Blank Space Adventure (Serial Story) — Chapter 5

Chapter 1 | Chapter 2 | Chapter 3 | Chapter 4 | Chapter 5 | Chapter 6 | Chapter 7 | Chapter 8 | Chapter 9 | Chapter 10 | Chapter 11 | Chapter 12


Chapter 5: Things go thump in the dark

Thump!

Whatever was behind the door, and between us and the main computer, really wanted in.

Thump! Thump! The black goo that had once been part of the fungal lifeform of the Andromeda Syndicate, replied to the thing on the other side of the door.

“What the hell?” whispered T.

“The first two habitats were destroyed but the third one has an atmosphere. I’m going in to look,” the cheerful voice of S burst through the radio earpieces and made us both jump. 

The glass, or more likely transparent aluminium, cracked under the onslaught of the goo. 

“We need to get out of here,” I said. I could feel the malice coming off of the tank.

We headed back to the elevator as the thumping continued. Instead of activating it, T ran to a console on the other side of the room. 

Thump, Crack! The door bent inward and somehow still held. 

“We need to get out of hare,” I repeated.

T nodded and said, “We need to contain whatever is happening here. I don’t want that goo dripping down on our heads. 

He was right and I looked around for anything that would help us. Fire, I thought and my hands moved on their own. I felt heat coursing through my body but before it could release, there was a searing pain in my head.

Thump,Thump,Thump! I couldn’t tell if the sound was my own heartbeat, my brain trying to escape from my ears, or whatever monster was behind that door.

“M! Get up. Please,” barked T. He sounded scared.

I slowly stood up and he placed a gun in my hands. It was an AS plasma rifle that shot a ball of superheated gas. It was a nasty weapon that could sear a hole straight through most armour.

“I’m okay,” I said and took the safety off the weapon.

“You have blood coming out of your nose,” he replied. “I need a few minutes at the terminal. Hold whatever comes out of that glass or door back as long as you can.”

I took a deep breath and took a shooting stance. These weapons didn’t have much kick but they still had enough to land me on my butt if I wasn’t careful. I must have used these weapons before because I was inundated with information about them.

His hands moved faster than I could register. I didn’t know what he was doing but just as the door slammed open, I saw him bleeding from his nose and ears. 

The last thump was cut off by a victorious yowl and metallic crunch as the door broke open. 

Whatever the creatures had been, they were now covered in black sludge. Most likely the same black goo from the tank. They were roughly the size of and shape of grizzly bears but with an elongated head and far too many black teeth. Their flesh rippled, sending shivers of nausea throughout my body.

I shot at the creatures but they barely seemed to notice. The plasma dissipated on their bodies and seemed to do nothing but slow them down a little. 

T whooped and the roof started retracting. Despite the shielding, the sun was blindingly hot. Joining me on the elevator, T activated it and said, “Don’t look at the sun.”

We descended and an iris closed above us. I heard a loud crash, a whooshing sound and then nothing. “What did you do?” I asked.

“I vented the top level,” T replied.

“That was quick thinking,” I said before adding, “I thought you said you couldn’t read anything?”

He turned white and his eyes went large. “I can’t, I couldn’t, I…” he trailed off. “Once I was there I just knew what to press. Like the computer was telling me. Wow. I wish I understood why.”

“Me too,” I said sadly. I really wanted to understand. Not knowing frustrated me in a way that made my whole body ache. “Do you think there’s another computer we can access that will tell us if we can fly this thing away from the sun?”

He shrugged. We arrived on the next floor, and he walked over to a wall and pushed on it. It released a hidden door. Inside was a wall filled with blinking lights. T touched the wall and said, “The station doesn’t have the energy to escape the sun’s gravity. The whole station is on energy saving mode. I—” He fell to the ground and started to convulse.

I hesitated, not knowing what to do. When I finally decided to act, he stopped moving. A loud popping noise followed by a gush of blood from the back of his neck startled me. Something metallic lay on the ground a few metres from him and I crushed it for good measure.

The room was filled with people but I couldn’t see anything like a first aid kit anywhere. I leaned down to T and gently touched his neck. I felt a pull of energy in the back of my mind and I focused on healing him. A blueish light glowed around my fingers and into the wound. I watched as it closed and the skin knit itself back together.

Pain filled my body and instead of fighting it, I let it wash over me. I focused on the cold metal floor and breathing. The pain eventually passed and I checked T for a pulse.

Into the earpiece, I said, “T is hurt but alive. He figured out the ship is low on energy and that the engines are okay. He’s unconscious right now and I don’t want to move him. Can we meet at the second to last level?”

“On our way,” said W. She sounded frustrated. 

“I’ll be right there,” S said in her usual chipper voice. “You’ll never guess what I found.”

Read Chapter 6 (June 2026)


While you wait for the next chapter, check out the previous serial stories:

Jess Goldie – Part 2 of 2

I’m on vacation but enjoy this story!

Read Part 1


It was a terrifying place. I almost turned back but I saw movement and had to investigate. I followed the movement for a little, thinking I was hunting it. It lead me to a small clearing before two more of it came out of the forest.

