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The First Superhuman: Rebuilding Civilization from the Moon-Chapter 130: The Fall Of An Interstellar Empire
The Viridian Civilization, a young stellar empire, officially took to the stars 10,000 years ago, quickly rising as a rare and formidable interstellar power. Three millennia ago, they even cracked the secrets of warp drive technology.
Ten thousand years might seem like an eternity within their own recorded history, but against the vast, cosmic backdrop, it was merely a drop in the ocean. Compared to ancient empires spanning millions of years, they were but infants, young, inquisitive, and brimming with naive expectations about the universe.
This youthfulness fueled their vigorous expansion in both technology and culture. While the Viridians had brushed against certain universal truths, their understanding of the cosmos remained fragmented.
The massive dreadnought currently hurtling toward the Solar System was a remnant of their once-great grand fleet.
Inside the vessel, the Viridian crew was consumed by dread. Emergency reports wailed relentlessly as automated reports echoed through the corridors:
"Critical Alert: The containment field in Sector D has collapsed. Extent of structural damage unknown!"
"Engineering Report: Main drive is operating at a 40% failure rate and requires immediate servicing. Auxiliary drive offline. Catastrophic energy leak detected..."
"Warning! Cascade failure in Sector D power grid!"
A deafening roar reverberated through the hull as another internal explosion rocked the massive ship. Its sheer size absorbed the worst of the impact, preventing immediate destruction. But no vessel could withstand this kind of continuous internal hemorrhaging.
"...We have to find a star system to resupply and recharge... We need a safe harbor to initiate repairs!"
The frantic vocalizations came from a towering alien, nearly 5 meters tall. This was Fario, the ship’s commander, his demeanor radiating anxiety. Beside him stood a slightly smaller counterpart.
To human eyes, they resembled the dryads or treants of high fantasy, sporting green, bark-like skin, fibrous tendrils resembling hair, and appendages woven from vine-like muscle. Naturally, human biological terms like "hair" or "arms" didn’t exactly apply to them. Their bodies were draped in natural, leaf-like formations that served as clothing. Their physiology was composed of a material akin to supple wood, granting them structural integrity without sacrificing mobility.
They were, unmistakably, a sentient species evolved from plant life.
Their verdant skin was rich in chloroplasts, allowing them to photosynthesize ambient starlight. Because of this, a Viridian could survive for extended periods without consuming physical sustenance.
Though technologically superior to humanity, their communication still relied on localized acoustic waves rather than direct neural or telepathic broadcasting. It seemed that manipulating physical waves was a universal stepping stone for sentient life, with sound being the most elemental medium.
"We’ve reached the Orion Spur of the Milky Way, an isolated sector with a sparse stellar density. By the Maker, I hope our ship holds together until we make landfall!" Fario rasped.
Like humans, they experienced a full spectrum of emotions. However, lacking sweat glands, they expelled excess body heat through foliar transpiration. When a Viridian was enveloped in a fine white mist, it was a clear indicator of spiking internal temperatures, a physiological response to extreme stress, panic, or physical exertion.
The bridge was currently choked with this rising vapor, shrouding the crew in a thick, white fog. It wasn’t the ambient temperature causing it; it was pure, unfiltered terror. Despite the damage, their ship remained an engineering marvel, and its current trajectory was locked onto the closest star system: the Solar System.
While warp drives were exponentially faster and more energy-efficient than conventional sub-light thrusters, they came with a fatal blind spot: environmental observation.
When breaching the light-speed threshold, the vessel’s exact position became unreadable to the outside universe. Conversely, the crew inside could only perceive the exterior as a chaotic stream of raw, corrupted data.
This perceptual distortion also occurred during sub-light warp travel. The ship was enveloped in a "Warp Bubble" an artificial, localized distortion of spacetime that warped incoming light and radio frequencies. The crew relied heavily on supercomputers to untangle the visual static and reconstruct a coherent image of their surroundings.
At sub-light velocities, a slower speed meant a thinner Warp Bubble, allowing the ship’s computers to generate more accurate sensor readings. But once they crossed the faster-than-light threshold, they were flying completely blind. Therefore, FTL jumps were strictly for charting deep space. For precise, short-range navigation, they had to decelerate to sub-light speeds; otherwise, they risked plunging straight into a star!
For the Viridians, 0.4 times the speed of light was the absolute processing limit of their navigational computers. Pushing past that in sub-light mode would overwhelm their sensors, rendering the voyage suicidal.
"May Gaia preserve us," Commander Fario prayed fervently.
The Viridians operated as a unified, primal clan society bound by deep genetic ties. They suffered from low reproductive rates and a minuscule population, but compensated with staggering lifespans often stretching into several millennia. Freed from the fierce competition for resources thanks to photosynthesis, their civilization experienced almost zero internal conflict. They were a highly intelligent, docile race devoid of natural aggression.
If the universe handed out racial attributes, their baseline stats would dwarf humanity’s.
"Commander Fario, why... why did that empire attack us?" Mal, the younger Viridian beside him, stammered, his voice laced with lingering shock. "Could they be the Legendary Annihilators?"
If they hadn’t engaged the warp drive the absolute microsecond the ambush began, their entire species would have been erased in the crossfire.
It was a chilling realization. Dr. Arthur Lambert’s controversial hypothesis back on Earth had been dead-on: the alien vessel approaching the Solar System was indeed a crippled refugee ship!
Fario, the towering commander, shook his heavy, wooden head, his voice a low rumble. "Mal, perhaps it was simply because we carried too much wealth... and it drew the wrong eyes. We never should have attempted to trade the Heart of Gaia... those ancient empires operate on logic we cannot comprehend. We are still woefully ignorant of the cosmos."
The young Viridian fell silent, sinking into quiet grief. So many of their kin had been slaughtered without reason, and he had been completely powerless to stop it. They had perished in the cold void, forever denied the right to return to Gaia’s soil.
"Commander! Urgent report!" A frantic voice shattered the silence as a soldier burst onto the bridge.
"What is it now?" Fario snapped, his irritation flaring. Viridian culture placed a high premium on decorum, and bursting into a room without signaling was highly unorthodox. However, his inherently gentle nature quickly reeled in his temper.
"A transmission, sir! An intercepted broadcast from a local civilization... It’s a standard radio frequency! The audio feed is crystal clear," the soldier reported, his voice vibrating with a mix of awe and terror. With a gesture, he routed the audio to the bridge’s main speakers.
It was a broadcast from the Federation specifically, Jason’s furious ultimatum: "Unknown alien vessel, you have breached our designated security perimeter. Power down your drives and alter course immediately! If you fail to comply, you will be met with lethal force!"
Dead silence. The fog on the bridge thickened drastically as every crew member stiffened at the translation.
"By the roots, there’s another civilization in this sector!" young Mal shrieked. He couldn’t understand the exact alien syntax, but the hostile, warning tone was universally clear. Ever since the massacre of their fleet, Mal harbored a deeply ingrained paranoia toward any other lifeforms in the universe.
What did the presence of another civilization truly mean for their survival?
"Mal! Hold your composure!"
Fario commanded. He paused, the wood around his jaw tightening before he let out a dark, rattling sneer. "Do not forget who we are... We are, after all, a true Interstellar Civilization. Such empires are a rarity in this galaxy! If some primitive, dirt-bound species overestimates its reach, we will simply crush them into fertilizer."
As he spoke, a cold, uncharacteristic malice flickered in his sap-green eyes. As a veteran commander, he knew all too well the insurmountable technological chasm that separated true masters of the stars from lesser, planetary civilizations.







