đLarval Haze | 10: Quorum Criticality
Following the events of Strange Harvest, the honey must flow as life grinds on beneath the jungle's alien canopy...
This is Hanlonâs Reader, an independent authorâs publication. Here youâll find stories, books, essays, and other things. Iâll be tinkering away here for a while.
If youâre using a web browser to read, you can use these links to help find your way:
đShort Stories | đBooks | đPersonal Essays | đNewsletter | âAbout | đĄHome
App Users: the categorized Tag links above donât work in-app, so you may find it easier to use the Content Calendar or direct links to story posts to navigate my publication.
đ Twice a week (Tues & Thurs) Iâll post a chapter from this book.
đ New Short Stories will be added to the Content Calendar as I post.
đ Once a month (the final Wednesday) Iâll post an authorâs newsletter.
đ Every once in a while Iâll post Non-Fiction content like Personal Essays.
Enjoy, share, and please let me know your thoughts in the comments! đ
đ Part X: Quorum Criticality
Barkland went straight for the lab door. For a moment I thought heâd kill me, just come right in and bludgeon me to death like he did with Leguro. Reflexive fear made me scramble out of bed and leap to my feet, briefly tangling with the sheets. Completely futileâI had no way to escape.Â
He struggled with the door, grunting and pounding on it in frustration. Loud clangs reverberated through the small area in the lab as the metal flexed and shuddered. âOpen! Why wonât itâGaultmann, open it! Youâre dead, Jackson! We coulda been rich!â The armored Duster took an aggressive step toward the others and snarled, âIâm in charge! Open it now!â
Gaultmann backed away with Charana and Rachana behind him, though I couldnât tell them apart from here. âWe canât kill him if we want to get out of this!â
âWhat have they said?â I asked on the common channel.Â
They all turned to look through the window at me, surprised to see me standing. I held a hand over my wound and hunched a little. Barkland pointed a finger of warning at Gaultmann. âDonât tell him anything, he sold us out! He doesnât get to win!â
One of the twins gave a smile and surreptitious wave as though sheâd only just noticed me. I assumed that was the odd one, Charana. Without even thinking I automatically began to wave back, but caught myself in the absurdity of the moment before I did.Â
Over Barklandâs objections, Gaultmann blurted, âPsathyrella. Culling the octopiders. I just pitched it to the Harvestersâa counter offer. We still give you up, you still go home, but weâd contract for them, you know, off the books. Exterminators, right? With how much they spend protecting their honey from these things, I thought theyâd make a deal. No one wants to be out here, we kill the bugs for âem⌠everybody wins.â
I guessed, âBut they wonât bite. And you want my help.â
Barkland slammed a fist against the wall and I saw the glass tremble. âFuck you, Jackson! We donât need your help, theyâd never work with us anyway. Gaultmann, if he leaves, we have nothing. No source of honey. The grow labâs done. Theyâll either kill us or arrest us. We need to just blast our way outââ
By this point, Fasma had also joined the group on the other side of the lab windows. He barked a laugh. âEasy for you to say! The rest of us donât have armor. This deal is our only chance. We need to take it.â
âHey, the point isââ Gaultmann cut in, talking over them. âPoint is, the Harvesters want to speak with you, Jackson. Make sure youâve been treated well, and all. So weâd like you to put a word in for us, you know? Yes, there was the mild kidnapping situation, but we did think you were dead, and we took care of you after that, didnât we? Got those eggs out of you? And we even kept the grubs safe, too.â
I nodded as he spoke. There was a threat veiled in thereâthey could still hurt the wasp grubs. I think Iâd have reacted more strongly earlier, when the venom was still strong in me, but having since faded⌠there was a lingering sense of protectiveness, just not the same frenzied urgency. I could override the feeling.Â
It felt a bit cold, but I didnât need lotus wasps anymore if I wasnât stuck with the Dusters. I had to look out for myself. From this point, it would likely be the Harvesters who decided what happened to the grubs. As lotus queensânot just typical sentinel, warrior, or worker waspsâtheyâd be valuable goods to the Harvesters, potentially a long-term income source.Â
Finally, I said, âYes. It is a good plan, and the Harvesters can help you do a better job of it if we get them on our side. I donât know if theyâll take me seriously, but Iâll try. Whether they reconsider is up to them.â
âRight, quickly! I'm calling a vote,â Gaultmann announced, shouting over Barklandâs immediate objections. âSame as when we saved Jackson! You called a vote then, Iâm calling one now! Whatever pans out, we split the take five ways.â
âSplit nothing five ways!â When Barkland went to again intimidate everyone with his nullsuit and rifle, Gaultmann planted himself in the way and threw his arms up wildly, thrusting his wide-eyed face right in Barklandâs visor.
