Critical Role & Sagas of Sundry - Chapter Seven: A Different Approach | Ten Candles: Eclipse
Episode Date: May 12, 2025As the situation accelerates, the team on the International Space Station attempt to save their samples. This captivating series, based on a game of tragic horror, includes a cast of 40 players, on...e game master, and zero survivors. Warning: for mature audiences only. Starring Josh Petersdorf, Trisha Hershberger, Vince Caso, Noura Ibrahim, and storyteller Ivan Van Norman. Video versions are available at https://www.youtube.com/geekandsundry Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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My friends. My friends.
My friends.
Hi.
Hi.
Hi.
Hello.
Oh, I am very excited for this table.
I honestly am, not only because I have two, um, God, it's so hard not to do spoilers.
Um, love you, love you.
Love you, I'm sorry, I love you.
That implies nothing.
Vince, Josh.
Thank you for, I don't, why do you keep coming back?
Why do we keep coming back, Vince?
Glutton's for punishment, I think so.
You know, that's up to you, man.
I welcome it.
You do. You're like, oh, ma, mum, yum, yum, yum.
Misery loves company.
Yes.
We literally, Vince, story time, you two heard this, but Vince walked in.
I was like, I read the whole rule book.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It went straight into it.
And I sent it like yesterday.
So, yeah, yeah, cool, man, good.
I'm glad you're here.
I'm honestly, legit, glad you're here.
Thank you for some playing.
Yeah.
Trish.
It's good to see you again.
You too.
Oh, no, we're doing spooky stories.
It's been a while.
It has been a while.
since the oh god forever verse days yes it's still on Pluto everywhere yeah i have so many friends
that are like i turn on my tv and saw you and i'm like wow that was from a long time ago yeah i i
was just adding streaming services the other day and i was like i wonder if it's still there and i
totally yeah still there well i have to say you what they were playing what were they playing
Puppetland.
Aw.
Yeah.
So sweet.
But yeah, no spoilers for anyone who hasn't seen Forever Earth yet.
But I feel like I took my character out in a way that would be appropriate for 10 candles.
I actually agree with you.
Yeah.
I also, for people who was on that show, I don't know if this felt it to you.
Was that like Navy SEAL training in the RPG world?
Oh, my God.
You know?
A little bit.
Yeah, because it's like, okay, new system, go.
Charactered by tomorrow.
Well, but same psyche.
Same psyche.
We quantum leaped from game to game to game to game to game,
that's same base character.
Which is the same base character.
You were juggling two character sheets,
but then one had to be flopped out every month or so.
Yeah, it was the thing.
Hi, Nora.
Hello.
You're the only one I loved playing with you on LA by night.
Yeah, that was the first time you played together.
Ever, I know, and we're only like recent friend acquisitions.
Yes.
But that was super fun and I was super excited.
when you decided to come and play.
Yeah, we got to play dark characters.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
It was fun being bad guys.
It was.
Although you're, uh,
sorry guys.
You're still, your judgment's still out, so to speak.
I know.
Yeah.
What happens, we'll see.
I don't know.
Check it out.
Or just, a geek and sundry's just becoming a dark place.
Yeah.
A little bit, a little bit.
Yeah, a little bit.
Well, a lot of vampires, a lot of people.
Dark places, Ivan?
No. No.
But yeah, no, thank you for all playing.
I love this because this series has been just so different.
Like some days, and we were like, wow, I've never played with any of you before.
And then some days I'm like my old friends.
So let's get into it, shall we?
That's awesome.
All right. Do it.
Take your, you have five pictures, which you're going to be acting as our cards for this session.
I'd first like you to take your top one.
This will be the virtue, and we are going to pass.
pass it to your left.
So take it and hand it to the person to your left.
But write a virtue on it or not?
No, do not write on it yet.
Take it and pass it to the person to the left.
I see.
Yes.
Great.
Now on that, I would like you to write a virtue.
Sharpie?
Sharpie, yes.
And you know, you're either in clan fine or not fun
when it comes to Sharpie times.
So.
Well, a virtue meaning...
What is something that you look up to in someone?
Okay.
What is something...
This is something that this character would look up to.
Yeah, that you appreciate about someone.
Because this is a virtue that you will be ostensibly
and literally handing to someone else.
Okay.
Done and done.
Mm-hmm.
I know I heard you stop writing.
God.
No.
Do we have to keep it a secret?
We will not.
Keeping it a secret.
We're going to hand them out.
This is kind of like getting your camp name when someone gives it to you.
I love it.
It's your virtue and your vice.
So, yeah.
I love this collaborative character creation.
It's different.
And it's because the story system is so fluid,
it allows for a lot of interpretation.
And like you pointed out earlier,
and I know you talked a little bit about,
I like my spreadsheets when it comes to my point.
Oh, you know I do.
I know you do.
So it was definitely one of those.
I want you to think about it, but don't think about it too hard.
Well, that's, yeah, I didn't plan too much for today
because I am an overprepper and then sometimes it gets me into like
wonky gear catch situations when something happens that I wasn't prepared for.
So I planned my whole character and then walked in and promptly threw it all out.
Yep, as is very common in this.
Give them back to their owners to your right.
that is for you, sir.
Great.
This is not a one word thing.
Technically a one, like a virtue,
should be something that is a...
If you say it really fast?
So just the first word, then, maybe.
Strength?
Why don't you, yeah,
why don't you tell us, Nora, what did you guess?
Strength?
Yes.
I can't see what the other...
What is this?
Strength by truth.
Truth gives me strength.
Uh-huh, okay.
So you could say...
Honesty.
Honesty.
Yeah.
Honesty.
I was describing honesty.
I'm just gonna write that.
In the most poetic way.
Honesty.
Honesty.
That is definitely a word.
Wallet up here.
Yeah.
I like where we're going today.
Yeah, it's fantastic.
By one word, I write two things.
Now that all of the blood has gone to your face,
why don't you know yet?
So.
I got resourceful.
Resourceful.
Very resourceful.
That's also very concise.
Very concise, to the point, one word.
It's so many syllables, though.
It's like the same.
Trish, what did you get?
Insightful.
Insightful.
Okay, so we have resourceful, insightful, honest.
And how about you, this?
I got dependable.
Dependable, very practical virtues over here.
Yeah, I'd say.
And very, resourceful is very practical as well, too.
It's just easy.
Yes.
Insightful is very cerebral.
Now let's take another one of your portraits,
and let's pass it to the right.
Now on this, here,
on this, I would like you to write a vice,
something that you would not wish upon anybody,
something that you,
something that creates more problems than it solves.
One word again?
One word.
Okay.
Be very direct about it.
So this is your vices.
I wrote the Oxford Dictionary.
I received the entire
Encyclopedia Britannica on the back of mine.
Merriam's Dictionaries,
makes this time it be used in many ways.
Bob.
And let's pass it back, so go back to their owners
to the left.
Thank you.
That's a great photo, right?
I do appreciate that photo.
It was not a purpose.
Why don't you start us off, Vince?
I got greedy.
You're greedy.
I'm very greedy.
So greedy and then remind me what the virtue is again?
Dependable.
Grady and dependable.
You're dependable and greedy.
Fun contrast to play there.
Yeah, absolutely.
And how about you, Nora?
Covetous.
Covetous.
That's a new one.
All right, yes.
Excellent.
It brought out the orthosaurus.
Trish, what did you?
you get. Selfish.
Selfish, insightful and selfish.
All right. Interesting.
Interesting. Josh?
I got blunt.
Straight to the point.
Straight to the point.
All right, that makes a lot of sense.
The irony of your last.
Yeah.
You're very honest. I like this.
You're already twisting your mental dials.
Yeah, making those mental dials.
So I will describe to you the situation you're in,
and oh boy, do I have a treat for you today.
Oh, good.
Yes, after much discussion before this setting,
I'm pleased to tell you that you are
on the International Space Station for this episode.
Wow, delightful.
Which means in so many different ways
what has been happening in this world,
you have only the knowledge of what
you have been able to scramble,
and we did discuss getting the radio to work,
but only a week after everything went down.
Yeah.
All right.
And since then, you have been watching the Earth go through turmoil.
Just constant turmoil.
And very quickly, because of your position on the International Space Station,
you have noticed the moon is getting closer.
And it is not getting closer in the way that,
oh, it's bigger in the sky, as you would see from the ground.
ground, it's physically approaching the planet. And as a result is when you are making your
pass to come to where the moon is, you see every time you pass it, it's currently has, it's,
it's coming at you. It's gaining on us. It's gaining at you. In fact, because you're in the
International Space Station and you have actual instrumentations that allow you to measure this
kind of stuff. And because you were not affected by the EMP that destroyed the entire planet
on bottom side, you were able, because otherwise if I ruined you with power, you'd all be
dead right now because of life support. In fact, you probably all of your instrumentations did blip
out for a brief moment, but then once the solar panels kicked back in and you replaced the batteries,
everything was fine. But with your instrumentation, you can tell that it's going at the speed of a Boeing
jet. So basically it's at a decaying orbit of around anywhere from 430 to 500 miles an hour.
And that's the speed it's maintaining. And it's been maintaining for the last two and a half
weeks. So ISS is maintaining or the moon is maintaining? The moon is maintaining the speed. And now
you're at the position in which the moon is close enough to change and steal your orbit.
And that's where we're going to start our story today.
It's been like this bizarre figure eight kind of pattern
right now with the moon and the Earth.
You haven't.
The figure eight pattern is going to start to begin.
Oh, great.
Yes.
So ostensibly you're in a position where you know that the,
actually, no, you're right,
you would have actually gone through that figure eight orbit
for a while where it would have stolen
and then you would have exchanged it back.
Yes, that makes a lot more sense
because it would have stolen you way
before you gotten too close to it.
So figure eight, it's been,
You have been exchanging orbits with the moon as it has been closer,
and that orbit has become tighter and tighter as our story begins.
So with that said, I would like you to take a third card,
and I would like you to write a moment that you hope your character can achieve in this story.
It has to be something that has a chance of succeeding, that can succeed,
excuse me, but also has an option of fail as well, too.
This is important because if you to fulfill this moment at some point in the story,
you will get a mechanical benefit for it.
This can be more than one word.
Thank you, Chris, yes.
I was like, I'm really limited here with one word, I don't know,
and I can save the world in one word, I don't know.
But that is truly the, it is a moment that you hope your character can accomplish in the story.
That's a new ASMR.
I don't want to, I'm not trying to mowed out, that's what I'm saying.
So, I mean, how far can I go on there?
Is this something you can accomplish?
Yes.
Is it something that can fail?
Yes.
Then write it down.
Okay.
You were hoping that basically, you're intending this happens during the session,
during the episode.
And if it does, if it goes well, you gain a benefit.
That's right.
Thank you for the Oxford Dictionary version.
Or the rule book version.
I read the rule.
You would think it would be the lawful neutral kid
That would be like, I read all the rules
But not today
It's okay
Curious, Vince, your IRL alignment
Oh, oh boy
I'd like to say it's
Cautic good
Oh no
You see a lot of people say they're chaotic good
But aren't actually when push comes to shop
A chaotic neutral
That's fair
No I'm definitely more natural good
Neutral good
I'm just you know I like doing good things
but I don't feel that every rule regulation is necessarily the best at all times.
Got it.
Yeah.
How about you guys?
No, I think you just need to share today.
I would just rather look at you quizzically.
Yeah, I'd rather side-eye you instead of answer that question.
I always like asking people that question.
I just think it's fun.
It is a fun.
It's a fun question that only Vince gets to answer.
Apparently.
I think that Josh needed more time.
I do.
Still writing.
Oh, it was a, yeah, I gave it for more time.
Yeah.
Nice.
See, and you know my favorite bit is that I have enjoyed in this show,
and I have been observing how lovely the silences.
And I love watching your natural host instinct to get in.
You always do, no dead air.
No dead air.
You just want to make sure that it's all taken care of.
And oh, boy, am I loving the place that it's putting you in right now.
So, yes.
So you're ready for me to be super uncomfortable today.
I'm not ready to be comfortable.
I've already been chastised for writing a sentence.
I'm ready to go.
We're into it.
This is good.
Use it.
Speaking of being chastised, what's your moment?
And who are you playing today, Josh?
And please introduce us.
Today I'll be playing Joseph Myers.
Joseph Myers was a shareholder for the company that
pours money into one of the many rockets that delivers supplies to the space station
and was on a mission with a branding officer,
I believe, to check out the space station
and made it up there.
But he is a corporate guy,
and he is, like he said, a shareholder.
So he has ulterior motives for the company.
Got it.
So he's a company man.
He's a company man who made it up here alone, however.
So something behind that.
Got it.
So you made it up?
Did you come with the, like you said, the corporate
I came with a little corporate knowledge, a little bit of maybe...
Well, you said you came with a corporate employee, or you came as a corporate employee.
I came as a corporate employee.
Okay, correct.
And then what moment do you hope to generate in this story today?
Activating a nuclear warhead that disrupts the moon orbit, so...
Oh, so you want to detonate a warhead.
Possibly, yes, that's possible.
That could be why I'm up there is to...
Cool, great, awesome.
Trish, who will you be playing today?
I am playing Stacey Martel.
Stacey Martel.
Yes.
And Stacey is a very well-respected and highly accredited marketing director.
Okay.
From the United States, who was sent to ISS by the International Space Station Program
by the Union of Nations that run ISS.
Yeah.
To come up and create some.
some videos selling the general populace on why the ISS is needed.
So there's a, this is interesting.
Do you want to have it be like there's an upcoming bill to basically, or an upcoming proposition
to pour more funding into the station and you are there to help?
Yes.
And in some nations, that's more of a thing than others right now due to political climate.
Some people feel that money should, could be better invested elsewhere.
Right.
So I, Stacey, can spin anything.
Okay.
And I was...
Spind Doctor in space.
Yes.
And so I was sent to the ISS
to create a series of video packages
that convince everyone
why ISS is worthwhile
and why they should invest their money.
And what is the moment you hope to create
in this story?
The moment that I hope to create
is to send at least one,
preferably more,
of the video packages
that I have created to Earth.
So your goal is to actually do your job?
Spend fast.
And the video packages, I feel like, that Stacey has created while up here, kind of morphed in what they were from selling ISS to almost more of a journalistic.
Holy shit, this is what's happening up here.
So now you become a disaster reporter.
A little bit.
So it's a hybrid of both.
So this is still really great, but also what the hell is happening?
Okay.
Done.
All right.
Excellent.
Vince, who are you playing today?
My name is Danny Barron.
I am the comms officer on the ISS and a mechanical engineer.
And yeah, I just maintain the comm systems.
I would have been the first to realize Tom's had gone out when everything kind of went to hell.
And the first to try working on a radio replacement to establish some sort of contact.
That's great.
Yeah, so ostensibly reconnected whatever you could at this point, which I would say,
from what I know from your timeline
and where you are,
there has definitely been radio transmissions,
but they have basically been guys in bunkers.
And it's also situational in terms of
which part of the Earth we are orbiting over
at any one moment.
Sometimes you catch it,
sometimes you don't,
sometimes you hear terrible things,
and you've heard terrible things.
You've also heard things you cannot explain.
So I do imagine you being like a sonar,
you know, a sub guy
sitting with your cans on.
Yeah.
What moment do you hope to create?
My moment, it says,
I will gain hope when the comms flicker to life
and I swear I hear my wife's voice.
You want to hear your wife's voice one last time.
Okay.
You want to hear your life's voice.
All right.
Sounds excellent.
Nora.
I am playing Genevieve Zane.
Genevieve.
Who is a microbiologist,
and she specializes in,
extreme weather conditions.
So her goal is
in doing research on the
ISS is to
hopefully find sometime in the near
distant future if we are able to
colonize on other planets.
Okay. However, so not there
yet. No.
So not there yet. Yeah.
She's also secretly
an ancient astronaut theorist.
Oh, okay. Cool, cool, cool.
Writing books under a pseudonym.
Yeah.
I can't tell anybody about that
because she wants to keep her job.
But I don't wanna say it's aliens, but it's aliens.
Great.
I love.
Okay, cool.
And what moment is this ghost writer
of ancient alien archaeology
hope to create in this story?
Oh, well, she wants to find out about what they are.
You want to know about them.
Okay.
Capital T them.
Yeah, capital T them.
All right, great.
Excellent. Well, that leaves us with one final task before we actually begin our story.
And they would like you to take a third card that is with you, one that hasn't been written upon yet.
And we are going to pass these to the left. These are your brinks.
So what this basically means is an observation your character has made against another character.
that has seen them at their darkest and lowest moment.
Now, this is going to be a little different.
Oh, did we pass years already?
Did I pass?
Okay, so this is, for you and I,
this is going to be a little tiny bit different
because I'm actually going to participate in this with you.
Oh, okay.
So you pass to the left, and then, no, you're fine.
You're getting there.
And then I'm here, and then.
So I get one from you.
Yes.
And then I have, Tricia.
great. So what this means is you're going to observe someone at their very lowest point and
basically write the I have seen you dot dot dot dot and a couple of examples they give in the book are
just terrible low points. Something like I've seen you lose it over this dead dog. You cried for
hours and I almost left you, you know, or things like I have seen you worship them. I have watched
you whisper a silent prayer when you didn't think anyone was looking. So we've had
some incredibly awful brinks that have come up as a result.
It doesn't mean you need to write something awful.
It is just something that you've seen someone do.
But it is like that darkest side of someone.
Yes, it is.
And for Vince and Trish, how this is going to work differently with me is that Vince,
you will be writing a brink for them.
You get to see, you get to basically do a, I have seen them.
dot, dot, dot.
And this can apply not just to the proverbial them,
but also the situation that you've seen,
these monoliths, which you have observed,
have come up, the state of the moon
that you have very clearly observed
as it is coming into the orbit of the earth
closer and closer.
And it could even be about the proverbial them,
but this is your opportunity to kind of expand on our world.
Yeah.
And Trish, I will be writing a...
They have seen you an observation that them has imposed upon you in this circumstance.
So there we go.
So exciting.
This is something our character has seen the other characters do.
