The Road to PALISADE 20: City Planning Department

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Episode description[edit | edit source]

This episode carries content warnings for distorted and layered vocals (00:30 - 01:10), discussion of workplace injuries, discussion of medical debt, and discussion of slavery and indentured servitude.

For three years, the Bilateral Intercession has held Palisade under blockade. The Pact of Free States holds just beyond Nideo space, waiting in the dark for an opportunity to strike. The Qui'Err Coalition's fleet hovers at the edge of the Mirage, a flock around the Brink. Millennium Break's strike force hides in the shadow of Palisade's moon, Travertine.

Something must give. Someone must move.

And that is when Perennial whispers into an ear she’s taken as her own, giving the Witch in Glass a new task and reminding her of an old law: Everything that has happened before will happen again.

And so she moves. The Witch in Glass is fearless, and after all, she has two Divines on her side. The revivified corpse of Past and, of course, the Adversary herself. So she drives the Reflecting Pool (and her many  and its attack wings crashing through the blockade and driving Crystal Palace once more into the ground--albeit in a much more controlled way this time.

It is only hours days after making landfall that the Witch departs the city, joined by Emmeline, her attache, but leaving behind her most loyal supporters. She leaves behind two orders: First, that they must turn their wider landing zone into a city worthy of her rule before she returns. Second, that the city must carry the name which came to her as she browsed Past’s ruined archives one night, taken from a kingdom that once ruled vast expanses of the Quire desert: the Crown of Glass.

And with no further words, she wanders out into the wilderness–everything that has happened before will happen again–leaving behind only a group of the ship's de facto leaders to see to the new city's repairs and re-establishment.

This week on the Road to PALISADE: City Planning Department

Records Recovered from the Divine, Arbitrage[edit | edit source]

Factions[edit | edit source]

The Bilateral Intercession: This faction, made up primarily from Stel Nideo and Kesh assets, was formerly known as the Curtain. The rebranding comes as part of a “civil coup” performed by Cynosure Whitestar-Kesh. In a move that surprised no group more than the Curtain themselves, Cynosure spent years growing in confidence and power, until that intelligence organization could be once again reduced to a tool. Still defined by their traditionalism, they wield their control on culture, religion, and history as a weapon—and the extensive spy network for which they are named when those come up short.
The Pact of Free States: While the Bilateral Intercession’s name change reflects a shift in leadership and posture for the Curtain, the shift from “The Pact of Necessary Venture” to “The Pact of Free States” is simply the public acceptance of what was already widely understood to be true. Led in name by Dahlia, the Glorious Princept, and in day-to-day operation by senior members of Stels Apostolos and Columnar, the Pact paint themselves as liberal reformists whose aim is to increase the degree of autonomy in each of the Stels, such that they become in reality five separate nations.
Hypha & Ashen: The former were a culture of galactic nomads, guided by a paranatural force called the Strand which they could commune with using technological devices built into their antlers. The latter are their descendants, their routes broken by the Principality’s expansions and occupations, their culture ripped from them.
The Branched: A post-human culture from the Golden Branch star sector who have transformed their bodies into spectacular forms, but who are now weighed down by an endless war with the Principality.

Persons[edit | edit source]

Apparatus Aperitif (they/them), Shunley Pernard (they/them), Antonina Juris (she/her), Plum Tort (he/him), and Kojack Variety (he/him): The leading council members of the Crown in Glass, the city built from the fallen ship the Reflecting Pool.
The Witch in Glass (she/her): A former scion of Kesh who, after knitting a bond with the adversary Perennial, came into control of the body of the Divine Past. Now scours the galaxy for the lost, injured, and unsure, recruiting them into her growing city-state. A shaky ally of Millennium Break. “Haunted” by an old foe.
Exanceaster March (he/him): Head of the vast Columnar multi-system conglomerate called the Frontier Syndicate, which is older than the Stel itself. While the Syndicate has its hands in many enterprises, the heart of it all is corralling and instrumentalizing data. One such effort, Exanceaster’s pet project the March Anecdatist Foundation, set its sights on Palisade as a testing ground.

Locations[edit | edit source]

The Bontive Valley: When the fledgling Divine Principality left Palisade—for reasons unknown by most—those few who refused to leave (unwilling to see themselves become part of a new empire) remained in quiet isolation, blessed by the gifts of the Divine Bounty. Where that Divine is now remains a mystery.

