| AURORA: Auxiliary Union for Rallying, Observation,
Recording, Analysis
A Division of CONCORD
Lieutenant Bills abruptly stopped walking, and lowered
the datapad. An odd scent wafted from an open door,
instantly distracting him. He pushed open the door and
edged inside, only to find himself in a poorly-lit storeroom.
A small crate stood open, and he reached inside with
trepidation. A moment later, he withdrew some of the
contents - a darkly-colored cigar.
"Let me light that up for you..." the older
man said, as he leaned forward out of a darkened corner,
just a few feet away. A small tongue of fire snapped
to life, making ominous shadows of crates and containers
dance about the dimly lit chamber. The young officer
jumped, dropping the datapad to the floor.
Nervously, his gaze worked its way across the cluttered
room. "What is this?" He took a breath, and
held up his cigar, letting the flame wash over the tip.
"Where did these come from?"
"Serpentis. Or at least, somewhere near there."
Tarainis leaned back against a crate of holoreels, and
took a deep puff off of his own cigar. "Criminals,
they may be... but they certainly know how to enjoy
the finer things in life."
Bills stared at the old man for a moment, then looked
back at his own cigar. "That would make these...
well, contraband, wouldnĄŻt it? WonĄŻt we
get in trouble if..."
The fellow gave a sly grin. "DonĄŻt let the
lack of uniform fool you, egger. I outrank you, and
almost everyone else at this station." He blew
a smoke ring in BillĄŻs direction. "Besides,
none of this exists."
"Come again?"
"Some of your comrades caught a shipment of boosters
coming out of SerpĄŻ Prime." He gestured with
his cigar. "These were on board, as well. Not on
the cargo manifest, though... they donĄŻt know
where they came from, so AURORA got them. They donĄŻt
care how we dispose of them, so long as they never see
them again." He took a deep puff, and smiled. "So,
weĄŻre incinerating them."
The lieutenant nodded slowly. "IĄŻve seen
the name AURORA on memos, but never understood what
it meant. What does it stand for?"
"Auxiliary Union for Rallying, Observation, Recording,
Analysis."
"Ahh... alright." Bills looked around the
room again, for a second, before continuing. "And
what does that all mean?"
Tarainis smirked, and reached over to the nearby terminal.
The screen flared to life, displaying one of the main
thoroughfares of the station. CONCORD officials hurried
about, each with their own agenda and purpose.
"We handle the jobs that they donĄŻt. The
ones that fall between the cracks." He tapped a
bit of ash from the end of his cigar. "We started
out as information gatherers, making sure that the right
information got to the right people. It was only natural
that we become the historians, as well."
He gestured at a neatly-stacked tower of pressure crates.
"See those? Data arrays, due to be shipped out
to the archives. You would be amazed at whatĄŻs
in there... Video footage of that battle in Passari.
Last nightĄŻs Clash match scores. Minutes from
the Sanitation Committee meeting".
The younger man coughed, and sat up more attentively.
"Why do you need all that junk?"
"You never know what is going to be significant,
or to whom. So, we collect it all."
"DoesnĄŻt sound that bad a job," the
lieutenant mused. "At least you get to see all
kinds of interesting stuff, right? Beats patrolling
the inner systems for hours at a time..."
Tarainis shook his head. "ThatĄŻs what got
us in trouble. We were just supposed to move information
around, to whom it belonged." He gestured at the
viewscreen. "Look at them. They all have a purpose,
a job. Try to give them anything even an inch outside
of their focus, and they donĄŻt want to know about
it. It might as well not exist."
He flipped the viewscreen off, again. "ThatĄŻs
why we got our commission. There canĄŻt be a department
to cover everything, so our job is to take up the slack.
And you are right... it is a great life. One day I may
be following a smuggling trail, and the next officiating
a wedding."
The lieutenant smiled and leaned back, taking another
puff on his cigar. "IĄŻm in the wrong line
of work." He glimpsed at his datapad, and stood
up again. "IĄŻm due in Hanger 3. Thanks for
the diversion, though."
Tarainis smiled softly, and leaned back into the shadows.
"DonĄŻt worry... weĄŻll be seeing each
other again."
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