This is character.
With our own eyes on the space station.
This is character knowledge.
Or before.
One example was, you know, I have seen you on trial for the murder of your family.
That's something that only you know about that person.
And it could have taken place before the event or during or what have you,
but it's just something you know about them that informs their character that no one else knows.
My diatribe here.
Brink Volume 1 by Josh Petersdoll.
In the beginning, there was the edge.
A cliff overlooking a precipice.
What would say a brink?
A brink.
What would say close to the brink, close to the edge.
Highway from the danger zone by John Cleese.
Now, Ivan.
Wait.
Please.
I will wait.
And as well, though the brinks are the one thing,
not virtues and vices,
but the brinks are intended to be kept secret.
Yes.
Got it.
They are kept them to be secret.
This one's always tough for me.
What are you going to do to trash?
What if they see me?
Right.
Right.
You have this, right?
Yes.
Before we actually started the game, I came up with a plan for every single person I could possibly write a ring for and what they would all be.
And I was so excited about this one.
I was hoping that I would get this.
You would write it all out before.
I would.
My phone has a note on it.
It's like this long.
Guys, I'm crazy.
It was 100 pages.
The book was legit.
Yes.
Yeah.
100 page rule book.
It was.
it was intimidating
to be in 12 hours.
It's also awesome how many different
in the appendix in the back
it's all like the example modules
of ways you can run the game
and the different ways you can adapt
the rules to different settings
that do or don't include creatures
or do and don't include this
is such a flexible system
it's really awesome
he said buying for time
storytelling you guys
yeah collaborative storytelling
they called me the long-winded writer
sir no
Ivan just wants to thoroughly terrorize Trish.
And I admire that.
I think that's what's happening.
It's good.
Yeah.
It takes deep thought to execute deep war.
Yes.
Honestly, the only thing that I might enjoy more than writing a bring for them is them writing one for me.
She's all right.
The fidgeting has begun.
The mic face.
Yeah.
I know.
I know.
I'm about to be real uncomfortable today.
All right.
Okay.
Now, Ivan, I just want to preface this a little bit.
You are, this is open-ended, you're entitled to play however you want.
Oh.
Because I'm not sure what's already been established.
Thank you, Fitz.
So it's intentionally a little bit big.
No, I appreciate you letting me know.
Okay.
So, yeah.
Okay.
Oh, shit got dark real quick.
Yeah.
Well played, though.
Oh my.
I want, I, ironically, you know exactly what that means.
You know what?
That's what I really did.
When I turned it over, I was like, oh, I didn't even know that was there.
One in one now.
Okay.
Got it.
I'll burn your eyes, Trish.
Game secrets.
Okay, now we have one more picture.
Don't look at it.
That's the character concept.
That's simply your name, your occupation if you wish it.
Can we write that down now?
It's about as much of a character sheet as 10 candles will allow you to have.
So, it's really for you.
I rolled a 40 on strength, so you so mega-stalled.
Oh my God.
Cool.
Okay, cool, cool, cool, cool, cool, cool, great, great.
So basically, what we're going to finally do,
now that you have this concept out there,
will be laid close to your side.
You may take your virtue, your vice, and your moment,
and you may organize them in whichever stack you'd like.
The only thing it's important is that the brink must be on the bottom.
This is important because you can only burn
the card that is on the top.
Virtues and vices will allow you to rerall any ones
that you might occur in the game.
The brinks should you get to,
it will allow you a full re-roll of everything.
And you cannot generate your moment unless it is the card on top at the time in which that
moment comes up.
So what that means is that if you, for example, your moment came up Joseph in which there's
a chance to detonate the warhead.
If your moment isn't on top of your deck and say you put your virtue and your vice on top
of it and you didn't rip those up as a result of doing re-rolls before you got to that moment,
it would not play out.
But versus if you put your moment on top
and your moment does not come up,
you cannot get to your virtues and your vices
until the moment has been completed.
Got it.
So this is why you have to stack the deck.
And virtues and vices give us re-rolls on ones, essentially.
Okay.
And character sheet is not a burnable card.
Okay.
And you said brink was on the very bottom.
Must be on the bottom.
Because it's all you have left.
It is all you have left.
Okay.
Exactly as it is.
So, for anyone who's keeping track,
because the good news is that on the I International Space Station,
you're working off of an atomic clock
and not something that's tied to or its magnetic field.
You're looking at day 19.
Day 19.
Day 19.
Yes.
And this is day 19 since the monoliths came.
Since the monoliths rose, since in your perspective,
the blip of the power.
tower went out. And let me preface this with. Your story begins on the International Space Station
in which you are currently exchanging orbits with the moon. It has come so close into your
proximity that you have managed to be able to maintain a figure eight orbit between the
moon as it is constantly exchanging you. And it is constant diligence. There has been
someone who has taken the time and the opportunity to pilot this course.
You've had a navigator on the International Space Station this entire time.
And he has been ostensibly making every waking moment to replot the course of the
International Space Station in order to maintain this.
But the moon is getting closer now and everything has to be re-corrected.
This is something that has to be done every six hours or so.
On top of that, you were supposed to be resupplied weeks ago when everything first started happening.
And so far, you're three weeks behind on your food supplies.
You've managed to ration as best as you can.
You've been paying particular attention to your water at this stage,
but you are dangerously low on supplies.
thankfully, due to the solar panels, you've been able to maintain power,
but because the moon is taking up so much more of the sky
than it was when it was in the ISS's original orbit,
there have been long spans of night,
and you are in one of those spans of night.
You are running life support, and that's it.
at this point, just the air is keeping you alive at this stage
because the sun has not come back
and you have been ostensibly jettisoned
to the dark side of the moon.
So now you're on the return course
to come back to Earth,
but it is still dark
and the batteries are not charging due to sunlight.
What do you do?
I've been on the phones for the last,
hour or so trying to again establish contact with anyone planet's side we've we've had you know spurts
of communication but nothing concrete and one very delightful song a song yesterday a rogue broadcast on a
ham radio signal came up and it was just someone and you didn't catch their name because you
had you didn't catch the beginning of the broadcast but it was someone singing someone on earth
was singing a song and you kind of recognized it this is s to earth i s to houston to moscow to
anyone who's picking it up um is anyone down there anyone it's been 19 days now and um could really
do with hearing a voice right now?
Not uncommonly.
No response.
Okay, we need to take...
I don't know, we need some kind of proactive action
because we're...
The scrubbers are almost crapped out.
Food's low, water's low.
Life support is on its last legs.
We're not going to last up here for much longer.
No one's coming.
Have you been able to get through it all?
No, I...
I'm hearing...
just music and and and
warnings and the occasional distress signal
but no one can hear me.
It's a fucking ham radio.
I mean, we're in space.
So no, we got to either find some way,
I don't know, off this station
or a way to extend the supplies we have
so we can last until whatever's going on down there is done.
I mean, forgive my naivety.
I haven't spent very much time up here,
but is there any way that we can
science up some resources.
We have the module you came in on.
You too.
It's not, without the resupply,
it's not designed to make the return trip
the way it is right now.
We could try and Jerry rigged something
to get us back planet side,
but that would only really work
if there's someone to receive us on the other end.
So we're stuck here.
And I don't know what other proactive measure
we could take.
we're already rationing our supplies out.
There is definitely, and again, to keep this conversation and this story going,
beyond the rationing and supply, the more direct problem at hand is that your course
correction needs to be adjusted or something the moon most likely is going to throw you off
your orbit and will send you out into deep space.
at this point.
The module we came on still has battery power
that we can transfer some of our systems life support on.
I work for the company.
I learned that it is very possible
to revert the systems.
However, the module only fits two
and the escape pods only fit three.
Yeah, I don't think...
Getting off is probably not an option,
but that's...
If we could use some of that power
to help correct the course of the station,
it buys us time.
So we're not, you know, flung off into space.
Sure.
Or what have you.
Okay, yeah, I can, is the Navigator still here on the station?
You do know where he is.
He's in a module.
Let's put him in the...
Let's put him in the Zvezda Russian service module,
because that sounds appropriate.
That's usually where he tends to spend his time.
He's been sitting there literally with a notepad
and has just been crunching numbers for the last.
two and a half weeks, you know, making sure
that every little adjustment is made in order
to prevent the slingshot effect, so to be.
And what's his name?
Let's have his name.
If he's gonna be in the Russian space module,
we can make him Russian.
Dmitri.
We'll have him be Dmitri.
All right, Dmitri said he'd be in Svezda right now,
working on the calculations.
If we can just get over there, get in touch with him,
and see what he needs to make this work.
And if we need to draw power off, I would rather not do that,
but if we need to draw power off of your module, then we'll do that.
Fine.
But we've got to keep the station in orbit.
So you begin making, well, I'm sorry, that's what you two would like to do.
Is there anything else at this point that anyone else is interested in,
or are we all just converging on Zvezda at the moment?
I know that I reported on a piece, I think a few years back,
about growing plant life here on ISS.
Is there a way for us to potentially expand that effort and grow vegetables,
grow some type of sustenance here?
We're not there yet.
I mean, I'm working with single-celled organisms,
just trying to keep them alive in harsh conditions.
That's far, far from being able to plant anything.
I mean, we really need, if we don't get these supplies, I don't know.
There is a tissue lab for genetic culturing,
but it's mostly just harvesting sproutlings and seeds to see them grow.
Yeah, everything here is like,
experiment sized.
It's not, we can't farm the ISS,
at least not for this many people.
Got it.
Unless you wanted to convert it into something,
but there are definitely enough seeds.
But that is completely your prerogative.
This is an intense survival situation,
and it's nice that you guys are thinking about the long term.
But you are having this conversation
as you get close to VESDA, and you,
the ISS is obviously a very small contain,
so you're walking single,
file as you're making transitions from each one, doing your movements in zero-g as you're getting through.
And as you get close to Zvezda, you actually are looking into the open area and you can see
Dimitri's clipboard is kind of swaying in the midst of the zero-g.
And a long string that had his pen attached to it has been tied and wrapped around one of the
the chairbacks and it's just kind of listfully floating
in the middle of this open service module.
That's not a good sign.
Dimitri?
You don't hear a response.
What the fuck did he go?
Okay, I wanna go inside the module and look around.
Well, as you go into the module kind of look around,
you see that nothing's really out of place.
It's besides this floating clipboard,
that's kind of waverly moving around.
everything seems to be where it should be.
Um, you might cheat.
Stacey, as you kind of get closer,
you grab the clipboard and you pull it forward and look it up
and you can see in Russian big red letters have been written.
Do you know Russian?
Um, very, very small amounts from what I've needed
as far as my interfacing right before I came to the ISS.
Okay.
You can definitely,
see and read enough for it to say, I'm sorry.
What? What? What? What?
This isn't good.
There, as you can see, and I will pass it around
this that everyone may examine the evidence. It's all red letters
and very big. Is anyone else speak Russian?
Just conversationally, because we all work together on the ISS.
See what you think, but from my limited knowledge of the Russian language,
it looks like an apology.
Fuck.
I want to go to the comms on the wall
that just like intercom for the station itself.
And I want to hit the button and I'm a cop.
Hey, Dimitri, if you're on
Of course you're on the station.
Wherever you are on the station, get to a comms and ping us.
I don't know what the fuck you're doing
not being in Spectre right now,
but we need you here.
I mean, do we think he just left?
Like gave up and left?
Yeah, like went to the corner store.
No, what?
No, okay, we're all, okay, we're all tense.
We're all kind of bummed out right now.
But no, he's still on the station.
There's nowhere else to go.
Right?
Well, you could have taken one of the escape pods and left us here.
Oh, no.
Check the monitor.
I mean, honestly, we don't have the power right now.
With the emergency systems on,
you won't be able to check statuses of anything
unless you physically investigate them
because at this point it's maintaining life support
with its red, dim light.
I can't tell if it's gone or not.
Boards off.
Yep, there you go.
No, I meant darkly,
He said, I'm sorry and gave up and left to float out in space
until he explodes or whatever happened.
We had to have known.
There would have been some, the system would tell us.
It always tells us.
Okay.
Okay.
Are there sleeping quarters we can check?
I guess, like hang on, let me see if I can,
I can maybe try and pull something up here.
Do you wanna try to see what do you wanna pull up on the board?
Or because you have literally access,
I mean, you can turn on some of your power
to go and check the systems.
That is definitely an option.
I want to try and just get this thing open
and temporarily get it running enough to check.
All right.
It's a lot of dice.
10.
10.
Yeah.
Okay, that's, we got a success and we got one, one loss.
Not re-rolling that.
There you go.
One, one for me, two for you.
So by all means, tell me kind of how you go through the process
of getting the board up and running,
basically going from reserve power or emergency power
and giving it just enough juice so that you can check the systems.
and then I will tell you what you see.
Okay, so I'm just describing how I get the thing on.
Yeah, I just would, I would love to hear
how you feel like your character,
and if this is, by the way, by all means,
if it's too technical, since obviously we're all space astronauts
inside of this, but I'm giving you narration rights
to be able to tell me how you get the power on
for a moment, yes.
Okay, so I am one of the few mechanical engineers
left on the station right now.
One might say the only.
Yes, one might say the only.
Only. So I get the panel open. There's an access channel just underneath. I get it open,
and I know that there is a, there's basically a mainline power grid that runs through the entire station.
Right. It accesses through auxiliaries, every other system, but I can channel power off of the main line mechanically without having to go through the emergency procedures.
You basically just turning the spicket on in an area enough. Yeah. So it's just, it's a little bit Legoy. It's just reconnecting the line. It's diversified.
It starts power temporarily without having to reboot the entire system.
Great.
So you divert enough powered that you basically see
the regular fluorescent lights of this module.
Click on.
In fact, part of the module that you're in,
including the airlocks that are close to your area,
as well as the engines that are used to correct orbit,
which are right next to you,
all kind of boot on for a moment
and you can see systems dialing and rebooting
and you do see the airlock hatch one is current.
read as if it has cycled.
Okay.
Technically, it might not mean anything.
It's also, there are errors all the time.
Technically, Erlock 1 is registering.
It has been recently used.
Oh, shit.
Poisk.
Poisk.
It could be, it could be from an EVA.
It could be from a lot of things.
Great.
I don't want to jump to conclusions right now.
Okay.
But Dimitri's not here.
So he's not responding to the comms.
At the very least, we need to try and still
get this course correction done while we have time.
We can look for him later.
Yeah.
But we don't have a lot else we can do right now.
You do see that the notes that Dimitri has left
are still on the clipboard that he's left into it.
It's a whole lot of advanced astro physics science.
It's a bunch of gobbledygook for anyone who doesn't understand astrophysics.
But there is some numbers on there that could make sense.
So who wants to put in the course correction?
I mean, anyone good with us?
I was president of math plates,
but I don't feel like this is preparing me for this specific challenge.
I'm going to be busy just trying to keep power in this module.
So someone else has to do all the inputs.
Listen, I only have like undergrad level physics.
I don't know.
Well, I've seen the schematics for it.
I can try.
Okay.
Yeah, just put in what's on the clipboard.
It's not, it shouldn't hopefully be too complex.
Okay.
I'm gonna try and re-grap power while you do that.
I'm gonna take a big deep breath and kind of turn to the side
and swallow my spit without anyone watching.
I kind of...
Great.
And you go up to the dimmed interface panel
and you see the UI laid out before you.
Three ones, but four sixes.
We'll take those.
I get one dice to see if I can steal narrative control.
Nope, I can't, so.
Okay.
But please, why don't you take narration rights
in this conflict?
So I take the clipboard and I start running my finger down
the numbers and I very deliberately make sure
I don't make any mistakes because any wrong number,
can send us spiraling off towards the moon,
can use too much fuel, too much boost,
and if we go too far to the left, it's over.
So I run the entire numbers,
and luckily there's a safeguard check on the system
when nothing will be finally inputted
until I hit the button.
So I double check everything.
Everything looks to be normal to my knowledge,
but I am not a navigational expert,
but it looks correct, and I push the button to enter the port.
So as you pushing the button, you hear the,
of the outside engines, they boost up,
and you can feel the vibrations of the module
that you're in, just rattle ever so, minor.
It's good, but vibration and jet fuel is jet fuel.
And you can feel as kind of the space station
starts to make this slow pivot
as it's making its course adjustment appropriately.
That's a $700 million turn, guys.
How much time does that save us?
Well.
How much time does it give us?
According to this, we're just back on regular track
to continue the orbit around the moon.
This just keeps us from careening into it
because he keeps coming closer.
Okay. Do we know where we are
to finish the orbit around the moon
and get back to the orbit around the Earth part?
Well, it looks like at least three hours
until we get out of this darkness, at least.
What Dimitia was working on last
was stabilizing the orbit so we maintain that new path.
Granted the moon,
is apparently moving, but this should correct us enough
that we maintain our sort of cyclical trajectory
long enough to figure out how this, we can get off the station
or we can get help.
When three hours comes up, we'll be facing the earth,
and if we have a shot to get back, it'll be then.
I mean, I'm sorry to get dark here,
but do we even really wanna get back?
We've all been seeing where the moon's going.
I feel like maybe the safest answer
should somehow try to get people here.
Until what?
We have no supplies.
How do we live on this thing?
I don't know. That's why I feel like that's what we need to figure out.
I mean, if the moon's going to slam into the earth, that's not a viable option.
Standard operating procedure for these types of events is to just follow straight protocol,
go with the navigational systems, and continue the mission until we figure out an alternative.
The way these things usually work, one of the other...
Leslie was telling me about this,
but the orbit is anomalous, obviously.
The moon moving toward Earth is bizarre and crazy,
but these things, because of the massive size
of these bodies, tend to self-correct.
It's much less likely the moon will actually collide
with the Earth than it will simply find
some new oblong path as it eventually reaches equilibrium.
Our best chance of survival is getting back to Earth,
and there's a perfectly good chance
Everyone on Earth will survive pending whatever else
might be going on down there.
I've been hearing some weird shit on the comms,
but if we stay here, we're going to die.
It's a guarantee.
We have to try and get off the station.
