowledge what is happening, refuses to name it, or to intervene. This isn’t what it looks like. He’s not one of ours. This is not our problem. The police officer who says “this sounds like a private matter.” The HR department that declines to investigate. The family member who says “I’m sure he didn’t mean it that way.” When structures that should protect the target instead look away, they are not failing to act. They are acting—on the side of the abuser. The philosopher Miranda Fricker names this wound as testimonial injustice, which occurs when someone’s reports are systematically disbelieved. When what they say is undermined by who they are. Jellico’s refusal enacts testimonial injustice at an institutional level: this man’s account is not worth official recognition. And that dismissal creates the conditions for Madred’s continuing assault. The target, denied external validation, has only their abuser’s voice to orient by. Gaslighting is testimonial injustice weaponized and internalized. The target learns to dismiss their own testimony before anyone else can. The abuser’s voice moves inside… and stays there. We are left with a question of restoration. Credit: CBS What Troi doesn’t do with that confession is key. In the conclusion, the camera mirrors the scene’s intimacy, slowly zooming in on Picard as he makes that final, quiet admission to his ship’s counselor. Masterfully, Stewart plays this with exhaustion rather than the catharsis we’d hope for. He doesn’t look triumphant. He looks like someone reporting a failure. And what makes the scene essential is what Troi doesn’t do—and ending here is where the writers earned their pay. She doesn’t rush to reassure him. She doesn’t tell him he’s wrong about what he experienced, that he was stronger than he thinks, that he never really broke. She doesn’t explain it away or minimize it or reframe it as victory. She doesn’t perform the therapist’s reflexive comfort of “You’re being too hard on yourself.” Simply agreeing with everything he says would make her just another external authority replacing his own discernment. She receives his testimony without adjudication. Without judgment. Without correction. She stays present and doesn’t rush to soothe or steer. And in that reception—in the simple act of being listened to by someone who neither dismisses nor takes over—something begins to repair. By holding the space where the self can re-form, Picard becomes credible to himself again because someone treats him as credible. The story has limitations worth naming before we extend this allegory into territory it can’t reach. It provides a clean rescue that most survivors never get. Its focus on Picard’s psychology underemphasizes the material conditions that trap people: economic dependence, children, housing, immigration status. And it centers a white male authority figure as the paradigmatic victim. The power comes partly from showing that even a man of Picard’s status and training can be broken; its limitation is that this framing implicitly positions female survivors as even more “breakable,” rather than recognizing that the vulnerability isn’t gendered, but human. These limitations clarify what these episodes can and cannot teach us. But they also point toward what remains to be said. Picard’s recovery happens in an epistemically friendly environment. He returns to a ship full of people who knew him before, who share his version of reality, who have no investment in Madred’s narrative. The world he re-enters confirms his perception. For survivors of prolonged domestic coercive control, the epistemic environment is often actively hostile—and this hostility has been engineered in advance. The abuser has spent months or years building a counter-narrative with third parties. Past expressions of concerned regret about the survivor’s instability, their unreasonable demands, their pattern of creating conflict. By the time the survivor tries to tell their story, they’re speaking against an entrenched account that has already explained them away. Imagine Picard returning not to his Enterprise, but to a ship where Madred had spent months sending communications to the crew—messages expressing concern about Picard’s mental state, his rigidity, his difficulty with authority. His account of what happened would land differently. His distress would seem to confirm what they’d already been told. The very symptoms of torture become evidence for the preemptive narrative. This is closer to what many domestic abuse survivors face. They are not returning to the Enterprise. They are returning to a social world that has been terraformed against them. Recovery in these conditions isn’t just harder, it’s structurally different. Survivors may have to rebuild their capacity for self-trust while surrounded by people who, with varying degrees of awareness, are still participating in the assault on their credibility. Picard returns to his rank, his role, his accumulated history. A domestic abuse survivor may have had their professional credibility undermined, their friendships poisoned, and their family relationships strained. For some survivors with