Galileo's Burden, Phase Alpha: Bungle in the Jungle
((PLOT POST! READ IT!))
Stacy's voice rang out through the corridors of the ship, announcing that a message had been received and would be played on the Obs Deck momentarily.
The message was patched through a few minutes later, shown on a holographic screen. It was shot in very poor video, from a very old communicator frequency.
A woman wearing a blue veil over her face appears on the screen. She speaks in a soft and cultured voice, bowing deeply before she begins.
“Greetings to the crew and command of the Transmigration 9. My name is Reda, revered mother of the village of Avania III on the planet Orya."
Reda pauses, bowing once more before removing her veil and revealing the face of a beautiful humanoid woman.

"It… pains me to ask for the help of outsiders, when we have so little to offer in return, but I beg of you. Please aid us. My people are becoming sickened by an ailment we have never seen before. It seems to come differently for all who suffer from it... some have fevers, some strange dreams, some begin to speak madness while awake. But no matter how it develops, they grow weary. Their faith weakens and they die, disgraced and turned from the eyes of the great goddess Avani."
Reda folds her hands together, frowning worriedly. "I have heard of your ship's great deeds even in such a small and isolated planet as Orya. Though I am hardly worthy of asking, I know there is no one better to ask for a favor such as this. What I ask is for… those who have knowledge."
"My people know little of the universe outside their village. They do not know what you know in the ways of medicine. Our shamans are not equipped to deal with a threat of this magnitude. We seek those who can help us ease our suffering. We have little to give in return for your help, but what we have is faith… enlightenment and enrichment of the soul, which we will gladly share with those who come to visit us."
Reda smiled softly, shaking her head. "I will understand if you deny my request. I ask much of you and cannot give much myself, but should you assist us, I will do what I can to help you. I will see to it personally that those who come to our help are taken care of and shown the greatest hospitality. My own Chosen soldiers will protect them, and if they should help us in our time of need, I will do everything in my power to aid your efforts against the Ohm. You have my word as a devout child of Avani."
The revered mother bows once more, kneeling down before the camera. "I will be happy to speak with you if you require more information. Please... I beg of you, help my people."
Stacy's voice rang out through the corridors of the ship, announcing that a message had been received and would be played on the Obs Deck momentarily.
The message was patched through a few minutes later, shown on a holographic screen. It was shot in very poor video, from a very old communicator frequency.
A woman wearing a blue veil over her face appears on the screen. She speaks in a soft and cultured voice, bowing deeply before she begins.
“Greetings to the crew and command of the Transmigration 9. My name is Reda, revered mother of the village of Avania III on the planet Orya."
Reda pauses, bowing once more before removing her veil and revealing the face of a beautiful humanoid woman.

"It… pains me to ask for the help of outsiders, when we have so little to offer in return, but I beg of you. Please aid us. My people are becoming sickened by an ailment we have never seen before. It seems to come differently for all who suffer from it... some have fevers, some strange dreams, some begin to speak madness while awake. But no matter how it develops, they grow weary. Their faith weakens and they die, disgraced and turned from the eyes of the great goddess Avani."
Reda folds her hands together, frowning worriedly. "I have heard of your ship's great deeds even in such a small and isolated planet as Orya. Though I am hardly worthy of asking, I know there is no one better to ask for a favor such as this. What I ask is for… those who have knowledge."
"My people know little of the universe outside their village. They do not know what you know in the ways of medicine. Our shamans are not equipped to deal with a threat of this magnitude. We seek those who can help us ease our suffering. We have little to give in return for your help, but what we have is faith… enlightenment and enrichment of the soul, which we will gladly share with those who come to visit us."
Reda smiled softly, shaking her head. "I will understand if you deny my request. I ask much of you and cannot give much myself, but should you assist us, I will do what I can to help you. I will see to it personally that those who come to our help are taken care of and shown the greatest hospitality. My own Chosen soldiers will protect them, and if they should help us in our time of need, I will do everything in my power to aid your efforts against the Ohm. You have my word as a devout child of Avani."
The revered mother bows once more, kneeling down before the camera. "I will be happy to speak with you if you require more information. Please... I beg of you, help my people."
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He rubbed his eyes behind his glasses. "You may have been onto something about the water, though," he said. "Maybe some kind of contaminant?"
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"Tamil told me that they were really pushing the sick to drink a lot of that stuff," which would.... normally be sound advice. Normally. Why had it tasted bad?
Daniel blinked behind his glasses, looking puzzled. "I thought you said the sample was clean. You think the entire village supply is contaminated, so no control group?"
At least not in the village. Maybe the jungle.
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He tapped his fingers on the table. "No, it would have to be a smaller source than the whole village's well. Something that only the sick ones have had access to."
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The only thing he could think of that fit the smaller source criteria, at least, right at the moment, was either the temple or looking o the sky for Daena. But he thought most of the population had access to the temple. He wasn't sure how you could get sick from looking at the sky, only that doing so marked you as a target. Apparently.