You mentioned the Leslie.
So what role does Leslie serve on the station?
Leslie is the captain of the ISS for the American team.
Got it, the captain of the American team.
Okay, all right.
Great.
Great. So, and, you know, that is something that Leslie has absolutely told you.
I mean, it is Leslie's job to make sure that no one makes any rash discussions at this point.
But even Leslie has mentioned that at that point, the oblong orbit of the moon at this stage,
will definitely wreck havoc upon Earth for sure, you know, going crazy with tidal floods
and maybe even causing some unnecessary earthquakes
that have been dormant from so long
because the Earth's magnetic field is off.
But that is their professional opinion
that everything should settle in at some point.
So it's better than staying here.
Well, there were 4 billion people in Earth
and there were 40 in space.
So I think our chances down there are a little bit better.
Yeah.
Okay, next order of the Earth.
business I suppose would then be to see what we can do about this module you came in on to
see if it's even viable to try and take that off the station. All right so let's say for
the purposes of this that that module has that brought you in has been originally
offloaded and garnished for supplies but there is definitely a chance because
of trying not to use all of the power there is a chance that there could
be more stuff inside of it because you've been essentially kept it on lockdown this entire time.
So if you want to go investigate to see if there might be some extra supplies inside of there,
that would be great. I just want to know who is going to cycle the airlock to go inside.
I know.
Yeah.
Honestly, she's been on like twice as many EVAs as I have, so.
So it's time to get an EVA suit.
Yep.
And it's time to go into the module.
All right.
Are you going out through Piausk,
or are you going out through a different,
because the Piazc airlock and Prius,
that is one of the areas where you can do do docs.
It's Rasmid and Pyrriss,
who are the areas where supplies come in at.
So there's basically two different areas
that you can have supplies come into
that you could evade out of to go to the module.
So, oh, in fact,
Let's make it this.
The reason you have to EDA out
is because at some point
there was an emergency system
and it just disconnected
and it's been managed to staying with you
but it's just kind of ever so
it's maintaining orbit with you
but it's a way.
So you gotta pull the module in.
I like that better.
Okay.
Yeah, cool.
No pressure.
No pressure.
But you can't drag it in
you have to just go into it.
Okay.
You know, so you can carry what you can carry.
Okay, so I'm putting on the suit
and then having to go out there
and then carry things back?
Yeah.
Okay.
Yeah.
All right.
Yeah, let's do that.
Does it matter which one we go through?
It doesn't matter.
No, an airlock's an airlock for the purposes of our story.
Okay.
I'm sure the people who are ISS nerds will yell at me.
One one for me.
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
So.
Do I have enough juice in my camera battery to film this?
You tell me.
I don't know, honestly, but I'm going to.
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Hit it a couple times because, you know, that's how you get things to turn on.
And I wasn't supposed to be the cameraman, but that's fine.
and turn on my camera and just kind of watch as best I can.
What's going on right now?
If you notice, she's highly trained
in the spacewalk apparatus with the EVA suit
that was provided by our stockholders
and it's made at Michigan related factories.
It looks really good,
and these are the kind of exciting things
you can do aboard the ISS.
Now, before I go out, do I know how much time I have?
To go in and out?
To go in and out.
So you definitely with the air supply that you have
this multi-layered EBA suit.
You, see, this is where I have,
this is where I have to get reality checked a little bit.
So I'm gonna be very general
and say that you are in the,
you're more in the half an hour hour category
than you are in then like the minutes category.
Yeah, because no proper EBA can be done in minutes.
It probably, I've heard that there are spacewalks
that can take up to a full hour.
So we're going to work off of those assumptions.
since we're all just playing astronaut for the day.
Okay.
Okay.
Testing my communication system.
I'm gonna have comms open, I hear you,
you're coming through fine, just take your time.
Okay.
Are you going out the same airlock that was,
the one thing I think it is important,
are you going out the same airlock that was mentioned
that had the red alert on it?
Or are you going out the other one?
I would say the other one.
Good idea.
Red alerts are, right?
So you cycle out and please narrate to me
how you accomplish this spacewalk to get to the
the module effectively.
So there's really, like, I'm just walking along the outside of a, of the module itself.
Yes.
So I'm not like out just like.
Using a little, you tell me, because this is part of your story as well too.
So whatever I've given, feel free to elaborate, expand upon, or, well, not disregard.
So.
You're taking over story.
Okay.
I'm just going to try to run over as fast as I can.
Yeah.
Just using your personal momentum.
Yes.
as you're walking with the magnetic boots.
Yes.
Okay.
While keeping communications.
I don't know.
I've never done this before.
You're going to walk me through this.
Okay, no, you're doing fine.
Just remember, I know it's been a while.
Remember the training.
Okay.
You're closing in now.
You're going to want to reach out and grab.
I see it.
Yes, grab the hatch there.
Uh-huh.
Okay, good.
Now, if you can work the door,
there's going to be a release of air
when you open it because it's detached,
but hold on and then you can just pull yourself inside.
Okay, okay.
As you open and you cycle through this detached module,
you go into it, you do see something out of the corner of your eye.
It seems to be something, a shape, a shadow that's kind of,
it is pitch black, but you do have the starlight
in the little bits of the moonlight that is giving you
a little bit of illumination in the void of space that you are in,
but something is reflecting light.
What the fuck is that?
Everything okay?
I think so.
Now, I don't know, it just must be something I saw.
I don't know, it's nothing, it's nothing, it's fine.
Jen, you sure?
It's just something caught my eye.
I don't, I'm not sure what it is.
Turn the camera over here.
Magnetic boots brought to you by Myers industry
are the finest in the industry,
and they can always be counted on.
even in outer space.
I told you.
Let's keep it going.
So you get inside of the hatch
and you do see that
while you had an opportunity
to unload some supplies
when the module first was docked into it
and brought into the station,
that it detached
during the whole incident, we'll say.
And since then, you've not been
bothering to want to do this up to this point.
So you do go in there and you do see that there's about,
you know, I'd still
less than a quarter
of the original supplies that are still
in there, but you
get to carry what you carry.
So what do you focus on?
Food and water.
Great. You grab as much food and water as you could
physically hold onto, and
you walk back into the module.
You cycle through,
and you pull yourself up into
the EVA suit, and you're back now
inside of the
airlock module.
Wow, what a heroic moment. Genevieve, tell us what that was like.
What? I'm sorry. I don't. I don't like being on camera.
It was, it was, things are, there was supplies in there.
Yeah, guys, bigger problems right now. I don't, I know.
Yeah, really? We don't have no time with it. You are the hero. And again, we have another adventure here on the International Space Station.
Casta crew is always on top of board and make sure they get the job done, folks.
I can't fucking believe this.
Are we letting Sives on here again?
Really good.
Okay.
What do you got?
I just brought back some food and water.
I don't know what technical equipment we might need
or they might have.
So I don't know if we need to go back out there,
but for now at least we have food and water.
Now, I really should have asked while you're out there.
Okay, when you were in the module,
if you were paying attention,
there would have been a panel to your right.
Even in low power states,
it will give you a read out of the current status
of the ship insofar as the onboard batteries go.
Do you know if it read green?
It would be just letters in green.
Were you able to see that?
Why don't you roll to see if you're observant enough?
This is a conflict that could be both in bad.
So I'm all for it.
Conflict, can you do the conflict shake.
All right?
Two for me.
I will use this opportunity to also take narrative rights
or try to roll for narrative rights
and I actually have a lot of dice in this circumstance
You have four right now, so I get six.
Let's see if I get more than two sixes,
which I do not, I get one six.
So it is still up to you, Genev.
Tell the story.
I saw that there was a green light,
but something's odd.
There was only half of the supplies that were in there.
I mean, we might have inventoried wrong
when you guys first docked.
I don't know.
The manifest is usually correct,
but yes, absolutely there could have been a few.
I mean, is it possible?
that our missing navigator may have absconded with some supplies?
I did see something.
I mean, it's silly, I don't know.
I don't know.
It's, I just saw like a thing,
and it just caught my eye for just like a second, but come on.
Okay, it's all, this has been a rough couple of weeks.
Space debris.
Yeah, it's getting to our head a little bit.
This is not abnormal.
We've trained for this, it's okay.
Sure, sure.
The module has power.
That's what matters.
Yes.
which means we could use it to try and get off the station,
but we would need an incoming return trajectory,
typically supplied planet side,
and we'd obviously need to be able to get in there and start it.
That usually requires it being attached to the ISS.
There are ways to make that work,
but not with what we currently have with us.
Okay, so what are the next steps?
So to be something to kind of keep into it,
I do see more stuff.
There is an opportunity here to maybe reattach the module.
You do have a remote manipulation arm.
That's on the station.
And it's usually used for very minute techniques,
but for the purposes of our story,
we could use it in order to basically either attach
or reattach the module,
or at least get it to a situation
where it's easier to get to and from it to resupply.
Not being said, the remote.
arm uses power.
We do have the remote arm that assists with EVAs and docking.
We could use that to reattach the module
or just try and guide it back and then attach it manually,
but it's power hungry and that means
it would need to temporarily divert power
from the only other system we have running right now,
which is life support.
And more importantly, do you wanna sit and enjoy this food
that you just found as well too?
So more water, there it is.
How long do you think we'd have to?
have to be without life support?
I mean, is it sustainable?
I mean, it wouldn't negate life support.
It wouldn't, we wouldn't necessarily run out of air
or water cycling, but what it means is that
it's going to operate in a low power state
for the time it takes maybe five to 10 minutes,
tops, hopefully.
If we only run one carbon dioxide filter
instead of the normal two, the air will become lighter.
We may become lightheaded, but we could turn it back on after
and that's the most minimal drain on the power.
As long as we all do it before we pass out.
Yes, the only difficulty being the fact
that we now don't have sun access.
The solar panels can't recharge
while we're on this side of the moon.
Got it.
So if we drain it too much,
the life support will not last
until we come around the other side of the moon.
It's mathy.
But this might be our only shot to bring that back though.
It almost definitely is our only shot, I think.
So at this point then, if the plan is to,
to use the remote manipulation arm
in order to get closer into it.
This circumstance, I guess who would like
to remote pilot the arm?
Well, I'd like to take a second actually.
We did find food and water.
I'd like to enjoy some of this for a moment.
And then before we actually try and reattach the module,
I'd like to take a tally of who is still on this ship.
Oh yes.
Something happened to Dimitri, whatever that was.
and we haven't heard from anyone else.
Leslie's been sleeping today.
So I'd like to make sure everyone else is still okay
and they're on board of this plan.
Okay, do you want me to go around and take inventory?
I mean, I can just kind of pose
as if I'm getting statements from everyone
about their life so we don't freak anyone out.
Yeah, if you can check crew quarters and the galley,
just to make sure everyone is there and accounted for
and also knows that we're going to be trying to get the module running.
Okay, got it.
So I'm gonna start going around through the ship
as I've known it in the approximately four to five weeks
that I've been here.
Right.
And just let everyone know that for our comprehensive reports
that we are taking back to Earth,
I would like a statement from them
as to what their daily life on the International Space Station is like.
Great.
So I'm going to say that beyond Dimitri and Leslie,
there is one other person on the space station with you.
And that is it.
And everyone else has succumbed or fallen in one form or another
in various different ways.
Yes.
Because, I mean, we're presuming at this point that,
one, two, three, four, five, six,
making a lot of assumptions here at this point.
But yes, I'm going to say that there's only one other person alive
who's left on the station right now, presumably alive.
and who is that?
The person left on the space station is...
Besides Dimitri and Leslie.
Is Annabelle.
Annabelle?
Yeah.
And what does Annabelle do on the station?
Annabelle is pretty far down on the comms team.
So she's on the comms team, but she's more entry level,
as far as entry level, gets to ISS.
So she's one of the best at which she's.
She does, but she's not high up the food chain.
So I'm going to say that you have not spoken to Annabelle in a while,
and it's because her outlook on this situation has taken her down a downward spiral,
so intense and so incredibly debilitating,
that you've actually had to sedate her a few times.
Jesus.
Because it has been so tough, violent outbursts, yelling,
screaming and she was not at all
claustrophobic in any of the tests leading up into this
she was a very reasonable grounded engineer
but as soon as the prospect of not coming back to earth
was potentially a reality for her it was like a switch
just clicked on and suddenly
she wasn't Annabelle anymore
some wild feral thing
that just wanted to get out of its cage.
So with that said,
are you going to go check on her?
Yeah.
Yeah, and so as far as everybody else
that's disappeared from the space station
in one way or another, as you said,
am I potentially going around room to room
and kind of finding bodies?
Or are they just not there?
My role to see what we find?
It's so dark.
Well, I mean, how else?
Just disappearing from the space station.
No, no, I agree.
And I'm actually just trying to decide,
I'm just trying to decide how much,
how much I want to take control of this
and how much I want to leave to this to a conflict role.
Yes, I know what's going to happen.
With or without the success.
Okay, we didn't lose any dice and we have one six.
Actually, this is your territory.
This is 100% your territory, Stacy.
So you get to tell me exactly how this goes down.
And I am more than happy to help you in this circumstance.
But let me know, tell me who is left.
And you have some assumptions about what happened to Dimitri.
So was it a joined effort?
Or did he make a decision on his own?
Well, I start going around from,
from door to door and, you know, sleeping quarters and offices,
because I don't know if people are choosing to work or choosing to in this time,
spend time in their rooms.
And knocking on doors, I'm not hearing a response.
So the first time I knock on a door and don't hear any response,
I let it be.
I figure they're sleeping.
I move to the next one.
Knock on the door, don't get any response.
Try to knock again on the same door.
Excuse me.
Hi.
I'm here reporting for the International Space Station,
and I need a statement from you, are you available?
Okay, well, uh, we'll be in the comms office if you change your mind.
Move on to the third room.
Knock on the door.
Uh, hello.
Hi, this is Stacey Martell reporting for the International Space Station.
Are you available to make a comment?
Go away.
Hello?
Why are you?
Um, if you could just let me in for one.
I'll be very quick and not interrupt you at all, but I would also love to fill you in on some of the goings-on here at the space station.
No, no. The answer is no. I'm not letting you in. I'm not letting you talk to me. Just go find your own room.
Do you need a shipment of resources, perhaps?
What are you a fucking robot? Shipment of resources? No.
Do I know if this is Annabelle's room?
I don't know. Is it Annabelle's room?
I'm not trying to pass it on to you.
This is your success.
Sure, sure, sure, sure.
Narrative rights.
Is that you, Annabel?
I wasn't sure if this was your room.
I'm going around room to room,
but honestly, I'm here to help,
and you may have noticed
that it's been very dark here lately.
Yeah, no, it's been dark.
The world is dark.
Everything is dark.
And yes, I'm fine.
I just don't want you to come in right now.
Okay, okay, then I won't come in.
Thank you.
At all.
If there were a way to find some light,
but it would require your help, would you be interested?
The pause is enough to maybe be a shrug.
Maybe.
Okay.
We're working on something really promising right now.
Okay.
And if we need your help, would it be all right if we come back?
We can talk through the door if you're more comfortable that way.
Sure. Just, I don't know. Just whatever you want to do, go for it.
Okay. Keep up hope. We've got this.
Stacey, whoever you've got, bring them back to the airlock right now.
We have something going on out here. We need you here.
Okay. I'm going to really quickly just run through the rest of the rooms and knock hello, not callow, and just mark down who's not there.
and I feel like I do get one of the rooms.
The door is open, and I find absolutely no one in there at all.
No one in there at all.
It's Leslie's room.
And they're not in their office at the moment.
It could be somewhere else in the station,
but at least all the sleeping areas that you've checked.
Do you've heard from Annabel?
Okay.
And that's about what you know.
So then I'm going to circle back to Annabelle's room.
And if the offer for help is still available.
We could use you now.
Oh, God.
Jeez, that was fucking quick.
Sorry.
All right, yeah, just let me get dressed.
I'll be out in a second.
Sure, no worries.
On the com.
Be there in a second, bringing Annabelle.
No one else is here.
No, what?
Okay, whatever.
Just brief us when you're back.
Got it.
So you, Stacey, come back,
unless you want to wait for Annabel to come into it.
I'm going to wait for Annabel.
Okay.
Yeah.
It takes a few minutes, longer than it should, to get dressed.
but you kind of watch as Annabelle,
she has like shoulder length,
the dirty blonde hair,
and she has just bags under her eyes,
like she's been crying for,
God knows how long.
And she kind of pulls up her flight suit
over this just, you know,
dark tank top that she's wearing.
And she zips up and goes,
okay, let's go.
For the record,
let's just leave most of that questioning footage
of the B-roll on,
you know, put on the cutting floor.
100%.
Absolutely, yeah.
It's just Annie?
Where is everyone else?
Didn't answer their doors?
Danny, they're gone, all of them.
Wait, what do you mean?
I'm sorry, gone?
Why would they stay?
Where would they go?
This girl's been highly sedated.
Maybe she's a little bit loopy from the travel.
No, no, it's a good story.
I mean, what, you just want to stay here?
heard you talking for a while ago, and you're right.
Why go down?
Why even bother at this point?
Hey, we want to go too, but we want to fucking live?
Right.
Yeah.
Good for you, Danny.
I'm glad you've got this gumption to turn this tin can into your salvation.
Okay.
Maybe it's time I go get some more sedatives.
Annabel, you might not be feeling.
as good as you thought.
Don't fucking touch me, Joseph.
She's fine, she's fine.
Don't get anywhere close.
I watched Leslie go to bed last night.
I saw her get in her cabin.
Where is she?
Not in her cabin.
That was the one door that I did open.
I was terrified.
I would find a corpse.
She was trying to go do something
in the hydroponics lab.
Last I heard from her,
whatever it's worth.
Close to your lab, Genevieve.
Hey, hey, that's worth a lot.
Yeah, yeah, well,
thank you.
What did you need for me?
I mean, you said you needed my help for something.
Yes, we're trying to get the command,
that the module they came in on
reattached to the space station so we can try
and jettison off this thing.
Right.
Get back planet side.
Yeah, it dislodged in the thing.