Miscellany[edit | edit source]

The Perennial Wave: Perennial is something like a god, or at least I think she imagines she is. Her wave is her arrogant whim, made manifest. Functionally infinite nano-particles, spread throughout the galaxy, hampering all technology except (curiously) Divines.
Kalmeria Particle: A so-called miracle of modern science, providing those that master it power akin to what was wielded before the Perennial Wave. Like most miracles, there is an explanation, but most people have neither the knowledge of nor interest in what it really is or where it came from. Some know that it is named for the rogue engineer Kal’Mera Broun, but few know that it is the result not only of their research into the divine Asepsis, but also the particular consequences of Millennium Break’s battle with Motion and her siphoning of so-called “Autonomy Itself.”

Contents[edit | edit source]

Opening[edit | edit source]

Rival pilots. Daring heists. Divine companionship. War. These are the sorts of topics we’ve covered this season on Perfect Imperfect, a podcast about the end of the Perfect Millennium. I’m your host, Layer Luxurious, and there’s really only one place we could end this season: on the [audio distorts and slows] pearlescent, peripheral world of Palisade itself, in the [audio speeds up] moment that these outsiders who opposed the Bilateral Intercession’s invasion [audio becomes unintelligibly fast for several seconds]

[high pitched and tinny] Let’s dive in. Let’s dive in. It’s time to dive in. Get ready to [audio distorts and slows] dive. Diiive. Diiiiie…

[sound of waves splashing] [spoken clearly] Dying. I’m dying. [audio becomes layered over itself] I’m going to die — falling — slipping — her — no — I hate — it’s fine — you took it — Valence will handle it — Motion — time itself — Perennial — her melody — Perennial — you’ve seen all this — her eye — Perennial — I can’t — I can’t — don’t show me — there’s too much —

[shouting] Don’t!

[spoken clearly] “This is a message…” Tch. Did I ever speak with such confidence? What hubris. What did I believe in? Appointed times which moved swiftly from week to month, outpaced by their machines and the delays wrought by our petty arguments. What did I believe in? A god as empty synechdoche for justice, a god so easily diluted and dispersed. What did I believe in? You who listened once and is dead now, and you too, who listens tomorrow beyond my reach, beyond your own.

And what do I believe now? That there was more to see than I ever could; that I haunt a corpse of a queen soulless, ambitious blood replaced by compulsive sap; that the revolution never needed me; that the shape of empire is a circle, a noose, a strand of metal caught tight around neck, a blindfold… a manacle. A manacle which must be broken.

I believe in us, I believe that us is longer than us, I believe in oil on aprons, I believe in black eyes, I believe in yellowed posters on the wall, I believe in sacrifice. I believe that justice given is no justice at all. I believe in tired knees and bad backs, I believe in drawers or closets or bureaus of replacement parts. I don’t believe in music but I do believe in dancing. I believe in whispers in ears, and so I speak.

I believe that this will be heard, well after it’s needed. Well past the long nights. I believe, against it all, in Millennium Break. My name was Gur Sevraq, and I have been stolen from you. But you will win anyway. You must.

Plot[edit | edit source]

The Witch in Glass is given direction from Perennial, and she uses the Reflecting Pool to crash through the Bilateral Intercession’s blockade of Palisade. Hours after she lands, the Witch departs on another mission from Perennial, wandering into the wilderness and leaving the de facto leaders of the Reflecting Pool to create a new settlement called the Crown of Glass. Apparatus Aperitif, Shunley Pernard, Antonina Juris, Kojack Variety, and Plum Tort form the city planning council, and together they work on creating recreation, housing, and food supplies for the city. They are interrupted by Kojak receiving what he believes is a vision from Perennial, telling them to dig into the nearby mountain to build an altar. As they begin the project, the mountain is slowly covered in Russian sage. When the Witch in Glass returns, one of her fingers has been replaced with an ornate brass key.

The afterword narration reveals that in the next year more people begin to land on Palisade, with the Cult of Devotion, the Qui Err Coalition, the Hypha, and Millennium Break all taking part in attempts to fight the Bilateral Intercession on Palisade. Kesh and Nideo hold a strong grip on the planet, however; Stel Nideo reveals their New Asterism, with the prophet Gur Sevraq at its head. Meanwhile, the founder of the March Anecdatist Foundation, Exanceaster March, debuts his new war machine, the Altar, which outclasses anything else on the battlefield. As Altars begin to spread across the planet, they become known as "the platform on which the future would be earned, whether through worship or through sacrifice."

Cast[edit | edit source]