Daniel drew out his notes and glanced down at them. "I don't know if this will help, but Tamil told me that all the sick had been questioning Avani's ways, that this was the result of her wrath. He said the first patient was someone who was more vocal about the old ways and that the temple had warned him to stop."
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He shook it off within a few seconds, abruptly looking back at Daniel.
"Really?" he muttered. "That's... interesting."
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Daniel was unsure how to read that look on the other Doctor's face just then. He thought Luis almost looked uncomfortable at the mention of religious censoring. Maybe he'd had a bad experience with it back where he came from.
"I thought so. I was going to check out the temple after this. It's more my area," he said, apologetically. "It might take me a few days to fully investigate."
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"What did you mean before, about their faith being shaken? And a dissenter dying?"
oh god sorry about daniel going slightly tl;dr
Now they were back on ground he could talk about more comfortably. He could feel himself warming to the topic, even if it was grim.
"For one, the Avani faith wasn't first belief system here. There was a polytheism before, consisting of Daena the Sky Mother and Fuoros the Earth Father. There could be more but these sound like the most important figures," Daniel clarified. It wasn't all that unusual for a polytheism to have a host of main gods and then smaller gods in a pantheon, like the Sumerians and Egyptians.
Daniel could feel himself warming to the subject as he went on. Yeah, he was definitely in his element now. "Daena probably fills the sky deity and Mother Goddess roles. Fuoros may be either her direct counterpart or her opposite. I don't know what happened yet or the time line, but at some point, the Avani belief system grew in popularity and eclipsed the previous polytheistic one. At this time, it's come to the point where it's taboo to mention it or search for the old gods. And everyone in that tent had been connected with looking for Daena in some form."
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He didn't quite know what to think of it.
"I think checking the temple might be... a very good option, then," he said. "I don't know how well the Oryans will like you poking around in there, but Reda said we could go wherever we needed to."
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He was never cutting his hair if he had any say about it. And Luis's quick agreement was a nice change of pace. No debating, no fighting to convince Jack or General Hammond about the importance of a historical site. Luis got it.
"I was just thinking that," Daniel agreed eagerly. "I'm hoping it'll be fine as long as I just look around."
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"I think it should be fine, yes," Luis said, still sounding a bit absent-minded. He quickly focused, though, clearing his throat. "I think we should leave it to you, our resident cultural expert. I'll probably just trip and knock over an altar or something..."
He glanced over at Daniel, looking around them to make sure that the conversation was discreet.
"If anybody gives you trouble, have them talk to me. I'll make something up so it doesn't just look like we're ruining the diplomacy by being nosy. Maybe some kind of... temple lichen or something like that."
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Luis didn't strike him as the clumsy type, joking or not, but the temple probably wasn't anywhere near as interesting as the samples he was working on. Daniel could spend years on just this temple alone and be happy as a clam, and Luis could probably feel the same surrounded by cultures and a microscope. He got the feeling they might both get bored of the other's job in under twenty minutes. He didn't see how Luis could sit here all day with just a microscope and slides for company.
Daniel nodded. He understood well enough, although he thought he'd made a good impression on the Revered Mother.
"Hopefully it won't come down to it, but I mean, I do have a good excuse for being there even without... 'temple lichen'," Daniel said. Probably more than someone like a soldier. An archaeologist in a temple or ruins? That was about as out of place as sand in a desert.
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"What do you think you might find in the temple, out of curiosity?" he asked. "I'll admit I have a few wild guesses myself, but I may not be the most reliable or realistic point of view when it comes to... religious institutions, let's say."
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"It could be anything. Icons, paintings, literature, reliquaries, statues. It depends on the religion. I don't even know if this is a new temple or if they appropriated the previous religion's temple and converted it, yet." he answered. "I'd rather not assume anything until I get there."
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He paused for a moment before finally elaborating. "Try to be careful, okay? I know how things are in these small towns. People take their religions... very, very seriously."
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If he remembered to come back on time. Not that having the radio would help if that was the case, but it would save him time walking there and back. Less time spent commuting was more time spent researching.
Daniel was always careful, but that was usually trying to be careful about the remnants of the past. When it came to his own well-being, well, that was a matter of trying. He tried, yeah, just whether he succeeded all the time was up for debate. He got so involved in his work that even something like eating was easy to forget about. Daniel tried to keep an ear and eye out on his surroundings, something you picked up on digs back on Earth, but sometimes that wasn't enough to stop things getting crazy.
Which was why he could always count Jack to watch his six.
So that was it. Luis must have had a very personal experience, and a bad one from the sound of it. It probably wasn't his business, but it obviously still bothered the man.
And they were on a planet that had a very vested interest religion.
"Did you want to talk about it?" he asked after a moment.
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He scratched the back of his neck awkwardly at Daniel's question, smirking and shaking his head.
"It's not important," he said. "I'll just have to tell you about my hometown sometime. I see a lot of similarities between here and there."
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He really needed to get better about his poker face... it seemed to be slipping, if Daniel had spotted his discomfort so easily.
"Nah, don't worry about it," he said. "I'll just have to tell you about my hometown sometime. I am seeing more than a few similarities with this village."