Sure.
You are the robotics expert here,
so I need a little bit of assistance.
I can jerry-rig the thing to work,
but I'm not great at control
I just need a bit of help.
It's gonna take power.
We can give it power temporarily.
I crunch the numbers.
We can spare maybe 10 minutes without draining life support
before we hit the sun again.
All right, well, I mean.
However, I don't, I know how this sounds.
I was looking over the schematics and trying to compare them
to make sure the module was in the right orientation
to reattach to the station.
And I did,
It could be anything.
I saw something out there.
And it looked like what you said you saw.
Floating space debris probably couldn't.
It might be, it might be.
Humanoid or mechanical?
Look, I could, I'm not trying to cause a thing,
but I could have sworn it was moving.
Do you want me to bring it into with the arm, Danny?
I'd rather not do that,
but at last I saw it went around the other side of the mod.
What?
It could have, all I know is that space debris
doesn't change your trajectory
while it's floating around.
Okay. All right, well, whatever it is,
there's not much we can do about it,
so if you just want me to pull in the module closer
so you can resupply easier, I'll do that.
Yes, let's just reconnect the module,
but we lock down the airlock
until everything is secured, and we know for sure,
know for sure.
So this is the point where I'm gonna have you do the conflict roll.
I think in this circumstance, since you're manipulating the power,
let's just see how the whole ordeal goes
because I'm not gonna roll for Annabelle at the moment.
This is a conflict and you took the lead on it.
So I'll take the one one, but you can have the one six.
Oh my God.
If you saw something and I saw something,
We are potentially pulling that something in towards us.
I'm sure you want to do this.
It's a risk right now that we have to take.
We can lock the air lock down from the inside,
so it's inaccessible from the exterior.
The function exists.
We're not supposed to activate it
because if someone's on an EVA that gets shut out,
but we can do that.
So let's go into this,
because I personally feel like
that this whole process
will probably exist.
You did get a success onto it.
So using Annabel, you're able to
reroute the power to get
into the actual module, and she does use
the robotic arm. It comes to life.
You can hear
as it slowly starts to manipulate and
move its way down. The module, which is
still just slightly spinning,
but still staying adjacent to where it is,
you look through the security
cameras as she's using to remote
manipulate this arm. She grabs
a hold of the module, and
slowly starts to guide it ever so slowly back to where it is. And as you are getting it close to
the airlock, you know, it's taking time. But Annabelle seems to be savoring every single moment,
guiding it and moving it back in. Annabelle, come on. It's delicate work. Just let me do it.
We're doing a great job. And she puts the module back in place, using almost up the entire 10 minutes
to get it into place.
And at that point, the cameras have pivoted enough
and you have moved into the light enough
that you can see the thing that is floating into the breeze
and it is an EVA suit.
That is just dangling by a single cord.
That seems to be outside of the airlock
that you did not go out of.
It's much more distinct using the camera's robot arm.
Dimitri?
Yeah, probably.
Probably.
Turn the camera off.
I don't know why he'd take a fucking EVA.
Okay, whatever.
Okay, I'm gonna, hold on.
Leave him there.
I'm gonna re-up power back to life support
now that it's attached.
It does.
You probably have a 30 second buffer
rather than a 10 minute buffer now.
Okay, so with the trajectory that we put the ISS on,
we should have just enough life support
to get us into sunlight again
so we can recharge the batteries.
And we have the module attached now.
I go now. Yes, you can just be, there's something going on here. Just be careful, okay?
Yeah. Stay in your bunk if you could or stay with us. But let's not get too adventurous on the station.
I know this is a difficult time, but we're here for each other where all we have.
Oh, I appreciate that Genevieve, but I don't really think that's going to matter in the end.
So good luck with your module.
I hope whatever is in there gives you something to hold on to.
Until then, I'll just, I'll be where I'll be.
Thank you.
If you see Leslie, can you let her know to come find us or hit the comms or something?
Yeah, if I see Leslie, I'll let you know.
Okay, thanks.
And Annabel, just as calmly as if it was four weeks ago when nothing was wrong,
just makes her space walk back into her room.
Hey, we got the job done.
Okay?
Hey, if we see anything, get the camera rolling.
Okay, yeah.
Okay, this whole plan about getting off the station
when we reach Earth orbit again.
It really depends on Leslie being here.
I assume she'd still be in her bunk.
but we still need her in the module.
Some Annabelle said hydroponics, right?
Hydroponics, yeah.
If she's in there, we need to go find her.
I don't know why she's wandering around the station,
but we got to track her down.
Okay.
Are we going to do anything about Demetri's suicide mission?
If he's wandering out there for as long as I think he has...
It's done.
I'm fairly certain he chose to be out there.
Okay.
We're not going to call it suicide mission.
We'll call it sacrificed during the operation.
technical failure in the suit.
Sure, sure.
People will know what happened here.
I got shareholders to report to, okay?
So when we make it back down there,
if you ever want to have any more supplies put up here,
you're going to follow the protocol in the SOP.
You really think this mission is going to survive this?
I don't have time for this.
Or if we can get some kind of message to them down there,
maybe they can send us more supplies.
If the plan A doesn't work, you know, there's always a plan B.
That's exactly right.
We're going to be okay.
So does this mean, Joseph, that you're going to be the one to go find Leslie and the hydroponics?
Are you going to leave that to the engineers and the scientists?
I will go find Leslie and the hydroponics.
I'll go find her, okay?
Since you guys want to sit here and figure out our next move, we have to save energy,
and we can all move because there's not enough oxygen.
Only one of us needs to take it up, or more carbon dioxide will hit the atmosphere
and we'll all be passed out and not going anywhere.
Good call.
You my guest.
So you basically move to where some of the other laboratories are.
There's the European laboratories that are on the other side of the station.
So you basically do the clung move as you grab a hold of each one of the sides
and make this maneuver getting to the other area where do you know that the hydroponics and Genevieve's lab
with all the microorganisms are currently at.
and you get closer into the lab and you can see that Leslie is in there.
And they seem to be hunched over something at the moment.
They are currently look like they're deep into an observation of some time
as you kind of get closer to where Leslie is.
But, you mean, at this point, you probably even have another full,
call it 15 feet.
And I'm looking through a window?
No, you're looking through the doorways.
Through the doorway?
Yeah.
Is it a closed doorway?
No, most of them are open.
Most of the portals are open.
Unless there's some kind of catastrophic failure,
I'm going to say most of the portals are open in the circumstances.
Leslie, hi.
Leslie, my name's Joseph Myers.
I know.
You look up and you look as Leslie turns around,
and you see there's blood covering her mouth
at the moment, and she seems to have the corpse
of one of your specimen rats
in her hand at the moment,
and there's a chunk that's been pulled out of it at the moment.
Leslie, I'm going to grab the portal door
to the hydroponics and slam it shut immediately.
You slam it shut.
Let's see if you do it in time.
No.
Three sixes.
Three sixes.
Joseph is the main.
So Joseph is you grab, please.
I mean, I guess at this point I have a whole bunch of dice
that I can potentially roll.
So due to the zero gravity and she's chewing in, no?
No, there's no way I gotta go.
Due to the zero gravity as she's chewing
through the rat, these coagulated red bubbles
are kind of floating through the air,
and it's kind of, it's weird because it looks like
it's in slow motion, and her eyes are bloodshot
with purple creases running through the white of her eyes.
As I slam the door, she presses her face up,
right up against the glass and vomits against it.
Oh, and it just lifts up,
and you can see the mixture of the mucus,
as well as the disheveled rat corpses,
just kind of laid out,
and she doesn't slam it very hard,
but she throws her body against it for a moment
before she pushes away,
and just kind of goes,
as you watch her through the portal,
through the smears of the yellow and red,
just gore that's there,
and kind of goes back to the cages again.
I kind of look down for a second
And I check
I look down the hallways
And I see them all not paying attention
And
There's a couple emergency systems
That can burn out anything in the room
Oh, like a contamination fail safe
And
Since no one's looking
I put my hand on it
Well, that's going to involve you rerouting that power
and definitely since you are not the engineer of this,
I'm going to have to ask for a conflict role on that as well too.
I didn't touch it.
Just put my hand on it.
Oh, on it.
Just put my hand on it.
Oh, okay.
So I haven't made the decision yet, but I'm contemplating.
Will you let me know if you choose to hit that or not?
Cool, cool, cool, cool.
Cool, cool.
All right.
I think at this point, Genevieve, Danny, Stacy.
Everything okay with you guys down there?
Everything okay?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Have you found her yet?
I'm working on it right now.
Just some with the door.
Okay, hurry up please.
This place doesn't a mansion.
You sound weird.
You don't sound like you're trying to sell me something.
It's the oxygen.
I think it's starting to kick in.
He just is weird.
Slow breaths, you got this.
Thank, Stacey.
Genevieve, it is your lab that he's making me next.
Yeah, I...
I'm going to go down there to check it.
All right. So, Joseph, as you're sitting,
looking at this, knowing that you're going to have to reroute the power
before you hit this button, which should...
I mean, it is the proverbial red button.
It's not...
And by the way, I should, for the record, say it's not one of those.
We're going to cleanse the room. It's a detach module.
Airlocked up. And then just jettison it out,
kind of a situation.
But you hear the...
Pong, boom, pung of clearly the wrongs
as Genevieve is making her strong velocity.
And you can hear her more than really see her
as she's coming up behind you at the moment.
Do we hear the thudding as well?
The thudding?
Yeah, I've heard from this far away at this stage.
Dr. Genevieve.
Yeah, you come across into it.
What the fuck is happening?
What's happening?
The door.
What is on the door?
Look, I don't know what's happening in there,
but we can't tell anyone what's going on right now.
What is gonna kind of like move my hand?
I kind of move her, move on my way to check out what's happening.
I will tell you that the first thing you see is the gore,
the bread, blood and the vomit.
That's all across the window at the moment.
I think, I think she's gonna
gone. I think she's, I know, I think she's gone. We can get rid of her. We can pull the button.
We can, I don't know if we have the power. I don't know if we should. What happened to her?
I don't know. I went to the door and... Did you see her? Did you say anything?
I said, said her name and she, she was eating a rat and she vomited on the window and she's convulsing
and floating through the air. I don't think it's a good idea. We open the door right now, doctor. I don't
I don't think it's a good idea.
I think at this point, raised voices, yes.
Yeah, so I'm gonna also converge on the altercation.
Jesus Christ.
What's going on?
You know, as you can see, probably.
Fuck, I'm also gonna go to the window
and see what I can see through it in the door.
I mean, you peer through it, but it has coagulated
and has run, it's made it smear at this point.
You have an opaque window at this stage, opaque with blood and form.
Is that Leslie?
I think it's what's left her.
What did you fucking do?
I didn't do anything, okay?
I came over here and she was floating in the air,
twitching and vomiting and eating part of the animals.
So you locked her?
That's a medical emergency.
If I didn't lock her in there, she's out here with us, okay?
Fuck, Jesus, come on.
I'm going to open the door.
All right, give me those dice.
I'm running to the lab.
All right, to the other end.
To mine.
It's in the same.
Oh, you're gonna go into the lab with Leslie?
Oh, it's the same lab?
It's the same module.
I'm opening it up.
Both doing it.
I am hiding behind you.
Actually, we haven't seen a role from Genevieve in a bit,
so if that was your choice, because it's your lab and your own door.
If you two do this, you're in full control.
Oh, man, okay, look, that's another day of sixes.
Tell me, tell me what happens.
I unlock the door and I'm like trying not to slip over vomit
and like covering just.
It's less slipping and the more than the fact.
Oh, that's right, that's right, gravity.
There's the gravity.
You're avoiding it.
And the smell, oh God, the smell.
Oh, fuck.
And you do hear the sound of eating as just something.
Close the door, doctor.
I go, close the door, doctor.
I just want to grab my, all your specimens.
All my specimens and my journals and everything.
You can definitely see as you're going and running
for the specimens and getting what you can
and trying to grab your organisms.
you can see that clearly some of it has been smashed, broken.
You do find your notes, your laptop, especially, the one that's there.
And as you get close to it, because of the proximity of these labs all next to each other,
it's only like a station away from where Leslie is, after having finished another one,
as now just taking it.
And you can see this one is still alive, and it's squeaky.
She kind of just, like, looks at it, not looking at it, but like past it,
and has her head over it.
And you see that as she just pulls
and you watch as bits of skin and tissue pull away
as you can hear the crunch of bone
and she kind of just looks at you and she starts to speak.
But it is not a language you know.
And it is not a language you've ever heard.
Close the door, Doctor.
And you grab your stuff and she lunges for you.
Oh, God.
Doctor, look out.
Running out.
No.
One's, no sixes.
This scene ends.
She lunges for you, and she grasps just enough of your coat
to pull you and prevent you from making a quick escape to the door.
Nine candles, nine truths.
Good news, you have nine dice again.
We need to speak some truths about the story.
The first is the world is dark.
That is for certain.
Genevieve, since your...
Your conflict role was the one that failed.
You get to speak the first truth.
I made it out the door.
You made it out the door.
We're going clockwise, so Joseph, you are next.
I slammed, I grabbed the door
and tried to close it behind her.
You tried to close it behind her.
Yes, great.
Tried.
Stacey.
I maneuvered myself around Joseph
and was able to close the door.
the rest of the way that he wasn't able to close it.
You finished closing the door.
I finished closing the door.
Her fingertips were in the crease.
Your truth's already gone though, but that's great.
We can get into it.
You dropped some of your organisms
in the process of getting out through the door.
Upon the door closing, Leslie disappeared from view
into an adjacent lab.
Leslie went to a causeway.
Okay. Great.
Oh, do we keep going?
Yes. You're number six now.
There's a noise coming from down the hall.
Okay. Seven.
I noticed that the other door to the causeway
where Leslie was headed is open.
We can't explain it, but all of us feel strangely drawn
to the noises coming out of that room.
The sound?
Oh, that's better.
I like what you're doing with the sound.
The moon is starting to crack.
We pick up our story just as quickly as it ended
as you are outside of the laboratory module door,
having just slammed it in Leslie's face.
But in the map in your mind,
you do know that there is another way around.
There is another way out of this laboratory.
And Joseph, you know that door is.
Danny, we gotta get the door closed over there.
Okay, yeah, we can probably beat her there.
Hang on, let's go.
I want to move through the station.
Okay, move through the station.
Go as quick as you can't try not to hit your head on anything.
Frantic spacewalks.
Okay, good.
One for me, the rest for you.
So, I hurriedly, frantically move through the crawlways, the walkways of the
grabbing and pulling myself.
I've done this a thousand times before, yes.
Redirect momentum.
To get to that other door where she might be coming through,
and I arrive there, grab the door ready to close it,
knowing that she should have gotten to this point
at exactly the same time I entered her just before.
Yeah.
As I'm closing it, I realize she's not here.
She's not here.
I don't see her in the labs at all.
Got it.
I still close the door, but I don't know where she is.
All right, there we go.
go and then you report back to the group.
I got the door shut, but uh.
Lock it, Danny.
You know, it's all locked down, but she wasn't,
she wasn't what?
She's not in the labs.
She's not in the fucking lab, Danny?
It's impossible that she got there before I did.
Okay.
It's double the length through the labs.
Okay, well, she obviously was influenced by something.
Maybe she's moving slower.
Okay, that's the other thing that I wanted.
We heard her.
Didn't we?
I don't know what that was.
Down the hall?
Yeah, yeah, I thought I heard it too.
Did we all hear that?
I thought it was just me.
At that point, you can actually feel more than here.
You can just feel this shock wave, just that kind of like rustles and moves and just vibrates the space station in a way that when a,
um, and an airplane gets turbulence, when it hits,
hit some choppy air and it just shakes it ever so lightly
as you come into it and you peer out through a portal hole
and you can see a crack, an apocalyptic crack
as the moon is just cracked like an egg
as it's spider webs across its southern hemisphere.
What the fuck?
Okay, okay, problem solve.
Are we still thinking?
it will have an orbital route around the Earth?
That would mess all that up, right?
The moon is breaking.
What is happening?
It doesn't matter, it doesn't matter.
We still have no choice.
I don't know what to do about this right now,
but we still have to-
Leslie was eating rats.
I am aware.
Tink-Ting-Ting-Ting-Ting, tink, tink, tink.
Start hearing debris from the moon's small pieces of sand,
Just a small, little tiny clicks, just tiny pebbles.
It just seemed to be cascading against the side of the ship.
This station is designed to withstand space debris moving
at over a thousand miles an hour.
As long as we don't collide into the main body of the moon,
we will be okay.
The trajectory is set.
The orbit will hold.
The moon's gravity is still there.
We're going to be okay until we get Earthside.
Once we're facing the Earth, we can try and get down there.
I mean, will the Earth be okay?
If it's not, there's nothing we can do.
We can't just duct tape the moon back together.
You're right. You're right, we can't.
Okay, it's okay.
It's fine.
But, Leslie,
I wanted to mention,
this is not actually the first time that I've seen that.
Wait, people eating rats?
It was...
It was what?
We had another guy once earlier.
We called it just like a psychotic break.
We assumed that he just went stir crazy,
I don't know, cabin fever or something.
You talking about Derek Marcus?
But yes.
How do you know about that?
Because I'm part of this company,
and Derek Marcus was set back to Earth for a reason.
We were told he was sick.
We weren't told he was eating rats.
and vomiting blood.
We thought the symptoms could manifest any number of ways.
Weird things can happen up here.
It's desolate.
It's isolated.
But Leslie is now doing the same thing.
And the things that she was saying,
that that fucking gobbledygook, she was saying,
Derek was talking the same way.
And he was sent to Earth.
Do you know what happened to Derek Marcus when you sent him back?
Derek Marcus laid in the lab for two weeks
until his body disintegrated.
Jesus.
How do you put a spin on that?
Okay, maybe it's viral.
Maybe there's some kind of pathogen on the station.
We have to quarantine Annabel.
We do.
Oh my God, fucking Annabelle.
We do.
Do you think she may already be contaminated?
She acted pretty fucking weird to me.