It was fascinating; a grizzly sized capybara crossed with a teddy bear. As I looked at them in adoration they started to sing the sweetest song, layering harmonies. Before I knew what was happening, the one I’d followed had closed its jaws on my shoulder. The pain was excruciating and cut through their siren’s song. It ripped off a part of my shoulder and then salivated on it. Its saliva dripped onto my wound and I felt myself healing. I also learnt everything I needed about it.

Its natural predator was a form of large black hound, whose skin cracked and extruded some form of burning liquid. I forced myself to change shape and mimic the magma hound. When I’d grown to five times my size, I howled the howl the haunted the Adlat’s dreams.

The three creatures ran away and I shrank back to my dog form. I felt strange like I was missing something. I was scared and alone; all I wanted was the warmth of home.

I ran back to the gopher hole I’d made leaving the city. I looked at the hole and tried to bring up the memory of a gopher. I couldn’t. The knowledge I had about gophers was gone. That’s when I discovered my memories were spread across my being and losing part of me meant losing memories. I put myself to work and dug out the hole enough that I could get back into civilization.

I was part way through digging the hole when a howl, similar to the one I’d made earlier, echoed behind me. I melted back to my original shape and hurried through the rest of the hole.

I don’t like being goo, it’s like being naked, both physically and psychically. As goo I can feel all the emotions around me, plant, animal, human, and more. I also taste and feel every part of the earth.

Whatever made that noise was big and probably couldn’t get through the gopher hole I’d made. I changed into a crow and flew straight back to Jessie’s home.

Inside I walked gently into the kitchen. Even having changed several times, my heart beat swiftly.

“Goldie?” Jessie asked behind me. I jumped and made a strange snuffling noise and he giggled. “I can’t sleep. I had nightmares.” He shivered and I got a vague impression of a clown and the terror that accompanied it.

He walked over to me and hugged me, his little face buried in my fur. All the fear, mine and his, drained from me and was replaced by his love.

He took a glass of water and walked over to the couch near the antique television. “Do you want to watch something, Goldie?” I gave a soft woof of disapproval but he took it as acceptance and put in his favourite old movies (one his father didn’t let him watch alone). It was in colour and had a large insect like alien that tried to kill the crew.

I lay next to him and he put his hand in my fur, he was asleep before the first crewmember died. I don’t sleep but I was comfortable and not paying complete attention. I should have been sharper. I should have been more careful.

I lazily turned towards the kitchen and caught sight of two glowing violet eyes. Before I knew it,, the Magma hound had pounced towards us. I moved as fast as I could but I was too slow. It bit into Jessie’s leg, pulled him, and started to shake him.

The movie behind me influenced my shape and I changed into the alien. I’d never been so big before and I could feel it draining my energy. My double set of jaws snapped at the Hound. Surprised, it dropped Jessie and tried lunging for my neck.

I contorted my new body and unhinged my powerful jaws. It caught me in the throat but I bit down on its back, snapping its spine. The hound fell to the ground with a thump.

The terror in Jessie’s eyes when he looked at me haunts me still. I changed back to my Goldie shape and tried to move closer to him. He screamed and despite his bloodied and broken leg he scrambled backwards away from me.

Pain, fear, and betrayal emanated from him as he lost consciousness. I knew from his feelings that he’d never trust me again and that hurt more than the wounds that the Adlat or the magma hound had given me.

There was a lot of blood and I was worried that Jessie’s leg was still bleeding. Remembering the Adlat I transformed into one and started to salivate on his leg. Instantly, the bite marks started closing and he started looking healthier.

I felt fear emanating from the staircase at the same time I heard the sirens. Jessie’s parents had seen me change and then salivate all over their child. They feared too and now Elmsley was coming. The private police force of the NAF would show me no mercy.

I had no other choice but to leave.

I spent a long time living as various city animals. I watched Jessie grow up. His leg was never the same after that night but he eventually lost the haunted look I’d caused with my carelessness.

I was wallowing in guilt as a pigeon when I saw a poster on a mailbox with the picture of a young girl and the caption, “Missing.” I remembered the detective movies and decided it was time I started living like a human.

The wonderful thing about humans is clothing. It hides any form of sex organs and makes it much easier to mimic them. I chose a shape that was androgynous to let my clients expectations decide what I looked like. I took on the name Jess Goldie and I’m now a Private Detective.

Jess Goldie – Part 1 of 2

I’m on vacation but enjoy this story!


I was a pile of goo on the sidewalk, and it wasn’t because of a cute boy or girl. I was literally a pile of goo. The first thing I remember was oozing – yeah that’s the sexy description – towards a green lawn. Everything is a little fuzzy but I think I was running away from something.

I oozed under a white picket fence and felt the need to change my shape. When I’m around people I can sense what they’re expecting me to look like. My first shape was a golden retriever puppy. Exactly what Jessie Heaney wanted for this fifth birthday. I’m extremely grateful I didn’t show up the next year when he was into dinosaurs.

