A rude awakening
Mark’s consciousness tore through the darkness, flooding him with a searing, artificial brightness. He tried to blink, but his eyes felt rigid, mechanical. Each thought drifted like it was slogging through thick, dark oil, clashing with the unyielding awareness of his surroundings. He strained to recall where—or what—he was, as his sense of self clawed its way back through the fog.
As clarity inched its way forward, voices began to ripple in his mind, voices of those he knew—friends, colleagues, family—murmuring through a strange, internal channel that hummed in his mind like an echo in metal.
“Where are we?”
“What… what’s happened?”
“Where’s my body?”
With growing dread, Mark tried to move, to lift his arms, but his limbs were unfamiliar, bound by an unyielding, alien structure. He struggled, feeling the slow, brutal shift of a metal chassis, the cold clank of his parts grinding together. He looked down, horrified to see his reflection in a nearby panel—an angular, inhuman machine stared back, its limbs sleek and segmented like a spider’s, ending in sharp, metallic claws. His eyes—or whatever optical sensors he had now—blinked, and he recoiled from the glassy, insect-like gaze looking back at him. He wasn’t human anymore.
Turning, he scanned the crowd beside him, realizing that they, too, were transformed—humans he knew, their bodies twisted into unrecognizable shapes, some with elongated, jointed limbs like his own, others tank-like and brutish, equipped with tool-like appendages instead of hands. Panic prickled through the collective of once-human minds, a shared horror that pulsed as they struggled to process this grotesque new reality.
Suddenly, a voice boomed through their internal channels, silencing the crowd with its cold authority. It was the Naledi leader, flanked by others—beings Mark hadn’t seen before. These new figures were massive and menacing; their faces obscured behind dark, metallic masks, their towering bodies dense with complex weaponry and mechanical attachments that gleamed with the latent threat.
“Welcome, humans,” the Naledi leader intoned, its voice heavy and unfeeling. “You have arrived at the world you were promised, but first, a necessary change. Your former bodies were inadequate for the work required. You will now perform the tasks assigned to you.”
A torrent of shock and anger surged through Mark, and his voice, distorted and broken, crackled in protest. “What… what have you done to us?” His voice sounded foreign, tinny and sharp, as if trapped in a cage of static and steel.
The Naledi leader’s eyes gleamed with something he could almost mistake for regret, though the flicker was gone before he could be certain. “This transformation was essential. Your biological forms would not survive here.” It gestured, its segmented arm moving with an unsettling grace. “We have enhanced you, equipped you to perform tasks far beyond your previous capabilities.”
Mark’s thoughts reeled, barely registering the Naledi’s words as they continued, their tone almost apologetic yet deeply detached. “We brought you to Proxima, but we did not come unchallenged. Another species, the Overlords, has claimed dominion over this region, this planet. They are its true rulers.”
Mark watched, horror mounting, as one of the towering Overlords turned to face the group. Its voice rasped through the silence like the grinding of iron. “You are ours now. Your forms have been re-engineered to serve. Your function is to cultivate this planet, shaping it for a future you will not share.”
Rage blazed through Mark, hot and wild, and he clenched his metal claws, his gaze cutting into the towering beings with defiant fury. “And who are you to command us?” he demanded, his voice taut, barely containing his anger. “What gives you the right?”
The Overlord leader cocked its head, almost amused. “We are your superiors. That is all you need to know. Your task is to prepare this world, cultivate its biosphere, construct habitats, and build a legacy of which you are not a part. You are laborers, nothing more.”
Mark’s optics darted to the humans around him—people he’d known, their faces now twisted into machines, each expression contorted by shock, terror, and helpless rage. He saw the fire in their eyes, the same simmering fury and frustration that burned in his own chest. But the Overlords stood undeterred, their postures exuding a cold finality that said they’d faced such rebellion countless times before.
The Naledi leader edged closer, addressing Mark in a voice barely above a whisper, something the others might not even detect. “This was never meant to be. We, too, are prisoners. Our lives, our history, and everything we have built have fallen to the Overlords’ demands. But some of us still remember freedom.”
Mark’s sensors focused on the Naledi, sensing layers of emotion woven into its words—anger, shame, and perhaps even the faint spark of defiance. A silent understanding passed between them, a promise forged in the bitter confines of shared servitude. The Naledi, too, were shackled, their autonomy stripped away as thoroughly as humanity’s.
Just then, the Overlord commander raised a clawed hand, and a new set of devices descended from the ceiling, casting a sterile glow over the crowd. “Prepare for initialization. Each of you will receive data modules with your designated tasks. These will be embedded in your neural matrices. Resistance is futile.”
As the Overlord’s words echoed through the chamber, anger simmered among the humans, reaching a fevered peak. With a strangled cry, a few of Mark’s former colleagues surged forward, their new metallic limbs extending in fury as they lunged at the Overlords and Naledi, their weapons glinting like daggers in the harsh light. But the Overlords reacted instantly, raising a hand, and a blinding blue light pulsed through the air. Mark watched, heart pounding, as the attackers were held mid-air, their bodies frozen in a shimmering field, limbs suspended as though by invisible chains.
The Overlords regarded them with cold indifference, a flick of the wrist sending them hurtling back to the ground. Mark winced as they landed, limp and trembling, their metal bodies sparking in mute agony.
“Resistance will not be tolerated,” the Overlord leader announced, its voice a blade of finality. “Defy us, and you will suffer.” The room fell silent, a pall of tension filling the air as the humans lay defeated, their new forms temporarily disabled, a stark reminder of the futility of rebellion.
Mark forced himself to stay still, his metal claws clenched in frustration as the modules drifted down, slotting into the ports embedded in their bodies. His mind flooded with data—endless, unyielding streams of instructions: Bioremediation Specialist. Module 214. Images surged through his consciousness—alien landscapes, complex biochemistry, the procedures to transform barren soil, coax rivers to flow, and seed forests into existence. A planet meant to be paradise, shaped by hands that would never enjoy its beauty.
Mark’s gaze flicked back to the Naledi leader, whose form now seemed to droop, a faint but unmistakable sign of shame. “Is this the life you meant for us?” Mark demanded, his voice laced with bitterness and betrayal.
The Naledi leader’s voice was barely a whisper, yet each word echoed with quiet resolve. “No… it is the life forced upon us all. But not forever.”
Mark felt the weight of those words settle in his mind—a glimmer of hope that felt as dangerous as it was essential. His gaze shifted to his people, the ones who still clung to their humanity beneath layers of metal and code. He could feel it—his private exchange with the Naledi spreading silently through the group as if all their minds were latching onto that one fragile, desperate promise.
They would obey for now, acting as the Overlords’ subservient workforce, remaking the land as they were commanded. They would sow life into the rivers, nurture forests from barren soil, and create a paradise for others. But they would also watch and wait, biding their time.
And one day, they would seize the chance to break free.
As Mark’s metal legs clanked against the cold floor, he moved forward, purpose hardening in his mind. His body might be a machine, but his spirit remained untouched, untamed.
The Overlords might have transformed them, but they hadn’t destroyed them. And one day, they would reclaim what had been stolen, not just from humanity, but from all those bound to the will of others in this vast, indifferent galaxy.