Yeah, but like not eating.
Rats weird. Not yet.
It does a chance.
I don't want to take that chance.
Well, to be fair, she is kind of self-quarantining at the moment.
I don't think if we ask her to come out of her cabin that she will.
Small little droplet of blood floats by us all, and I kind of like move my head.
Don't touch the blood.
Don't touch anything.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I mean, actually, I would probably go so far as to say that, you know, the small droplet of blood, they're micro.
They're tiny.
They're like beads.
and you're not too sure where and how and when they came from.
They are out here at the moment, though.
Sit, sit, sit, sit.
Okay, let's just get to Annabelle.
Make sure she's still in her quarters.
Check on her.
Make sure everything's okay.
I'm not too comfortable with locking a person in her cabin if we don't need to.
Let's just have a look.
See how she's doing.
If you saw, we saw, you wouldn't call her a person.
if she has this.
If this is even a thing.
We're speculating right now.
At least just to warn her, if anything.
So you all begin making a very slow
and purposeful move as you get through the station
and the place feels so much smaller
than it did previously.
every little corner, every shadow,
in this darkened, red light illuminated space
just seems to scream that something is there
in the corner waiting for you.
And this oppressing, deepening darkness
that is constantly surround you
is what is on your mind as you,
especially, Genevieve, can just hear that voice,
that jesting,
just piercing, deepening, darkened voice that is in your mind as you get closer to where Annabelle's quarters are.
And you just hear screaming as you get closer, just screaming as you get closer, just screaming as loud as they possibly can Annabelle's voice.
And she's just yelling,
why, why, why?
Annabelle?
Annabelle!
Watch the ears.
But the, you hear the,
it's just here as the continued cries of her just yelling into,
just why, why?
There's no reason.
It's just, oh, God.
And there's this delirium in her voice that you can hear
as just she seems to be crying or lying.
There's some bridge in between there,
that's so hard to tell, but you know there's a porthole
in her room that she can see out
and you know that she probably has seen
the same thing that you have.
What do you do?
Okay, we need to sedate her again.
She's going to be a problem.
Good luck with that.
Okay.
I mean, do we though?
Can we just maybe leave her in her cabin?
That's where she wants to be.
I am totally on board with that agreement.
Where she can hurt her.
I'm also trying to look out for her right now.
Better her than us, Danny.
We're still alive on here.
We still got a chance.
It doesn't have to be a dichotomy.
It doesn't have to be one or the other.
They're not mutually exclusive.
No, no, no, but we can find some compromise.
I mean, she said she wants to be left alone,
and we brought up that maybe she's already contaminated.
If we go in, we would just contaminate ourselves.
We have to look out for the greater good here.
She's exactly right, Danny.
At this point, you actually hear Annabelle's door opens
at this point as she swings open.
and you hear a scream,
fuck you all!
Just end it now!
And she shoves herself past you
and throws herself through the causeway
as she starts grabbing a hold of pulleys
and is just moving through the space station as fast as you can.
I want to try and catch her.
Catch her on the legs.
You hear it going,
the moon's gone.
We're fucking dead.
Everyone is dead.
One for me.
Two, three, you take it, but you grab a hold of her legs.
You get both arms around her naked feet
as she's moving herself forward,
and she comes around and she's taking her arms,
and she's just turning around,
and she's just trying everything she can
to rest your hands off of her legs at the moment.
I want to pull myself up her body.
Daddy, don't, daddy, no, just stop,
just let it happen, just let it all.
I need you to relax right now Annie relax relax relax breathe she just takes another
just adrenaline burst as you're clasping around her neck and she digs her teeth into your
arm as hard as she can she bites into it and just starts pulling at you as much as you can
what do you do just let her go just let her go she'll do what she'll bring the station down
choke her out, Danny.
Choke her out?
I'm trying.
Choke her out.
Okay, see if you can bring her to an unconscious state
as she is digging into your flesh
with every ounce of strength she has.
One.
Success, one for one.
Okay.
All right, tell me how it happens.
Okay, so I was hoping we'd be able to sedate her
or that we'd have a less violent way of doing this,
but she's given me no choice.
And I tighten my arm around her throat.
And you can hear, stealing the wind from her,
and she's being, you fucking ass, oh, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry, I'm sorry.
She passes out.
Fuck.
And you look down, it is bleeding.
It is bleeding.
She not only bit through your arm, but she bit through the skin,
and you're seeing as these tiny droplets of blood.
Yeah, I'm fine.
Let's get her strapped to her bed and lock her door.
She's right, you know.
We don't know everything.
Why do we presume that we're the ones with the answers?
Because we're still alive.
Yeah, what's our alternative? You give up and die?
Look, maybe this doesn't...
The war is over and both sides lost.
Kingdoms were reduced to cinders, an army scattered like bones in the dust.
Now the survivors claw to what's left of a broken world,
praying the darkness chooses someone else tonight.
But in the shadow dark,
the darkness always wins.
This is old school adventuring
at its most cruel.
Your torch ticks down in real time
and when that flame dies,
something else rises to finish the job.
This is a brutal rules-light nightmare
with a story that emerges organically
based on the decisions that the characters make.
This is what it felt like
to play RPGs in the 80s,
and man, it is so good to be back.
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That music gives me nightmares from my childhood.
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Work.
Maybe we launched the module and we just fucking hit the moon.
I don't know, but we're definitely going to die on here if we don't do anything.
At least give her some food and water before we lock her in.
We'll put some in the room.
I'm going to grab a med kit that was near the office that she just came out of.
Yeah.
And I'm going to try and help suture his wound wrapping, which is basic
gauze and I'm gonna pull a syringe from the same pack as well that has the very
heavy sedative loaded into it and and I'm just gonna hold it up and be like well
we either inject her with this now and you know so you just want to hold on to it
with the syringe I want to inject her okay so you put the sedative into her
unconscious body and then you Stacy and Genevieve you
you kind of take her body floating
and put her back into her bed,
leaving her with some food and water,
and lock the door.
Sorry, Annabel.
We shouldn't have taken that choice away from you.
As you kind of lay her down,
you can see that she's been furiously writing
in something in a journal that's close in hand,
just penning away.
They are just inked with tears at this moment,
just all over it.
And you can see through her porthole off to the side.
You can see as the moon is just coming into its orbit and it's just slightly peering through
but you can just see the distance between the chunk and the larger mass of the moon is
just drifting.
Just next to each other, just like if you broke a cookie.
watching it peel away.
I'm gonna go through, looking through her papers,
trying to read what she said,
and I get this kind of just, it's just the same sentence.
She just wrote the same sentence over and over and over.
What does it say?
It says shadows aren't only in the day,
shadows are the night.
Two sentences.
Shadows are only in the day,
shadows are only in the night, and.
Shadows are only in,
And shadows are in the day and shadows are the night.
Yes, shadows are in the day and shadows are in the night.
Over and over.
Yes.
Well, you know, it's very poetic for being in the dark side of the moon.
Okay.
She's not gonna survive in there.
We are down robotics, we are down navigation,
and we are down a pilot.
And I mean, do we even know that the course correct we did before,
will be on the same trajectory,
now that the moon's mass is completely different?
I don't know.
I'm by a physicist.
At this point.
I have no idea.
We can only cross our fingers and hope.
Okay, so I guess...
And if we want to do another one,
if we want to try and alter the trajectory again,
and we have to draw power off the module to do that,
then we can't launch the module.
If we disconnect the module and shut the power down
where Leslie was...
was. We may be able to spare a few volts for another boost.
I mean, can we shut the power down pretty much everywhere else?
I checked all those cabins and they were empty.
We should.
So you want to isolate the...
There's no sense in keeping power open.
Right.
Up and running.
The doctor's right.
We've already channeled almost everything to life support.
We've shut down almost every non-essential system on the station right now.
The only things left are life support.
a few lights and comms.
You turn off the lights.
Turn off the lights everywhere, but maybe one room
that we hole into, and turn off the life support,
maybe everywhere but one room that we hole into,
provided that isn't some zombie plague,
and now that you've been bitten, you start eating rats and bikes.
That's not a real thing.
It's not a fucking...
We don't even know if there is a disease.
We know they both manifested similar symptoms.
But a lot of people can get sick a lot of ways,
especially up here.
Sure.
So if I'm hearing you correctly, you'd like to hold out inside of a module somewhere and turn off life support lights anywhere else.
Where would you like that to be?
You don't have to be specific to the map.
You just tell me if it's, is it a lab?
Is it a service module?
Is it a cargo block?
What would you like to hold up into?
I suggest we leave life support on in as much of the system as station as possible.
Because if we leave rooms uninhabitable, we will not be able to get through.
them if we need to. That's not a solution we should take as plan A. Lights, fine. Basic stuff
like that, fine, but we need to be able to breathe in the whole station right now.
We need to be somewhere where there's four doors around us. We've got to close the entrances.
The module right next to Erlock 1. We can access the module, the launch module from that point.
We can also lock down most of the rest of the ship.
The food and water can be stored in there,
and I can bring in the ham radio.
Do it.
Right.
So you basically get together as much as you can
to lock down this single modular.
You bring in whatever you've managed to put together
that you can hot wire directly into this radio,
and you sit there in the red light,
and you wait.
Genevieve, I think I saw in the commotion,
you pull a laptop out of your office.
Do you still have that by any chance?
Yeah, I mean, I grabbed everything that I could from my station.
What room did I end up leaving?
Well, it's all in the same area if you have it all together.
I'm assuming at this point you've all found a module.
You've brought whatever you can bring into it,
and you've shut the one door, the one exit out that you can get out into.
And you've shut it and put the lights on their lowest setting.
and you've turned off like support everywhere
but where you are.
So whatever you manage to grab from your laboratory,
you have with you.
So I do have my laptop and charger.
I grab my notebooks and just some of the cultures
that I could, shit.
What?
One of them's missing.
Which one?
One of them is missing.
Oh, God.
Okay, you dropped a sample, so what?
So what?
The whole reason why I'm here is to conduct this research.
And maybe, maybe if we get it out alive,
at least I have something to show for it.
It's still going to be in the labs.
It's still in there somewhere.
I'm sure we can go and go.
Do you want to go into where Barfi McRat, captain?
When and however, we get help or a team is sent up to recover the station.
I'm sure it'll still be there.
Time ticks as you stay inside of this module and slowly.
agonizingly, the minutes pass.
I'd like to be on the radios this whole time,
just trying to send or receive any sort of signal.
And I'd like, if Genevieve will allow it
to be on her laptop trying to do the same.
I'm gonna be kinda just looking out the window
a little distracted like my mind is on something else.
Right.
Well, as you go and sit in your private moments,
contemplating what you can, using the limited amount of power,
that is available to put this laptop to use
and using the radio to try to find signals
wherever you can get it.
It just sits.
Time stands still, almost,
but you know it is passing.
And you feel like at some point
you should be getting close
to when you've broken the orbit
and come into the light,
but it doesn't come.
The light doesn't arrive,
and you still feel this omnipresent, dark shape,
and it has this halo around it.
Should you take the opportunity to go look at it?
Yeah.
And it's infuriating how much it's blocking your,
just lifeline at this stage.
And that's when the tinking,
which at first was very
light and minor, just every once in a while,
like, thong.
And it was the only sound
to break the monotony of your key tapping
and you tapping on the radio
now starts to come in earnest.
You can hear it. In fact, the first time
you're really aware of it is when
as something just collides across the side
of the modular in as you hear,
it's just a metal just,
for a second and hissing.
Something hit the airline outside, Danny.
Okay.
We're spewing oxygen into the atmosphere, Danny.
Shit, shit, shit, shit, shit, shit, did,
okay, I'd like to,
can I hear any sort of distance in terms of the hissing?
It's in this room.
It's in the room.
Absolutely.
Okay, I'd like to explore the room to try and find
where a leak may have emerged.
Two ones.
No successes.
I'm actually going to burn.
What is it?
A trait. It's my vice.
Greedy. Greedy.
How do you want to apply greedy into this situation?
That's a good question.
Well, I mean, we haven't determined success or failure yet,
so should I roll this, see if I actually succeed
and then go from there?
If you think it'll help.
Yeah, let's see whether or not
this even goes well to begin with.
No, six is not go well in Hawaii.
So, bus ends our scene.
Eight candles, eight truths.
First, the world is dark.
This conflict has failed, Danny, you cannot find the air leak.
You don't know where it is.
And there's some greed that is invoking inside of you right now.
Something's happening.
There is a truth that needs to be spoken right now.
And it is an opportunity to leverage your vice.
your vice if you so wish.
And you do have the first truth.
While exploring for the leak in the room,
I sequester off a small pile of supplies,
water and food in a storage cabinet to use for myself,
should I have to attempt and escape alone?
You hide supplies somewhere.
Genevieve.
We're still able to breathe for the time being.
to look out the porthole,
and I see Leslie floating by.
I have uploaded all of my camera footage.
I've transferred it all to Genevieve's laptop
in the time that we're sitting there, assuming the worst.
Leslie is still moving.
The hissing stops.
I could still hear that noise.
Genevieve, you're seven,
which means Joseph, you get the last one, last true.
The voice is getting louder and undeniably loud.
Like it sounds like it's going from a yawning moan
to metal churning and like a gear moan.
Like it's a mechanical human like groan.
If I may, because I've been setting a few times already,
it is a hum.
It is a deep, throaty,
full blown hum as if like,
have you heard Tibetan throat singing?
Yes, double, double harmony attitude.
It's, it is a sound, but it's not human
in that kind of throaty way, but it is, it is resoning,
guttural deep, and it does seem to be on itself
as far as harmony goes, yes.
We pick up our scene immediately where we left off.
You are looking Danny frantically for whatever this sound is,
and you use this opportunity more to sequester supplies away
than you are really to truly find the leak
that is around there.
It's something inside of you is clicking.
What are you thinking right now, Danny?
What is going on through your brain?
If there's a leak in the hull,
we're not gonna survive much longer at all,
but if it comes to it, if everyone does succumb or things go south,
I need to be able to try and get off this station,
even if it's alone.
Okay, Stacey, you have a laptop filled with media content right now.
The power's low.
I know what you want to do, so.
Just tell me.
Tell me what you...
I need to.
And for Genevieve's sake as well.
This holds our legacy.
And if this is the end,
this is all that's left of us.
And your work and your work and all of our work.
And if there is anything left on Earth,
we need to somehow get this footage there.
There's a problem with that.
There's limited power supply,
and you're choosing to be on that.
right now.
I mean, would you like to take the lithium polymer
battery out of this laptop and somehow
use it to...
Well, actually...
There's a problem
with that.
We
should have seen the sun by now.
We've come around the far side of the moon.
Maybe the math is wrong, but this
is when we'd be in sunlight.
And I don't
see the sun.
Sure, sure, well, you know, like we discussed,
the trajectory would be off because of the moon splitting apart
and stuff, but that doesn't mean that we're never gonna see the sun,
right? It just means that not when we calculated.
It's supposed to be right there.
Yeah, it will, it will be right.
Being in the sky.
We'll be right there.
Maybe we're just moving slower.
Yeah.
Maybe we need another boost.
Maybe we lost time when whatever hit us, hit us,
and it spun us off.
Sure.
I can look at Dimitri's notes again,
but I don't think anything is left that can help us.
So there's a couple of options here,
considering how I'm interpreting what you would like to say,
and just using the knowledge of the space station at hand.
You're right, and I'm going to say for the purposes of this,
you've been running off laptop battery, not pulling from the grid.
The battery's low.
It's to the point of where it's on sleep mode.
You've got maybe a couple of hours before it is dead.
Sure.
You can boot up the flight module again.
We're going to say you're in the same room that you did it the first time so you can reroute the power again to go check at the flight module and use the boosters to re-correct course again.
Probably will be nearly the end of your power.
And yeah, we'll leave it there.
I'm also open to whatever one else wants to.
Trying to course correct right now means we'd be doing it blind.
We don't have a navigator and it means virtually draining the life support.
It also, I mean, we don't even know what the mass of the moon is right now.
No, it'd be a guess.
It'd be literally just taking a shot in the dark.
Well, a shot in the dark is better than floating forever in the dark.
It's better than doing nothing.
Not if it drains our life support.
We're already down to dregs right now because of the gambit we pulled
trying to get the module reattached.
Okay, so the other option, then just to play devil's advocate,
is to leave the life support on
and have it run as long as it can
and what hope that an envoy from Earth
comes up here with more supplies?
The other option, now that we've appeared
to round the far side of the moon,
is to try and use the module to...
Dung, don't...
Jesus. Just as it slaps again, another large crease
just collides right into the capsule yet again.
Danny?
She's outside.
She's outside.
Who's outside?
Leslie's outside.
And at that point, you can hear hands just scratching
along the side of the metal casing as something just seems
to be taking a wet hand and just running it as if taking it
across a newly washed car as just...
She's alive outside?
How did she get outside?
I have no idea.
Live.
Okay.
There's a lot going on right now.
there's no way
we can stay on this station and survive.
We need to get on the module
and try and get off.
You guys have a return path programmed into the module.
This is not where we intended
to launch from, but if we can
repurpose that, we may be able
to get us onto a safe return trajectory.
Okay, and just to explore our options,
I know we don't have a lot of time,
but, I mean, Leslie seems to be able to survive
out there.
If Leslie can survive out there,
then maybe we,
weekend. I don't, that's not really what I'm getting from that. Okay, okay. I don't want to be like that.
No, there's something going on with her. Sure, yeah, you're right. So, I don't, I really don't see any other way right now.
So is it to the module? Yeah, if that's what everybody wants to do, I'm on board. We gotta get off the station. We gotta go.
Okay, all right. Okay. So that involves opening the door up that you have locked and going back into the station, which is currently
has zero light and zero life support.
Well, no, we, I think we left the life support running,
but turn the lights off.
Yes.
Yeah, I see, okay.
So as you come to the door, you start to pull it open,
and you clear the airlock, and you see the darkness
of the International Space Station laid out in front of you.
You can still hear the movements.
Does she, to the movements still seem to be following us?