The only problem with the need to transform is the lack of information. Jessie knew what a puppy looked like and had a general idea what they should act like but no specifics. I did what I was expected to do and that was jump around and yip happily.

The early morning sun was warm on my new coat but the dew on the grass was refreshing. I didn’t mind running around. It was better than oozing.

When his parents saw him hugging me, I felt their sadness at the idea of hurting him. They said he could keep me if I was a stray and not someone’s pet. Jessie insisted that we go ask all the neighbours.

As they walked further out of their neighbourhood, Jessie asked, “What if someone owns the puppy?”

“If someone owns the puppy we’ll go to the pound and get you another puppy,” Jessie’s mother said.

He promptly burst into tears. Between gasps of breath he said, “But I don’t want another puppy! I want Goldie.” He’d given me a name. Names are odd, they’re abstract representations of the concept of self but it has a sort of power.

“I think he’s named the mutt,” Jessie’s father chuckled as he spoke.

His laughter was drowned out by the low growl from a black lab. It towered over me – everything towered over me – five or six times my size. My first instinct was to make myself small and curl into a ball.

When I did I heard a woman’s voice shout, “Calm down Ebony!” I risked a look up at the other dog and it moved slowly towards me sniffing me. I must have smelled wrong. A little boys mind doesn’t contain dog smells.

Ebony must have assumed I had rolled in something strange because she came up to me and licked my head. A shock ran through my entire being. Everything Ebony knew about being a dog and physically being Ebony was contained in her saliva.

It might be considered a gross way of getting information but it works. Any bodily fluid I come in contact with gives me all the physical information I need to imitate that being or species. It’s limited by what the other being knows genetically. In this case Ebony was a female black lab and that’s what I got as information.

It gave me the information to create animal genitals and basic behaviour, but the vet and dog experts would often mention that my behaviour and temperament was that of a lab not a golden retriever.

My life with Jessie and his Parents was simple and beautiful. I played, ate, and was loved. My days were spent lazing in the back yard, my evenings playing with Jessie and my nights exploring the city.

I learned a lot about the world from listening to Jessie’s homework sessions.

“It’s interesting,” Jessie’s father said, “I’d swear she knows what we’re saying.”

“Oh don’t be silly,” Jessie’s mother replied before asking her son another question, “Where do you live?”

“1227 Shatner Ave. Ottawa, Algonquin. Capital of the North American Federation.”

“Good job, and when was the NAF founded?”

“July 17th, two-thousand and thirty three.”

“Good Job, Champ!” Jessie’s father would say the same every time Jessie gave a right answer.

One thing I liked doing with Jessie was watch his father’s old movies. They were all on clunky round disks instead of data chips and they had to be watched on an old flat imaged television in the basement.

My favorites were mysteries from the late twentieth century. Not knowing what was happening was my default state but these movies gave clues and the men, they were always men, were confident and brash. By the end the bad guy was caught through hard work and intelligence.

Jessie however liked the movies that had monsters in them. His father wouldn’t let him watch any of those that were in colour without a parent watching with him.

After watching a movie where a rabbit had been made large with lion DNA Jessie wasn’t able to sleep. I had found the rabbits laughable. I’d licked one once and there was nothing violent or dangerous about them.

After waking up crying, Jessie asked his father, “Daddy, are there any real monsters?”

“I wish I could say no. There are no giant rabbit monsters and there are no monsters in Ottawa.” His father gave a big sigh and continued, “However, there are monsters out there. Both creatures and people with unholy powers. That’s why we have the Norns.”

“Aren’t they police?”

“Yes but they also protect us from monsters. And you have Goldie to protect you.”

I gave a soft woof of agreement and he gave me a furrowed look.

The conversation intrigued me and my nighttime explorations went from learning all I could about the wildlife around the house to exploring further and further out. I learnt a lot more about humans and dogs than any other animals.

Human’s leave their bodily fluids everywhere. I learnt from cigarette butts, half chewed gum, pieces of garbage, random spit on the ground, and humans that marked their territory. The older the sample the less I get from it but I learnt a lot of the cruelty of humans in those nights.

The hardest part of walking around at night is avoiding people’s expectations. In daylight they feel safe and expect other people or dogs. It’s a vague tugging on me making me want to mold to their expectations. At night, people expect their nightmares and fears. It’s a sharp and almost painful feeling. If I give in to it I’m tugged from one nightmare to the other. If I fight it, it’s like trying to keep water in a shape. It means I move slowly and must concentrate on my shape.

Eventually I reached the border between city and wilderness; it was marked by an electric fence. The fence was easily five metres high and made of hard thick metal. Underground it only reached a metre and was nothing for a gopher. (They were fun to chase even if I didn’t need to learn about them).

The wilderness around Ottawa is filled with wild, nearly random, tropical plants; nothing like the well curated plants of the city. The mists of the jungle clung to the plants in a way that I’d only seen in the movies with Dracula, Swamp Thing, or Frankenstein.

To Be Concluded