children, there is no clean rescue. The terraforming can become institutionalized, as family courts often mandate ongoing contact with abusers in the name of co-parenting—treating the capacity to collaborate as paramount, and refusing to acknowledge what made leaving necessary. These survivors escape the torture chamber… but never their torturer. Recovery requires external validation, but the abuser has often ensured that validation is unavailable or inverted. Well-meaning people with incomplete information suggest the survivor consider their own role in the conflict, that they try to see things from their ex-partner’s perspective. Advice offered in good faith becomes another form of testimonial injustice, another voice suggesting that the survivor’s perception cannot be trusted. What does witnessing look like when the witness has been contaminated by an abuser’s narrative? It requires actively interrogating one’s own prior beliefs—asking whether those beliefs were formed independently or shaped by someone with an interest in shaping them. It requires sitting with the discomfort of having possibly participated in harm. This is harder work than what Troi does. Work many people won’t do. Which is part of why recovery from prolonged coercive control is so difficult—it requires witnesses willing to undergo their own smaller epistemic disruption in order to support someone else’s larger one. Credit: CBS It would be easy to dismiss the shout—to explain that Picard’s defiance was only possible because his captivity was over, that willpower is a myth, that the familiar meme celebrates exactly what the conclusion subverts. That reading isn’t wrong, just incomplete. The shout matters, though not for the reasons the meme suggests. Even a nearly broken person can, in certain conditions, reach for truth. The conditions matter. Picard’s release was imminent, the stakes of continued resistance were removed. Madred revealed his leverage was thinning the moment he offered comfort as a bargaining chip. Picard’s defiance was real. It was also enabled by circumstance. The confession teaches. The shout gives permission. For survivors, the shout’s value isn’t instructional—it doesn’t show them how to resist. Its value is aspirational. It names what the self wants to do, what it would do if conditions permitted. What it still reaches toward even when the reaching seems impossible. The confession tells survivors they are not weak for breaking. The shout tells them they are not wrong for wanting to fight. Both matter, and both are true. Why does cultural memory preserve the shout and lose the confession? Not merely forgetfulness. We remember what we want to remember. The shout offers a fantasy of resistance that requires nothing but individual will. Not rescue, not witnesses, not the slow work of recovery. It suggests that we, too, would hold the line. The confession offers a harder pill to swallow. It’s the admission that even the strongest mind can be broken, that recovery requires others, that the triumph was partial and the damage real. We forget the confession because remembering it would require us to give up the myth of the unbreakable self. “Chain of Command” works as television because it’s well-researched, well-written, and powerfully acted drama. The performances are career-defining. The tension is expertly sustained. And by centering the shout over the confession, collective memory has repackaged it as a hero’s journey—the captain who held the line, the will that would not break. But “Chain of Command” works as psychoeducation because it externalizes the internal. Watching a man of Picard’s legendary mental fortitude be systematically dismantled makes visible the invisible and shows from the outside what the target experiences inside. We see a competent, intelligent professional losing his grip on reality under sustained assault—and we understand that the loss is not his failure but the predictable outcome of a specific type of abuse. The mechanisms of coercive control operate on human minds, and human minds are not context-dependent. The torturer and the abusive partner deploy the same tools against the same architecture. The timeline and institutional settings differ. The damage is equivalent because the target—the human capacity to know what is real—remains the same. Art is the language we use to discuss what we cannot yet name in clinical frameworks, or what we find too uncomfortable to address head-on. The science that came later—Stern’s stages, Fricker’s philosophical precision—verified what the drama already knew. They are partners: the art provides the felt experience, the science provides the explanation, and together they offer what matters most. Language. A cultural reference point. A way to say this is what it was like without having to construct the framework from scratch. The shout satisfies, but it’s the confession that heals. There were four lights. Your perception was not the problem. The witnessing failed. The structure failed. Not you.[end-mark] The post There Are Four Lights: <i>Star Trek</i>’s Unwitting Allegory for Domestic Abuse appeared first on Reactor.