It's just, it's just sound,
it's just sound, Stacy, and when you're in a tin can,
It feels like sound is coming from you everywhere at this point.
And as you open the door, you can feel the brisk, musky air of the stale air
that is from the station just wash over you as this dank, humid air follows you.
I'd like to search some of the supply panels along the side of the walkways for a mad light,
or just for a big flashlight.
Okay, go for it.
You gotta be shitting me.
1-1, no sixes.
That's your hope.
Yeah.
Yep.
You know?
Thus we end our scene.
Seven candles.
Seven truths.
We first start with the world as dark.
Denny, you seem to be taking a lot of the first truths lately, but I implore you to do it yet again.
What is the first truth?
I did not find a handheld flashlight, but did find an LED headlamp.
So you found the headlamp.
All right, Genevieve.
I grabbed a utility pocket knife.
Grabbed a pocket knife.
I made sure the EVA suit was still intact for a spacewalk.
So are you, just is there a truth that you're checking an EVA suit?
Yes.
Okay.
Absolutely.
The sound of Leslie's hand, presumably, on the eye.
outside of the space station seems to follow us
as we move through the hallways and into different chambers.
You haven't seen the sun yet
because you're on a collision course with the moon.
Ham radio, though largely silent until now,
has started flickering to life with a voice
I can almost make out.
The darkness feels suffocating.
Danes, you are leading your crew through.
Genevieve Joseph, you've grabbed whatever you can to go into it.
Stacey, you have your ears trained on this door,
this module that you're in,
and you swear to God it's following you.
You can just, with your mind's eye,
just picture Leslie out there using whatever grip
they have, momentum, just hugging onto this thing,
pulling themselves across for all that it's worth.
Genevieve, dark humming into your brain.
It wants you to take that knife.
It wants you to hold it.
It feels safe.
It's so comforting to have it in your hand right now.
Stacey, you want something, you need something.
The fact that Leslie is so close to you,
it terrifies you.
There's something going on in your mind right now.
It's more than just why you came up here.
What are you thinking?
trying so desperately to find hope right now and everything that's going on when it seems like all is lost.
And in my mind, there's always a solution.
There's a solution to every problem.
You just have to find it.
But you're having a hard time finding that it right now.
Sure.
I mean, I'm asking you.
Yeah, I'm starting to go places that don't make a lot of sense only to have a place to go.
Danny, as you leave the crew out going through it,
you suddenly hear the ham radio flicker on.
Any, it works.
Hello?
What?
It's on there.
Can you hear us?
Can you hear me?
Oh, God.
We're on the International Space Station.
What's going on down there?
You to hear static as something continues to come on,
and you finally hear a different voice, something else clasped upon.
else clasp upon and you hear
we don't
true
one
dark
they come from
three
don't go
towards
and someone
it's very it's not good information
but someone's listing
listing something
truths that seem to be laid out
okay well the radio
is working I'm hearing someone
but it's not making any sense
signal's not strong enough
enough right now.
Okay, we gotta, it'll get better
as the orbit gets closer to Earth.
It's something.
It's something, and I can try and tweak it
and boost the signal, but first we gotta get to the pod.
Are you bringing it with you?
Yeah.
All right, so you exit through the door,
and you go through and.
And I'm taking point with the,
with the point, with the light.
So you can keep looking through,
and as you kind of are, again, grabbing,
and moving through with your,
emergency light and it is the one piece of white light
that you've had so far in this entire moment.
So everything has just been red emergency lights
for weeks at this point.
And this one bright white light is just so stark
and just to see color, just to see a small amount of normalcy
as you're looking across the space station is both
gratifying and also jar.
at the same time as normal C is back, but it is not.
And Danny, as you continue to move and you move forward,
you see the module in front of you,
and you know that you have to go down
in order to get into where it is,
so you need to move up and then go down into the space
to get to where you're connecting
and could potentially disconnect away from it.
And as you're moving forward,
you get closer and closer
and then that's a moment when a head lifts up
and you see the eyes just at a hand block its face.
And it's that dark, dirty blonde hair
that you know of to be Annabelle
as you continue to see blood across her mouth
and it looks like her stomach has been torn in
from the inside
and you can see pieces of her flesh
just seem to be coagulating
and something in her stomach is wiggling
It's physically moving as you see something
just flapping into zero G
as it makes its way up into her body cavity
and she just shaking her head and convulsing
and she looks up and she grabs a rung
and flings herself towards you again.
Jesus fuck!
Can we all see that or are we like single file right now?
Single file through, but you do hear it,
you do hear the convulsing, you do hear the tiny,
tiny screeches of something.
So I'm going, my intent here is to
literally as a reflex, just clocker.
Right, as you do.
One, one, several successes.
Ooh, two ones.
All right, tell me how it happens.
Okay.
So she's rocketing toward me right now,
just using the momentum from her push.
And I focused the light on her face,
which appears to, yeah,
really get to her, and as she's coming up
and able to see where she's going now,
I just reflexively reach out and just catch her right in the temple.
All right, you just give her a right jab
as you watch as you just connect with her temple
and her head just, whong, just hits the side
of the module cabinet.
It just bounces and you see as her body is disoriented
as it starts doing small turns in the zero G
as you look at your hand
and you look at the blood upon your hand,
and you step back,
and your momentum does not stop,
even with the clocking, in fact, in anything,
that momentum pushed you towards the other direction,
and you find yourself, bong, and you feel metal,
clasp against your lower back,
as you impact against the side of the module,
and all of you tumble like a child
who didn't get off the slide in time,
and you just all buckle into each other
as you slowly all pool into a group
right in front of this open space.
Can we see Annabel's body?
It's spinning, it's tumbling.
I see her body spinning towards an unused portion
where an airlock is and there is,
it's a two-door system so she's going towards the first door
and we're lucky because the opening device
is close to me to open that door.
Are you lucky?
Am I lucky?
I'm taking out my camera and using what juice is left
to try to film what Annabel looks like
right now.
And my knife is out ready to attack if that doesn't work.
Got it.
So I'm rolling to see if I can open.
Does he get one more die?
Yeah, okay, there we go.
So I'm rolling to see if I can pull the latch
that will open the first door.
You want to get her in that airlock.
Get her in that airlock.
Let's see how lucky Joseph is getting Annabel.
I'm gonna look at her in the camera,
and I just don't, I don't still give a fuck anymore.
I'm like, whatever.
Yeah, and you push her in.
Wow.
Wow.
Three successes.
taking all of the rolls from now on.
Right?
You got those, I got those,
B. Dave dies.
Yeah.
So you, yes, you please take it away from me.
I get a couple, I think.
Okay, so as after Danny punches her,
she screams and her head rattles against that,
but he comes hurtling back into us.
We all fall in the zero grab, but I grab my
my arm on the side of the tunnel and just instinctively,
I hit the, I hit the airlock button, so psh,
the first door just violently opens up, pow,
and just wax her.
And just smashes her, okay, let's decide.
I like that, so this idea that you,
are basically, like you said, you mentioned,
she was part in there, but you just kind of watches,
because it's all an emergency power,
there's no safety protocols inside of this,
the emergency airlock ostensibly pins her
into the airlock and you can kind of see,
this distended gore, as I mentioned earlier, coming from her stomach.
And it just is like oozing now over the top of the airlock
as it seems to pinch and it's going into her system.
And you can hear a tiny squeal.
It seems to be there, but her body is more just looking around
and it is taking pieces of her own flesh
and shoving it into her mouth as she is staring towards you,
towards you, but not towards you.
As she's looking into this thing,
this thing that's staring in front of her.
Okay, we gotta move, we gotta move, guys.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You go past and you throw yourself down
and you can see as you get with an arm's length,
she makes a grab, but very haphazardly,
almost as if it doesn't matter at all,
because there's stuff here,
and she puts it back into her mouth again,
as each one of you descend into the module.
and you find yourself in a tiny entry module
that was used to come up into the space station.
It's probably the size of this table.
Can we seal off?
Absolutely.
What that looks like, I wanna seal it off.
You seal it off, and the four of you sit in this
just cylinder, this squat cylinder as you open.
It is blackness, it is darkness inside of here.
What do you do?
Okay, um.
Okay, yeah, yeah, we're gonna get out of here now.
Nothing's getting through those doors.
Is everyone okay?
Yeah, we are we fine?
I'm alright, I'm right, I'm right, I'm right.
Okay.
She didn't scratch you anything, did she?
I mean, not that time.
She bit him before.
No more wounds.
Okay, um.
Did anyone get a good look at what was in her stomach?
Yeah, I don't even, I don't want to think about it.
There was something.
But I heard something.
Inside her.
It was like squeaking, but not.
Look, when I told you that Derek Marcus disintegrated,
I wasn't being 100% truthful.
What actually happened was Derek disintegrated,
but not all of his body.
Something was left behind.
There was something new, that was something new,
wasn't Derek.
Did it speak? Could we communicate with it? Is it an area 51?
I don't know, because that type of information was way beyond my pay scale at the time.
But I do know that whenever they brought Derek home, whatever they buried, wasn't Derek.
Okay, we have to assume this is probably happening in a lot of places right now.
I don't think it's just us.
But our best chances of surviving
are still away from this place,
even if we have to try and pilot this thing
mostly manually.
Sure.
We need to get out of here.
They knew that that happened to him,
that that means nobody's coming for us.
And why the hell did they send us up here after that?
There's people coming for us.
There's people coming for us.
So are we going to jettists in this thing?
Well, I'm going to take a minute first to just tally up what basic supplies we have with us now.
Sure.
You have about a quarter of what, actually I would say, yeah, about a quarter of what was originally brought up
because it is the handful that you took back and used was a blip in it.
At the same time, the supplies that you may have scrolled away.
I mean, I don't think you brought those with you.
So it's basically what you have inside of here.
There is enough food.
There is enough water to last quite a while.
Okay.
Okay, next thing is if we're committing to this,
I want to reroute the remaining station power to the module.
Make sure we're fully topped up and the life support systems in here will last
as long as they possibly can.
I can overclock the systems a little bit.
Let's overclock the systems.
systems a little bit.
Please, look at all these beautiful engineering roles
you're making Danny.
Don't make you roll.
Unless you want someone else to do the engineering for you,
unless Genevieve's feeling a little sassy
and not wanting Danny to feel like he's got
the grasp on everything right now.
Want to work the power?
You know, if your arm is, if I'm getting,
yeah, I'm a mess.
If I'm questioning what your arms looking like.
Right.
I'll talk you through it.
It's those wires.
16-11.
Okay.
Genevieve, you've done this once before
with the robotic arm, having Danny talk you through it.
Tell me how it goes down.
Danny, what do I do?
Okay, so first things first,
we've got to pull out the main line for the module here.
It's designed to route power cyclically,
but we need to have its siphon power off the station instead.
Okay.
We're still connected.
We're still latched, thankfully.
So you can just reverse, I'll show you that switch there.
If you switch that, it reverses the polarity
and a pulse power from.
And some time later, you're able to get it together
and put into it, and you do feel the power
come into here and you flip onto the emergency red.
I think I got it.
I think I did something.
All right.
Great.
Okay, we should be topped up now.
It flickers.
It just flickers ever so slightly.
Oh, shit.
Is it supposed to do that?
It's fine.
The system is not designed to hold quite this much juice,
but it can.
Okay.
This will give us as much time
we can possibly have in a module this size.
So now it's just launching and let's see.
The built-in trajectory is designed to take you
on a return path but not launching from this position.
We're going to have to do some manual jockeying here.
This is the module me and her came up in.
Yeah. Okay.
Great, so you're gonna disconnect
and then you're gonna start moving it around
as much as you can.
Great.
Then let's disconnect.
So you basically, Danny, look at everybody
as you kind of go into this and as you said,
if we're ready to do this, you take the,
I don't know what these things look like,
but for dramatic purposes.
Just a big old lever.
Just a big old lever.
Just an airplane open the door lever.
That kind of attitude and you just,
and you feel it just slowly coming
away as you watch the ISS just drift away from you ever so slowly.
And that's when you can start to see just how much it's getting pommeled.
And you have a single viewport for this.
I should make it abundantly clear.
So all our heads are huddled there.
It's literally about this big, all right, as all of you are kind of going through it.
And before the ISS stays away from your view, you can see as it's just a little bit of you
just being pelted with rock and debris.
And that's when for a singular moment,
you watch as a bright light,
just hits your viewport.
And the sunlight is so bright and jarring and intense
as you've pushed away from the space station.
It's just a single beam and it just kind of hits
against the wall as this,
beam of sunlight crests as you move just 100 feet or so away.
Okay.
And we have no solar panels on here.
But we have power, we have a lot of power
in the module.
We do. And this was always the plan.
Yeah, yeah, and you know what's funny?
The modules batteries have a shelf life
of at least 40 hours.
Great, cool, cool.
You know, I feel like in every sci-fi movie you watch,
you know, like the goal
is to get to the space station
so that you're not out on your own
and then you get there
and you find the aliens, right?
And then the goal is to get back off
and we did, and this should be the happy ending part.
We're heading to our happy ending part.
It might be.
I hope, yeah, I'm hoping it is.
We all...
Except the Earth's cracked.
People are dying.
The Moon's cracked.
The Moon's cracked.
We don't know where the Earth is.
The moon's cracked.
Right, right.
We left Annabelle.
Our crew has disappeared.
I think she's better off right now.
I don't know how much was left.
of Annabelle. Leslie, it was just contracted something.
It was just floating around.
All of us are given emergency training
in the event that we lose the pilot,
in the event that we lose the station.
Yes.
We all have a basic understanding
of how to get the module down,
but it relies on quite a lot of guesswork.
We're supposed to have contact with Houston
or Moscow the entire time, which we don't have right now.
We have no one to talk us through this.
And that's considering if we
if we had a normal gravitational pull, which we don't.
But you brought the comms, right?
I have the radio, yeah.
Okay, got something.
This module is equipped with several fail safes.
Not all of them are apparent or maybe even ready right now due to our power,
but there is a possibility that the pre-routed course could still be in the Navi system,
the navigation system.
and if we can get enough juice on the solar panel,
we can triangulate where we are in relation to the orbit
and maybe the computer can plan a boost.
We have enough power to make it happen.
Let's see if we can dig it up.
But maybe we have to manually get further into the sun first.
I need that so that if you're going to plot any kind of manual course
to get into the sun, there isn't the solar panels on the module.
I'm so sorry.
But as you mentioned, the module does have some power.
and you do have a little bit of fuel left in those boosters.
So let's see if we can get that navigational chart pulled up.
And if we can, you know, get around and more into the sun,
maybe the cons will start working.
We could just start the burn towards Earth.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, we're in space, so all we need is a push
and momentum will take us the rest of the way.
All right, is that the thing meant?
This is the push.
This is the push towards earth.
Towards earth.
My man.
One for me.
Oh, so close.
So.
Now, if you have a virtue or vice active,
you can burn it to re-roll the one.
My top is my virtue, is what I'm going for,
is my wish is the top?
Whatever you have on top is what you can roll
for a re-roll of the one.
So you could consume that.
and it becomes part of the solution,
but you can re-roll the dye that landed on a one.
One-one.
Let's do that, I guess, right?
Right.
It's a choice.
What's the virtue on top that you're burning?
Activate the nuclear warhead disrupting the moon.
So that's what's on top.
Your moment.
My moment, okay.
I can't burn that.
The moment's on top.
Okay.
Yeah.
You can't burn that.
So then I can't do it then.
Unfortunately.
Okay.
That's fine.
We succeeded.
Yeah.
And I want to watch what Joseph is doing.
just kind of prepping for the worst
to make sure I know how to do it.
Yeah, you're looking at it.
Well, exactly what are you doing, Joseph?
I'm sweating.
I'm getting to sweat profusely,
and in my brow, the droplets are kind of just,
they don't fall because we're still in zero G,
so they just kind of float upwards.
And the small window is starting to get steamed
from all the body.
heat of us inside and not enough oxygen.
And I kind of pull an Apollo 13 when I just put my hands
on the booster thrusters and I just peek out the window
and that darkness, darkness, and then a sliver just goes right behind.
As soon as it hits my eye, I...
All right, and you go straight for it.
You just see that sliver and you just gun it
and you boost through whatever you have left.
And you hit it for, you know, and you don't know,
if you went through all of it,
but we're talking one, one thousand, two, one thousand,
three, one thousand, let it go,
and you can feel the momentum.
You can see as the space station just
and disappears as do things in space do so quickly.
And you're watching as the moon now coming into your purview
into your tiny port.
You see it's just,
just is planet and you can do this close to it.
You can see the crack, you can see it split.
The craters of the moon as they are.
You can watch as you can see it seems to just be,
the crack just seems to be drifting just next to each other
and you can swear to God you can hear them crunching together
as just rock on rock is just like slowly creasing on each other.
And you can see that at this point the moon is starting
to tilt in a lopsided way
as it's just beginning to spin
as this crunching rock is into it.
And it's enough of a spin
that you can physically still see it
from the altitude that you are.
That you go.
Now the module is designed to survive reentry into Atmo.
Right.
And once we hit that, the friction will slow us down.
We're coming at it at a pretty good angle right now
and once we're through,
through all the tough stuff,
the shoots will deploy and we land.
I have no idea where we're going to touch down,
but hoping it's not open water or something,
but we can deal with that when we get there.
So you are all together in this place,
all four of you crammed in this cylinder
as you ride through the void of space.
I wanna get back on the comms.
now that we can actually see the earth a little bit
and try and make contact with someone.
Yep.
And I am on Genevieve's laptop,
and fortunately this is the type of laptop
that has a SIM card in it,
so if I can access any kind of cellular data connection
from anywhere we are,
then I could potentially connect.
I would have to think about that for a hot moment.
He talks to himself.
Shit hits the fan.
You know this cover.
We're gonna die.
We're gonna die.
Put in space.
But they can watch you explode.
Throw a SIM card in there and try to see if by some chance you get some kind of satellite connection.
Okay, I'm gonna take the SIM card from my no longer powered cell phone, but take that and plug it in too.
No successes.
Can I burn?
Do you have a virtue on the top?