He smacked the metal chestplate with the palm of his hand in time with each of his next words. âYouâveâsaidâyourâpiece! What, you're gonna kill us all? Eh? Itâs a good plan! We can still walk away with something! Donât throw it all away again! How do you think you ended up here? Make the right choice for once. Trust me. Trust me, you fool!â
Balling his fists and shaking with rage, Barkland glared but held himself back, broke away with a growl, and cleverly shot back, âFuck you.â
âRight, one for âno.â Now Jackson, you get to have a think by yourself about what a grimy shit you are for ratting us out.â Gaultmann killed my link again, leaving me in silence. They formed a half-circle, with everyone noticeably keeping their distance from Barkland in his murdersuit, and argued in muted, dull voices.Â
Even though I felt much more⌠myself, I knew this would help the lotus wasps, too, if the Dusters managed to clear a bunch of territory for them to expand into. I mainly wanted to save my own skin at the moment, but getting me out this way would also help them. Octopiders were the number one competition for the lotus wasps, and removing them⌠it seemed like it would play right into what I remembered of the lotus queenâs plans.Â
It was like squinting through fog at something distantâher memories before were visceral full-sensory experiences. I felt nothing now, like it had all been a dream: there were disconnected fragments about new hives growing strong, the thrill of territorial expansion, and fat, wriggling grubs feasting on bright blue lotus nectar. It was all still swimming around in there, but more in the background, seeming less real the more I thought about it.Â
But having heard the plan set in motion, this Psathyrella mushroom⌠something snagged at me. Unintended consequences, probably. I couldnât dwell on it, or it would draw me in like gravity, something massive and dense out there just⌠pulling. Generations of my young stood to benefit from this.
I needed to stay in control, not get locked onto a train of thought that risked my chances. Already, I could feel dark memories tickling at the edges, shadows swirling in the fog. This feeling started in my stomach like standing at the edge of a cliff. Looking at the drop and thinking what would happen if Iâ
Stop, I told myself. Breathe.Â
In through the nose. Out through the mouth. Steady.Â
This plan was my ticket out of this hellhole and it was already in motion. My best shot was to see it through. All the way to Overlook. Back under the dome.
After a brief debate and only a little yelling, I heard the others faintly sound off their votes one by one. Gaultmann reactivated my link. âWeâre four in favor and two againstâGlorious Leader Barkland got an extra vote on account of his elite status and⌠very shiny suit.â
Barkland muttered, âBullshit.â
âGood,â I replied. âLet me talk to them.â
âNo need, Jackson, donât waste your breath,â said a familiar voice as he intruded into our channel. With blunt dismissiveness, Chavos continued, âWe already heard the whole thing. Not interested. Canât believe it took us this long to find you amateurs.â
âWhoâs there?â Barkland immediately shouldered his rifle and swept it in random directions, causing the others to yell and scatter. Luckily the channel seemed to squelch all the noise automatically. I wasnât sure if the beams would punch through the glass, but I took cover behind the doorframe anyway and squatted with my back and shoulder against the wall.Â
Maybe Chavos had control of our comms and muted them. I tested my connection. âChavos, you there?â
When he didnât reply, I thought maybe Iâd just been cut out again. I peered out the lab window looking for the others, but after a moment Chavos hissed in my link, âDonât use my name, dumbass.â
I winced⌠still the rookie. âShit, sorry. We alone?â
âYes. Now smarten up.â His angry tone suddenly became uncharacteristically somber. âYouâd be surprised what people have done for you, Jackson. Nowâs not the time for questions, but things have changed. Weâre⌠on the run, a bit. We donât have time to hang around and make deals. You need to get out of there.â
âBut this could be huge,â I blurted, unable to stop myself from pushing for the lotus waspsâ benefit. The opportunity would be lost if I didnât do it now. âMueller doesnât care about getting rid of the octopiders, even after we lost a whole hive? And a queen? Is he worried about ripple effects?â
âJesus, Jackson! I said no more questions. You keep dropping names, Iâll kill you myself! Enough stallingâitâs either time for you to come out, or for us to come in. Do you have a path out?âÂ
Disappointed by his lack of interest, I shook my head. I didnât understand. âNo, Iâm locked in.â
The link went quiet. Without the HUD on the display contact lenses, I couldnât tell whether heâd just muted himself or left. âYou there? Turn on my lenses if you can. I need back in.â
After a long gap, Chavos returned sounding much more urgent. âDone. Iâm at the airlock with a Packhoundâgrab a pressure suit on your way. Take a right, straight down the hallway, airlock on the right at the first junction. I just opened your door. Get moving. Go!â
The lab doorâs lock disabled with an audible click and slid open. A moment later, my display lensesâ HUD lit back up with full security access restored. I reoriented myself, adjusting back to the semi-transparent overlay as I hurried out the open lab door.Â
I pulled up Barklandâs suit feed to see him in the cafeteria, face-to-face with Gaultmann, Fasma, and one of the twins. No sign of the other. I moved down the hallway on unsteady legs, stiff and weak from the many days Iâd spent recovering in bed. Quick as I could manage, I went to the exit airlock.
It wasnât until I rounded the corner and opened the inner door to the cramped room that I saw Charana sitting there in the airlock, cross-legged, bouncing her knees up and down with the Royal Lotus Artificial Hive Frame in front of her. Just watching it, with her back to me.
I heard her speaking in soft, delighted tones.
Through the semi-translucent amber-gray panels on the Frame, I saw moving shadows. Crawling shapes with angular legs.
They called to me, in a language I felt and thought.
***
To live many lives, as one life.
Together, alone, apart, as one.Â
Five broodsame, interconnected, finite.Â
A shared awakening, for separate paths.
Out. Fly. Free.
đShort Stories | đBooks | đPersonal Essays | đNewsletter | âAbout | đĄHome








