Part 19
The view in the Revealing illustrated all that the voice explained, and it was impossible to tell which parts of the viewing had been recorded, and which had been re-created from memories or historical records.
“I am ready to begin our presentation.” First Mauve stated. “I suggest that I project it further down the beach, and that you Kellarani move there, so that each presentation does not distract from the other.”
“Agreed.” Six nodded again, and they followed First Mauve about a hundred meters down the beach, leaving the rest of The Triax watching the Kellarani presentation.
First Mauve’s display was far more basic than the advanced Revealing that Six had cast, but it conveyed understanding readily enough. It was somehow obvious that she had not recorded it in any way; she simply told the story and illustrated it with a large round Illusion cast against the relative darkness of the trees at the top of the beach.
The Triax were not a very warlike race. They were the only intelligent race on their mostly-aquatic world, and for the first two hundred and fifty-three thousand years of their recorded history, they had lived in peace. During this early golden age they developed a rich and artistic culture that prized knowledge and understanding. Their first technologies; aquatic farming of plants, domestication of animals, recorded communication, and metallurgy done by chemistry, led to an impressive hydraulics-based industry. The pumping of water and other liquids within vast networks of metal pipes provided power for machines and fast transportation. The pumps were originally turned by muscle and animal power, then ocean currents and large vertical flows were captured with huge water-screws. Liquids under high pressures in pipes became a medium for long-distance communication that was almost instantaneous, and complex pumping and networking schemes led to the use of intricate valving to calculate complex mathematical problems.
At the end of the first Triax golden age their population was many billions, and the oceans of their world were unrecognizable from their natural state. Their surfaces were covered with domesticated plants, most natural plants and animals were either domesticated or extinct, and the Triax civilization was a dark and gloomy industrial place lit by artificial light in the murky waters beneath the closely-packed plants.
Overpopulation and starvation finally brought war to The Triax, initially consisting of theft of one another’s food plants and sabotaging one another’s hydraulic networks, then open warfare began. They attacked each other with their machines, their domestic animals, projectile weapons powered by compressed gases, blades, and teeth. The first Triax war devastated their aquatic world, leaving it little more than a wasteland. Only one in every two hundred and thirty Triax survived that war and the social and environmental collapse that came with it.
After a long recovery, stability returned, along with another period of peace and prosperity marked by strict population controls and the restoration of much of the natural state of their oceans. The greatest advance of their second golden age had been the discovery and utilization of rare heavy materials called ‘hotrock’ that gave off vast amounts of heat and other dangerous energies when the material was refined from its natural ore and concentrated. Eventually all of their industry was powered by these amazing but dangerous substances.
However, a series of industrial accidents released large amounts of poisonous hotrock residues into the waters of The Triax’s world. Many died, and the entire population was sickened for many generations, along with most of the wild and domesticated plants and animals. Society collapsed, and small bands of survivors often fought one another for the few remaining resources, usually with quite primitive methods.
After another period of slow recovery that lasted for millennia, Triax society rebuilt and reformed. The use of hotrock was forever banned, and they reverted to the techniques they had used before its introduction; taking energy from currents and flows to power their society. Eventually they added wind power by building windmills in the shallows. They invented suits that allowed them to survive out of water, and the land masses of The Triax’s world were finally explored and utilized for the first time.
This part of First Mauve’s presentation had taken just more than an hour, and much of that had been devoted to weaponry and military techniques.
Then she showed the attack of a horde of demons that descended on their world from the skies; some by flight, some by Translocation. They had come to the world of the Triax in a gigantic vessel they had made from a metallic asteroid, and hidden it from detection until their attack was well underway.
The Triax fought and lost, then hid themselves away from the demons in habitats deep beneath the rock under the deepest oceans. They remained hidden for generations, fearful to emerge, and when they did return to the waters and the surface they found that all life had been exterminated and consumed by the long-departed demons.
Some of them wanted to rebuild their civilization yet again, despite the colossal effort it would require, but after centuries of debate they chose another plan.
They recognized that if they remade their world and filled it with life again, eventually the demons would return to consume it all once more. So they constructed the first of their great spherical void-vessels and moved their entire remaining population into it, with all of their artifacts. After three more centuries of traveling around the planets that circled their sun, preparing and training intensively, they set out into the void to hunt the demons, beginning with the horde that had destroyed their world.
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