I do have a virtue on the top.
What is it?
Insightful.
Okay.
So, knowing that I could not connect to anything with the SIM card that I had in what I was originally accessing was U.S. data connection.
I try international connection because the SIM that I was given was through the International Space Station program, which is obviously from a lot of different countries, going to go in a different route.
trying to take what I know and apply it.
So is this funny thing about EMPs.
You were high enough to maybe not have it be concerned,
but you find nothing.
You sit as you watch that little spinning disk
as you attempt to connect to a network
and you watch it as you wait for that dial
to turn to anything.
Your computer goes dark.
Six candles, six truths,
Stacey,
we start with you. First, the world is dark.
The laptop is out of power,
and any data communication
we could have hoped to have other than radio
is no longer an option.
Oh, yes, that was.
Very clear.
The module.
Clockwise.
So, that's okay.
You will have a chance.
You know that feeling when you hear one interesting thing,
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When the chaotics are on the cage.
There is a beam of light coming from the earth.
The radio now has a clear signal.
I'm growing very concerned about the wound forming in your arm.
Would you like to speak a truth about
The wound.
You can establish like pure cannon.
Oh, it's infected.
Bad first time.
Yeah.
A piece of the moon is going to hit the module.
Six.
The food we have on board looks to be not as much
as we had thought initially.
Six candles.
Six truths.
The world is dark as you crest over the edge of the moon.
and it is like coming across the horizon of the earth.
Like this could be some nature documentary
in which they give you those wonderful space shots
as the earth comes into light,
but it is the moon.
And you see the blue marble,
that is our planet,
come into focus as you are now making that return orbit
from the moon's trajectory.
And let me tell you,
you something to really give you an idea of perspective. When I mean the little blue marble,
we've all seen pictures of, you know, the earth looks like where the moon is. I want you to
instead imagine a world in which through your tiny porthole you see one half moon and coming out
from the blackness of space, you see the earth fill up your entire.
field of vision everywhere from the porthole as far as you can see up everywhere from the
porthole as far as you can see down as these two contrasting colors now barely
being illuminated by the sun's light and it is being interrupted as is more from
when your module hits the sun for a hard second and you get the porthole before
it comes back in its darkness again and
They just, it is an otherworldly sight.
You are probably looking at the moon being
rather than thousands of miles away.
More like hundreds of miles away from each other.
What do you do?
We are way closer to the earth than we thought, guys.
That's fine.
That's great news.
It's fine.
As long as we can get into Atmo,
At this speed we're gonna burn up.
There's no way we can enter the atmosphere.
It'll still slow us down enough.
The parachute will take care of the rest.
Okay.
We probably have a little bit of fuel left to commentate if we need to.
Sure.
It'll still be a little while off, so let's focus on right now.
Danny, there are pieces of the fucking moon falling in from the sky.
And there's nothing I can do about that right now.
But if we keep going down, Danny, there's not going to be anything left.
We have to go around.
Boom.
Boom.
Boom.
Boom.
Look, look.
I'm gonna pull him to the porthole,
and I'm gonna show you how close the Earth is.
And it's one of those.
You only catch it every few seconds,
because it has to make a full rotation and come around.
But then when it does, and it does take a while,
so you catch a second of it before you leave the purview of the Earth.
And again, we're imagining a world in which you're getting a slow pan
of what is in front of you.
You see blackness, you see space.
You see darkness.
And as you come around, you do see
just giant chunks of space rock
that just seem to be floating
and they're large, but they seem to be getting bigger
as they're coming somewhere.
And it is now an asteroid field
that you've looked at as you see
that the moon has just done another chunk
and has splintered
and you now see what was once open space
is now a debris field
of moon rock laid out in front.
front of you.
I have an idea.
This module was equipped with certain modifications,
not necessarily known in the Geneva Treaty.
And by that, I mean we have options.
And by options, I mean we have nuclear options on the ship.
What?
The company decided as a fail-safe method
that a small but extremely potent warhead
would be attached to the module.
If Hiroshima and Nagasaki were 100,
this thing's a 10, but it's still Paxivang.
Who decided that that...
Is this a fucking game to you guys?
Shareholders and bonds, we thought it was a good idea
just in case something needed to happen in evidence,
I mean, anything needs to be destroyed.
in case the moon needs to be more broken up into pieces?
I mean, okay, okay.
What can we do with this information?
We could fire it at potentially a piece of debris to knock it off course or something.
But then scary, if we do reenter the atmosphere and burn up, wouldn't we turn into a nuke?
The shockwave would send us flying.
We'd be disintegrated in seconds.
We have to figure out a way.
Oh, my God.
A warhead the size of a czar Obama.
would not be enough to send the moon on a different course.
It's like altering the rotation or orbit of a planet.
Not the moon, but maybe a piece of moon debris.
I mean, at what cost?
Then we're gone.
Would shooting it off in one direction change our trajectory?
With the motion...
Yes.
In one direction, make us go another direction.
It has an equal chance of destroying the capsule.
You'd have to time that flawlessly.
I get where you're getting at with your hope here, Joseph,
and I totally understand it,
but I want to understand that there is a tiny mini nuke
that you've put inside of this thing,
a tiny pea shooter nuke
that's somehow into this thing.
Correct.
I mean, I'm into it, as I always am.
Let's call it maybe not even,
it's not even necessarily a nuclear missile.
It's just concentrated uranium,
so which could be detonated.
It's still splitting atoms.
It's a nuclear reaction.
is a goddamn nuclear reaction,
whether it's Nagasaki or whether it is,
it is a big movement.
Area 51. Yes, so whether it's a test.
Any case, I'm still down, if you are,
but yeah, how are you going to do this
to try to create a reverse physics effect
to try to get you into or clear through the debris field?
What is the plan?
If we jettison the warhead, it has a remote detonation that we can time for 30 minutes from now.
30 minutes or an hour should give us enough time to clear the blast radius.
It's just a thought.
If?
If this is timed flawlessly.
Yes.
The shockwave would give us a little boost in the direction we'd like to go and clear some of the debris heading towards us.
It could work.
But that is such a slim chance.
I need to reiterate.
What else do we have?
I do enjoy slim chances as far as conflicts go.
So this is the perfect chance of something could fail.
And let's see if it does.
By all means, Joseph.
Wow.
My God.
One six, no ones.
briefly.
Tell me how this thing somehow manages to work.
There's a timing device in the warhead
that I can set for an hour,
and it's already based in the module
as like a torpedo bay,
when it'll just launch on its own,
it has its own self-operating systems.
It will carry itself.
It won't drain any more of our power,
but it will go off in an hour no matter what.
you successfully launched it does not mean it has to detonate.
But you did successfully launch it.
Fair enough.
So I'm going to give you your hope dice for whatever it's worth.
Can't believe I'm handing you a hope dice for sitting off a new.
But that's 10 candles story.
Yeah, no, it's all good.
It's all part of the story.
So does that mean that whole picture is burned or?
I'm going to leave it there on it at the moment.
Because what is happening if we get down to the brink,
which is something that can happen.
the hope dice will go away if he fails with it.
But we're not there yet.
Thank your corporate overlords.
So it's out and we leave it there.
You have half an hour?
You have an hour until this thing goes off.
Knowing what might be coming,
I'd like to hop back on the phones
and try and establish a connection to Earth
now that we're so close and the moon is no longer obscuring us.
Okay.
You do get, I mean, the,
the, it's,
The static is clear at this point.
It is not faded, it's not clear.
It is brisk, and you are going through the channels
as much as you can,
and you are consistently getting static
over and over again.
And you occasionally,
going through each one,
there's no repeat broadcast,
there's no emergency system
that those things you heard, those truths earlier, they are not there.
It does stop and you do hear something.
And it is that humming again, that deep throaty.
And hear a higher pitched harmony like something shrieking in the background.
The more you listen to it, the more you dive deeper into it,
the more you can hear tiny, unique sounds.
It's almost like listening to the sound
is like gazing into a mandala.
And the more you stare at it,
the more you listen to it, the more you can hear
and the deeper you go.
What do you hear?
It's this noise.
I unplugged the headphones and switch on the speaker
on the ham radio.
It pops onto it and you just hear it.
It's just this resonating,
low sound upon sound upon sound.
And it is, it's on like half the channels.
What is that?
It is piercing Stacy.
It hurts so much Joseph.
It drives you insane.
It feels awful.
It just is off putting in a way that you cannot even imagine.
Can you turn it down?
Oh, turn it off.
Turn it off.
Turn it off, Danny.
Nothing else, it's just that.
I mean.
I've never felt anything like that before.
It's like it eats it your mind.
Upon taking another pass on the earth,
you're close enough now that you can see the pinheads,
just the single black columns and areas in which there isn't cloud cover.
and oh, by the way, should I tell you the storms?
Oh, the storms that are above the earth,
these swirling hurricane-like clouds
that are just every once in a while covering the seas.
And in the areas in which you can see down to the ground below,
they're just like blackheads across the face of the earth,
just little pockmarks, but it is so,
So consistent, it's geometrically perfect.
What is this?
It's happening everywhere.
What are those things?
You know, like I would think maybe they're,
you know, craters from debris hitting,
but it's too.
They're all perfectly aligned.
It's perfect.
It's like they were there all along.
Guys, I hate saying this out loud.
but what if we're it?
What if this is it?
What if something happened down there and we're,
we're what's left?
I knew we should have tried to grow plants
on the space station.
Maybe we missed the worst of it.
Maybe it happened and then it's gonna be over
and then we can make something out of the earth
even if it's just us.
if it's just us.
Wow.
Even if we make it, what is left, what,
nothing, nothing is like what it was before.
We don't know what that is.
I don't know, I don't know.
We were pulled into different orbits
and now we don't know what life is like down there.
That's wrong.
I just hurts, it stinks.
Yeah, let me look at it.
This can't be a coincidence.
This can't be a coincidence.
Jesus fucking Christ.
It's swollen.
You can tell it's discolored at this point.
I mean, infection is usually something
that takes a little while in order to get through,
but this seems to already be putrefying.
How?
How are you just okay with that right now?
I'd really prefer this wasn't happening,
but I can't.
Do you have anything on board?
We need to make them a tourniquet so we can cut the blood
and just stop the swelling.
Just here.
Then I'm going to lose the arm.
Better lose the arm than lose all of us.
Yeah.
I mean, you saw the tentacles coming out of the middle
of Annabelle, right?
If you want to be a corpse with a squid arm,
well, that's your prerogative.
Okay, are we committing some kind of major surgery right now?
Or just turnic kidding.
We're starting with a turnickeying.
Okay.
She said turnicure.
Okay, she has a knife.
I was like, yeah, I do have a knife.
I'm gonna pull my belt off my suit
and just tie it around above the elbow.
All right, you tie it up around the elbow
and you put all the pressure on it and you,
I mean, it, yeah, it's the tingling of the lost blood
is now more, you're feeling it just as much
as the actual pain itself, so.
Oh.
I would like to see though,
because I do so love a good dice roll,
Genevieve, I would like to see,
to see how well this is doing.
As long as it's not me.
1-1-2-6s.
This turnicat is doing its job.
Okay, how much longer into that thing explodes?
45 minutes.
Okay.
Let me check on the power, hang on.
I wanna see how the power and life support's holding up.
Power and life support's fine.
It's taking some time and it's going through,
but I mean, under normal circumstances,
I would say all systems okay.
We'll touch the atmosphere in 30 minutes.
That's a 15 minutes a set.
No.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
You see.
That's not possible.
A hole a hand onto it streaking with blood.
It's fucking Leslie.
And it opens and you can hear pounding onto it
and you hear a gurgling.
voice. I mean, or God, if you can even hear it, you don't, oh, you don't hear it, but you can hear it.
And it's just saying something. It is saying something. I can't tell what it is. It's, it's, it is
awful, awful right now, but it pierces into your mind and it sounds something like let me in.
Let me in.
Fuck that. And these hands are pulling and you can hear it is pounding.
everything you can, but it doesn't sound like a fist pounding
against the module.
It sounds like a rock being pounded
into this steel over and over and over again.
There's no way she can get in.
This whole thing is solid, machine, steel, and aluminum.
There's no way.
How is she alive?
Yes, that is the question.
She'll burn up when we hit Atmo.
Yes. Great, great.
Should we try to enter atmosphere sooner than 30 minutes then?
There's nothing else to propel us.
All right. Are you gonna wait it out?
Wait for this thing to go down.
I wanna see if there's any more juice in the engines.
Well, you can turn it on.
You won't be able to know, but you can turn them on
and put it on if you want.
I wonder, is there a way.
We can wait for her to hopefully maybe she's over
by the engine.
I was gonna say,
boost her off.
If she wanders that way, we can try and turn them on
and just give her a push away from the module.
How are we gonna get her to wander that way?
Someone.
Someone, tap on the window.
Yeah, let's try and get her attention.
Okay, okay, I got it.
And I'm gonna tap on the window and Leslie, Annabel,
whoever this is, we can hear you.
What is it that you want?
How can we help?
And so you hear, it's something they're talking to you,
but they are not speaking in any voice.
You understand you are hearing
and it is shrieking, it is piercing,
but you feel more than you understand
this draw towards the earth.
It wants you to go, wants you to just let it happen,
come into it.
It is so safe.
If you just let them in, everything will be okay.
Can I tell if they mean let them in,
like let them into the earth's atmosphere,
or let them into our pod.
They are telling you, Stacy,
you will be spared.
You will be granted.
The final passage,
if you just let me in and let them go.
They are not for the next place,
but you are,
We know what you've done.
We know that you are chosen.
Just.
Guys, Leslie's still in there.
I can talk.
I'm communicating somehow with Leslie.
We can't just...
What is what she's saying?
We can't just let her die out there.
We've got to let her in.
You're not talking to her.
Are you fucking nuts?
I am. I am talking to her.
I can hear.
She needs to come in.
She needs to be.
Leslie.
And I'm going to lunge for anything that's going to open the other.
I'm going to lunge for her.
Yeah, it's great.
Oh, my God.
So technically, this is a conflict.
Definitely is a conflict.
But it's against two people who want to go into it.
So in the purposes of telling the absolute best story,
I would like to see Danny, who wants to hold her back, roll this,
to see how it happens and how it goes down since Stacey is.
We're giving me the depths.
So please, one, six, one, one.
You grab Stacy, you hold her with all of your might.
I'm going to roll.
One arm, by the way.
One arm, yeah.
And you grab her and you hold her,
and Stacy is still rambling as she's going for this airlock.
Stacy.
We have to save Lesland, guys.
What is wrong with you?
If you open the door, you'll vent the module.
We're all gonna die.
Stacy, calm down.
Stacy.
Can we just help?
It's space out there!
I'm trying to do is work to survive here.
How can we not do that?
You want to survive?
You want to leave that door closed.
That's not Leslie out there.
If you open the door, we're all going to get sucked into space.
Then who's alive?
Stacey.
Who's left?
You're in here with us.
You're not out here with her.
You're in here with us.
You're not out there with her.
She should be in here.
Don't listen to her.
She should be in here.
She should not be in here.
She should be in here.
You saw her.
She's not right.
I'm going to, uh...
See if I can get free from his grasp.
Instead of lunging to the hatch, I'm going to try to go back to the port hole.
The porthole.
Okay.
This one's for you.
Okay.
I'm going to try to go back to the porthole.
And escape there.
One six.
All right.
So I wrestle free of Danny's one arm.
And shove him away from me and go back over to the port.
and tap on it and say, Leslie, I can hear you.
I'm trying to let you in.
Please remember that I'm trying to let you in.
And at that point, you see the rock that Leslie had been holding onto,
and it comes down upon the porthole with as much effort as can be managed,
as it just can you watch as it's spider webs, just for a second.
I want to go over to the command panel and hit the boosters for whatever juice is left.
To try and shake her loose.
All right, keep rolling, buddy.
We get that one too.
Keep rolling, buddy.
Come on, Danny.
Take us home.
Oh, no.
All right, no sixes, no ones.
This scene ends immediately.
Oh, God.
Five candles, five truths.
We are getting into a danger territory now,
since we are more than halfway done decisions.
We can get into a situation where dire consequences.
absolutely can happen in the circumstances.
So with this said, five truths.
Danny, you have the pleasure yet again
of giving us the first truth.
So it didn't work because it failed.
But I'll say the remaining fuel in the module, the fumes,
were just enough to jostle,
to sort of shake and lurch the command module.
So she's just hanging on by a thread.
Yeah, by one grasping hand
where the edge of the booster rockets are.
I think that's nice.
Go ahead, Genevieve.
The radio spontaneously erupts with more sound.
Okay, all right.
Joseph.
I look out the window,
with a horrified look, seeing the nuclear warhead much closer than it should be.
Stop it!
God!
Oh, God!
I take what was a sturdy metal, like meal tray that was on board and use it to try to
finish cracking the porthole glass.
Okay, so you found something to hit the porthole with
from the other side.
Yeah.
To let Leslie in.
I will end you.
The warhead goes off.
Five candles, five truths.
They've even spoken and we start our scene immediately
with a bright flash of light.
Just erupting out of nowhere, it's searing
and you feel first the small shaking.
And then in your mind more than around you,
you hear the screech as Leslie is evaporated
off of the module, and you begin to shake,
and you begin to move,
and everything begins to just start to jostle
and get into it,
and you can hear just metal bending and twisting
and just everything,
and more importantly, you can hear the sounds
of impact on impact, on impact, on impact,
as your module is just flung with as much force as possible
as it is now careening at a speed straight towards the planet.
That was not 45 minutes.
These things aren't the exact science.
Fuck!
Nuclear physics.
You cannot hold still.
All of you are pressed through just the sheer velocity
that you're in.
All of you are on the back.
edge of the wall now as you're starting to get closer to where the atmosphere is, and you can feel your body. You can barely even get a hand up off the ground because the G forces are just so extreme right now.
As we were forced back to the back of the module, I leaned my body to try and catch the radio with my body so it wouldn't hit the wall.
Got it, and you, no.
Oh!
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
He's like, that's good, roll.
