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Chapter 6 of 19

Beyond The Myth

Chapter 6: The Aksharans

1,174 words | 6 min read

The blue-skinned figure spoke.

Not in the signal's language — not the electromagnetic patterns that Chitra had been decoding for days. In something closer to: sound. Vocal cords (or the alien equivalent) producing vibrations that travelled through the planet's atmosphere and reached our helmet receivers as: words. Not words I understood — but words. Structured sound with grammar and cadence and the specific musicality that language acquires when language has been spoken for: generations.

The figure gestured again — this time not the universal peace-palm but something more specific. A motion toward the settlement. An invitation. The gesture that said: come.

"Rudra," I said through the private comm channel. "We don't know what's in there."

"We don't know what's out here, either. But out here, we're: exposed. Four people in a clearing with no cover and no weapons. If they wanted to harm us, they could do it: now. The invitation suggests: otherwise."

"The invitation suggests they want us: closer."

"Same thing. Different perspective."

We followed. Four humans in EVA suits, walking behind a blue-skinned figure who moved through the forest with the ease of someone walking through their own living room — navigating roots and underbrush without looking down, the navigation that comes from: belonging. From knowing a place so deeply that the place becomes: extension of self.

The forest was: alive in ways that Allura's landscapes were not. Allura had vegetation — hardy, dark plants that clung to volcanic soil and survived the red dwarf's muted light. This forest was: exuberant. Trees that reached fifty metres, their canopies interlocking overhead to create a cathedral of green — the light filtering through leaves in columns that looked: solid, as if you could lean against a beam of light and it would hold your weight. Birds — or creatures that functioned as birds — moved through the canopy, producing sounds that I had no framework for. Not the silence of space. Not the mechanical hum of a ship. The sound of: a world that made its own music.

"Recording everything," Chitra murmured. Her suit's sensors were capturing: all of it. The atmospheric data, the biological signatures, the electromagnetic emissions of the planet's biosphere. Chitra recorded the way the ancient scribes recorded — not to understand immediately but to preserve for: later understanding.

We reached the settlement in twenty minutes.

The structures were: extraordinary. From orbit, they'd looked like metal-and-glass buildings. From the ground, they were: something else entirely. The buildings were grown, not built — organic architecture that used living materials, the walls made of a substance that was part plant, part mineral, a hybrid material that the planet had: produced and that the inhabitants had: shaped. The buildings rose from the ground like trees, their walls textured with the grain of living wood but strong as: stone. Windows — circular, iris-like — opened and closed with the light, responding to the sun the way pupils respond to: brightness.

Between the buildings: people. More blue-skinned figures, going about what appeared to be: daily life. The specificity of daily life — carrying objects, talking to each other, tending to structures, performing the thousand small tasks that constitute: civilisation. The tasks that said: we are not a military installation waiting for invaders. We are: a community. Living.

The figure who'd guided us stopped at a central structure — larger than the others, its walls more elaborately textured, the organic material shaped into patterns that reminded me of the inscriptions on the Nakshatra temples. Patterns that told: stories. The figure turned to us and spoke again — the same musical language — and then, unexpectedly, made a gesture I recognised. A namaste. Palms pressed together at the chest. The gesture that the Nakshatra texts showed in their oldest illustrations. The gesture that predated Allura. The gesture that came from: Earth.

"Did you see that?" Kabir's voice on the comm, sharp with: recognition.

"I saw it," Rudra said. His voice had changed — the controlled calm cracking slightly, the way a wall cracks when something behind it: shifts. "That's: a Nakshatra greeting."

"That's impossible. These aren't Nakshatra. They're not even: human."

"The gesture is human. The gesture is: three thousand years old. And they know it."

The figure gestured toward the building's entrance — a doorway that opened as we approached, the organic material parting like a curtain, revealing: an interior. The interior was: warm. Lit not by artificial light but by bioluminescence — the walls themselves producing a soft amber glow, the glow of living material that generated: light. The way fireflies generate light. The way the deep-sea creatures on Allura's ocean floors generate light. Biology producing: illumination.

Inside, more figures waited. Seated in a semicircle — an arrangement that suggested: council. Discussion. Decision-making that involved: many voices. The figures were varied — different shades of blue, different builds, different ages (or what I assumed were ages, the markers of ageing in an alien species being: unknown to me). But all carried the same: presence. The composure of beings who had been expecting us and who were: prepared.

One figure stood. Taller than the others — nearly Rudra's height. The figure's skin was the deepest blue I'd seen, the blue of the ocean at midnight. Silver hair — longer, more elaborate than the guide's. And eyes that were: different from the others. Not the dark eyes of the other figures but: gold. Bright gold, like the Nakshatra figurine's painted armour. Like: sunlight compressed into irises.

The gold-eyed figure spoke. The same musical language — but slower. More deliberate. Each word placed with: intention. And then: something changed. The figure paused. Closed its eyes. And when the eyes opened, the figure spoke: again.

In Alluran.

Not perfect Alluran — accented, halting, the Alluran of someone who had learned the language from recordings rather than: speakers. But recognisable. Understandable. Words that I knew, in a voice that was: not human.

"Welcome," the figure said. "We have waited. Long time. Many cycles. We are: Aksharan."

Aksharan. The name they gave themselves. The name that I would learn meant, in their language: "those who endure." The name that carried: their story, the way "Nakshatra" carried ours.

"My name is Rudra," the captain said. He removed his helmet. The action was: reckless, impulsive, the action of a man who understood that you cannot: negotiate through glass. That trust requires: exposure. That the first gesture of respect between species is: showing your face.

The air hit him. Real air. Unfiltered. The air of a planet that was not his home and that his lungs had never: tasted. He breathed. His chest expanded. His eyes widened — not with fear but with: sensation. The sensation of breathing air that was: alive in a way that recycled ship-air and filtered suit-air could never be.

"Rudra," the gold-eyed figure repeated. Testing the name. Learning it. The figure's hand moved to its own chest. "I am: Tara."

Tara. A name that in the ancient Nakshatra texts meant: star.

The coincidence was: impossible. And therefore: not a coincidence.

© 2026 Atharva Inamdar. Licensed under CC BY-NC-ND 4.0. Free to read and share with attribution.