Oh my god.
No successes.
No successes.
No successes.
The radio.
Doesn't matter now.
No.
Click and pop.
So.
Things get fucked.
Four candles, for truths.
Things are happening.
Daddy, I can't believe.
I'm taking this one from you.
I don't even care. You don't get the first truth.
You've had so many first truths instead, but I'm not going to take it.
I'm instead going to give it to Genevieve at this stage.
First truth for in this point.
I'm at some point going to stay.
stab at you for putting our lives in danger.
You can also say that it happens.
Oh yeah.
Yeah.
I swing at you for trying to break that glass open.
Two.
With the pocket knife?
Yeah.
I...
One more time, sorry.
Would you mind and again for the purposes of getting into it,
would you just like to say I stab you with the pocket knife?
I stab you with the pocket knife.
Hit the Earth's orbit.
Three.
I very surprised by the stab wound
that I've just received in my lower left abdomen
use all of my energy to try to,
I mean, I would assume she's because of the G force
and us being pulled back, she's now on top of me, I guess.
Or next to you, adjacent to you.
You can, with your truth, you have power.
Okay.
Being very surprised by the new,
to my lower left abdomen.
I use the G-force pulling us back against the wall
to get that arm up and just let the G-force
take my elbow back straight into her windpipe.
So you...
Roll.
Roll.
So you get her off you.
I get it lifted enough to...
How about this?
This is a way I like to interpret the truth.
You get her off her and you pin her down using
the G-force.
Great.
How's that sound?
Sure.
Okay.
We begin this scene, four candles, four truths.
The world is dark.
The world is always dark.
Did you have a truth?
There was, oh boy, I get a truth.
Excellent, excellent.
Keep it going.
Stacy, you can steer here,
you could still hear Leslie's voice in your head
even though she's gone.
All right, you have now erupted
the G-force is pulling your module
and all of your bodies laid up against it.
Genevieve, you have used this opportunity
to throw something in, but now you can feel a
just lack of air as just Stacy's arm
is against your windpipe and you're grabbing
with all that force and you can hear her gasps
of air at the moment.
What do you do?
I wanna reach over to get Stacy off of
to roll her over.
Joseph.
I'm going to grab the controls and go for another boost
because we're just sitting the orbit.
I have to slow down the module.
I'm trying to re-correct.
I'm trying to re-correct.
I know this is chaos, but I watch him do it,
and I just try and-
Yeah, I've got this, don't worry.
Recurrect as much as you possibly can.
Recurrect as much as I possibly can.
Okay, try to find a safe landing spot.
One for me and-
Oh, he didn't always hope that.
I did not roll my hope die.
You still got a success, but you're good.
Yeah, it doesn't matter if that's rolled.
In the future, roll that,
because that succeeds on a five or a six.
Oh, okay, I did not know that.
So you gun it and using, again,
just the dredges of whatever,
and it's more at this point just flitters.
Just trying to turn it anything again, yes.
And you take it as you steer as far away
from the ocean as you possibly can,
trying to find the coast or anything that you can land on,
so that you won't be stuck in the middle of the ocean,
should and when and if this thing lands,
and you get, you push and move with all of your forces you can,
fighting against that G-force,
you can start to see the front of the module is turning red.
That iron, hot.
Just a heat shield is absorbing so much heat you can see.
It's starting to make an effect on the outer,
and it's starting to get warm in this thing,
as you continue to careen at a wild velocity in.
Genevieve, Danny.
I know you wanna try to get Stacy off,
but Stacy, I'm more interested in what you wanna do right now.
She stabbed me, the bitch stabbed me.
You're trying to vent the module.
There anymore.
Stab her again, Genevieve.
Really?
Okay, everyone, calm down.
Enough, just get off of her.
If you stab me again, I swear to fucking God.
What the fuck is wrong with you?
What's wrong with you? You just stabbed another human being.
You almost killed us all. Yes, because you're going to kill us all.
I was trying to save Leslie.
You know what? Leslie cannot be saved right now.
And you know what? You're not talking to her.
Who made you God?
Who made you omnipotent God?
No way.
You sound like a four-year-old.
It's done. She's gone.
You sound like an insane person.
Talking to somebody who should not be alive.
They tried to kill us all.
And what did you do?
You grab a freaking trade and just just blast the freaking window?
The freaking window and kill everybody.
None of us.
I'm the crazy one.
I'm the four-year-old.
You just dabbed me.
You deserve it.
You deserve it.
None of us.
The ground.
It's coming closer.
I'm trying to tilt it up.
The porthole is the all view point that you have at this point.
And you're watching as the shattered, windowed porthole out of nowhere just,
and as you start to hear the atmosphere coming, you can hear wind gusting through.
And you can start to see and more feel than any of the air.
just the wild as breaking into the atmosphere.
You hear just everything displacing the air inside of you
is this porthole, having lost its integrity
from being hit on either side, is now just careening
and you can see fire, just fuff, pfop, pfop, pfoo, pf,
Leslie, are you out there?
There's no one out there!
And what do you do?
What kind of danger does this pose
that we can see in terms of the porthole being broken?
The porthole being broken at this point,
is literally just the point that it's creating such a vacuum.
We're in the atmosphere already because it's lit up,
so there is already oxygen because we're in the atmosphere.
Yeah, so that's the thing.
Is the tray large enough to we can cover the hole?
That's the thing, it's the vacuum,
because it's now pulling you all towards the hole.
It's trying to suck you out of this tiny porthole right now.
Does the tray cover it though?
Try to cover that.
Does it cover it?
Does it cover it?
Can I burn?
Yeah, what's on top there?
I'm covetous.
How are you applying covetous in this?
My tray, it's my knife.
Get away from it.
This is my life, I'm taking care of myself.
We're doing this.
Grab this tray and you are looking at Stacy,
just like you fucking crazy bitch.
How could you do this?
You grab that tray and you feel the air just as much
as anything else take you as you're guided towards this porthole and you slam the tray up against
the porthole and it sticks but you can still feel it pulling into it and you can hear the sound of
the wind is coming beneath it and you look towards your group and you're thinking something
what do you say to them you're lucky this tray this tray worked because otherwise how to
used you to block it.
Suddenly the tray breaks, pishk,
and you feel as your arm, which was the closest thing at the hand,
just flies out of the window and the velocity is so strong,
and the heat is so great, your arm is gone within seconds
as you feel this thing pull itself out,
and suddenly your arm, your torso, your neck,
you scream as part of you was being pulled out
through this porthole, this tiny little sense
that is not enough room for your body,
and you're watching the three of her.
As suddenly, as quick as it happens, her body is
just cracked and boned and flung out from this porthole
to disappear.
Oh, Jesus Christ.
Genevieve.
Oh my God.
Genevieve, oh my God.
What have you done?
Thank you so much for me, appreciate you taking the time
to come with Nora.
I'm going to have to ask you to leave my table.
And I'm still there.
Three candles.
Three truths.
Normally Nora.
Genefee's would give us the first truth.
But since she was forced out through a porthole,
I will speak the first truth.
The ground.
Joseph.
The parachutes activate.
Oh, wait, no.
Yes, sorry, it would go clockwise.
But you can still have your truth.
Okay.
Yes.
I'm thinking the same thing you are.
I have another one too.
Okay, good.
The parachutes have not been deployed.
There's time to do.
Do it. I grab the knife. Three truths, three dice. Our story begins with Danny activating the manual shoot release as you suddenly feel all of the momentum. The G-force just displace immediately as you're all thrown back again.
None of us are buckled in. None of you are buckled in. And you feel it and you hear bone snap all of you as we ever hit.
back.
I can't feel my legs.
I think I'm paralyzed.
And there's this muddy,
I can't feel my legs.
This muddy thought, this just air,
that just all the blood is gone.
It takes every amount of effort.
It is only the pain that is preventing you
from passing out at the moment.
As the G-4 suddenly lessens up
and you slowly start to descend.
Well, slowly is definitely a,
The word than you were.
S.
What do you do?
Genevievee, fuck!
I'm gonna try and grab onto anything I can
to brace myself against
becoming impact.
The impact.
All right.
Joseph Stacy.
My back is broken and I can't feel anything
past my waist.
And I'm laying like strewn about.
Yeah.
Just kind of, I still have the knife in my hand
and I just grab a latch.
to hold on.
Stacey.
Leslie, if you can hear me, I tried.
I tried to let you in.
And hopefully you're still out there.
If you're still out there, the porthole's open.
You can come in now.
I hear you.
I hear you, Leslie.
You just hear your name being spoken.
And through the descending porthole
as you come closer to the earth,
you can see one of the monoliths.
It's just, it's beautiful.
beautiful, slick, perfect form, descend downwards.
And there is something come and see a pinprick of light
in the darkness as you all slam straight onto the ground.
And you being the only one that didn't have a chance
to hold on, Stacy, I'm going to have you roll
as you're staring out at this beautiful, wonderful thing.
No success isn't a one, but, butt, butt, butt, but, but.
I am going to burn my vice.
Yes, which is selfish.
Yeah, that tracks.
That tracks perfectly.
To re-roll this one.
Yes, please.
So while I was staring at the gorgeous stunning monolith,
I saw everybody else grabbing on and realized
that none of them were smart enough to buckle in
or use a seat belt and was able to get myself
to a place where I could actually buckle in.
All right, let's see.
Candles now extinguished, two candles, two truths.
Stacey is you.
Get yourself in the seat, you can see this monolith
and you're looking above Danny and Joseph,
knowing that they will fail and you will succeed.
as you sit and strap yourself in,
you pull the buckle and you place the harness
in front of you, and you sit,
and you stare openly at the porthole,
knowing that something is broken,
but also not caring in so many ways.
And you can hear them moaning and agony and pain,
Joseph continuing to lament that he can't feel his legs,
I can't feel my leg.
Annie, I can't feel my leg.
As this thing impacts and crashes straight into the earth,
you look into the monolith,
and the last thing you see before the bent metal
shoots straight through concaving into the module itself
and cuts you from the crown through to your hips
is the monolith.
What are you thinking as you see this last thing in front of you?
I have ascended.
Thank Trish.
Thank you for having me.
I'm gonna have to ask you to leave my table.
Yeah.
Joseph, Danny, as this module impacts into the ground,
you watch as this split of steel,
just almost like a perfect wedge, just cleaves,
Stacy right in half, and you hear her body slip,
sit, thwap, thwap, falls onto either side of her chair.
And you sit there and all you hear
is the crackling of the radio and the dripping of blood.
There are two truths in which to speak,
Stacey normally would say the first truth,
but instead I will speak the first one.
We're very close to the monoliths.
A monolith, Danny.
The door to the module opened in the crash.
We can easily access the outside.
Great, two candles, two truths.
Joseph and Danny Uly broken on this module floor.
We've got to get out of here, Danny.
Yeah, come on, come on.
Danny, like, my legs are broken.
I can't feel them, but just move them
and I'll pull myself out.
Just move my leg.
Are your arms okay?
My arms are okay.
Okay, grab on, grab on to me.
All right.
And I'm gonna sling him kind of around my back,
like piggyback style.
As he picks me up,
and you wear him.
My legs look like two toothpicks to just...
Clicked out, so compounded out.
Just clicked out.
fractures out, mm-hmm, and you carry him on your back
as you inch yourself out.
Ribs are broken.
It hurts so bad.
It's just as agonizing, but you manage to sling him
like a Jedi master on your back as you crease out
through the air lock.
And I'd like to lay him down leaning against the outside
of the module so we can get our bearings.
Right.
It's daytime and the sun is out.
And the way he laid me there is that we're laying on the ground
and the sun is behind the monolith,
so the shadow is right next to us.
Oh, this.
I would even say that's, I love that.
Let's keep that going.
It's a big monolith.
It makes a big shadow.
And as a result, it's light, it's daytime,
but the monolith shadow
put you in darkness.
High five.
I'd like to lean in back to the module,
grab the hand radio.
We need help.
We need anyone who can listen.
We're planet-side now.
Someone should be out there.
And we want to turn it on.
Hello.
We escaped the International Space Station.
We're downed in some...
I don't know where we are,
but we're near one of those big,
the stone things.
Is anyone out there,
there. I don't know, a police, military, anyone, Ashley? I'll take anyone right now
would be really nice. Danny, tell him I can't feel my legs. We're injured.
You twist through the dials and continue to repeat this phrase over and over. You hear a voice
suddenly crisp and clear come out through the radio. Danny?
Ashley?
Oh my God, is that you?
Danny.
Where are you?
I don't know.
I got off the station, baby.
Where are you right now?
Are you okay?
Go to it.
What?
I'm going to look at Danny talking right now,
and I'm going to realize the radio is completely broken.
It's not even on.
It's not even on.
And he's talking to it.
Baby, what do you mean?
Just, it's there for you.
Just go to it.
It's waiting.
Is that where you are?
Danny, you've been so good.
You've done so good.
But it's time to let go now.
Just go to it.
As the sun tilts, I start to see.
The shadow is beginning to move a little bit,
and I start trying to drag myself
towards the light part of it
away from him in the dark.
This point, you can start to hear and feel
ground being displaced under you,
and you actually watch
in the shadow of the monolith, just something long,
tiny tendrils, like a giant centipede
as something pulls itself out of the dirt,
and you see a wide open lamprey-style mouth
with articulating tentacles,
pull itself slowly out, and it's crawling towards you.
Danny, no, no, no, no.
Danny, get out of there.
Danny, it's all right.
Danny. It's time to go.
Danny, get out of there.
Okay.
It's coming for you, Danny.
Okay.
What do you do?
I'm going to go toward the creature.
You're going to go towards the creature?
What about you, Joseph?
I'm going to go away from the creature.
Can I roll this one too?
Yeah.
It's your hope dice.
It's my hope dice.
And this is all I hope.
One-one.
If you would like to try.
Yes.
Can I burn it?
in this.
Danny, as you stand up dropping the headset from your hand,
your wife's voice still in your ears, you can hear the sound,
you can hear the calling, the deep resonating voice
that is pulled into you, and you walk towards the creature,
but it doesn't go to you.
It ignores you.
It flatly is going for Joseph.
No, no, take me, please, just take me.
There's a jealousy in your heart, and you look at it,
and you stare at it, and you look at him as Joseph,
you see this thing, grab its tendrils.
One of it lifts through your shoulder, wrapping you up,
the other one pulling upon your broken leg.
You can't feel it hurts, oh God,
as it lifts you up, and it slowly headfirst,
puts you inside of its mouth.
And with each passing muscle, each movement,
it slowly pulls you into its gullet.
And Danny, you watch as this thing is consumed,
his man is consumed in front of you,
and you can only weep and wish instead.
It was you that was there.
And with that, we end this scene.
You watch this creature having taken Joseph into its maw,
lifts it down as it crawls back into the hole.
It stands there and it looks at the receding sun
as it continues to move into the light.
and before the light can go back into its tiny little crevice,
it finds darkness again by diving back into the rock,
leaving you alone, leaving you here in the shadow of the monolith.
You're losing a lot of blood.
You are broken as you stare at this thing.
and there is no light to guide you
because you have silence
and the bright burning light
bristling on top of you.
Vince, is there anything you want to say?
There is, unfortunately for you,
there is death as you have nothing, no supplies,
no water, no nothing, and you do not even have friends
anymore around you, but you are alive.
And maybe that is worse than death.
What is going on in your mind?
What is with you right now?
I just wanna be with her again.
And if she's with them, if Ashley is with them,
then I want to go with them.
to.
You do not find them, Danny.
They do not come to you.
And it is almost a week
before you finally feel the last breath
of your lungs give away
and your heart slowly stops to beat.
You haven't moved from this spot
in the time that it took you.
to lay down and die, hoping that any moment,
any time at one point they would come and take you,
hoping that they come and take you.
I'm sorry, Ashley, I'm sorry.
There's so much I wanna say, but I'll save it.
For the moment I'm gonna have to ask you to leave.
I'm so sorry.
There is only one thing left to do.
And that is listen to the messages of our dearly departed characters.
Hi, this is Stacey Martel coming to you from the International Space Station,
where I don't even know if anyone's ever going to watch or listen to this.
You know, I came up here thinking I could make a difference.
I could educate people.
Maybe even win an award for this one.
But with everything that's happened now, it just seems so.
unimportant. I can usually put a
positive spin on anything, but
even I can't deny what I've seen. I mean, is this the end of everything?
No? No, I can't think like that.
It will be...
just fine.
Turn this shit off.
Okay, so
I try collecting my thoughts and rehearsing a bit before doing this,
it all sounded like shit anyway, so I'm just gonna wing it.
I don't know how everything up here is gonna go,
so I wanted to broadcast this for you, if you hear it,
and maybe a bit for me.
I'm sorry, Ashley.
I'm so sorry.
I tried.
I really did.
The comms went out, and I couldn't reach you,
and I'm not trying to make excuses, but I...
Fuck, I don't know.
Maybe I could have done more.
I just...
With how things look like they're going down there,
I just hope you're okay.
I love you, and I really hope...
This is Dr. Genevieve Zane.
Log Entry 134.
Morale is as good as it could be,
I mean, all things considered.
Some power issues are becoming a nuisance.
I haven't been sleeping very well.
I keep getting those sleep paralysis nightmares
where I think something's at the foot of my bed.
The microorganisms I've been subjecting to harsh conditions have been behaving as expected.
Up until today, one of the cultures is oddly mutated, I mean completely unrecognizable overnight.
I'm not quite sure what I'm looking at.
Just like everything else around me lately.
I hope supplies are coming in soon.
You know what I think? I think it's all a lie. I think we're a
We are told this whole time the sun shines on us and creates the shadows.
That's a lie.
We are the shadows.
We are the dark trails left behind.
And it's up to me and this company to take us into the new light.
I arranged for this mission because I wanted to show the world what we're capable of.
And hopefully we have the right tools here to do it.
I just hope I wasn't too late.
When my father, Joshua, left me the money to create T-A-S-C, I knew I couldn't let him down.
And now it's up to me to show the world that military defense spending was all worth it.
And in the corporate lens, everything's got a price, including life.
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