By Sophia Hansen
Saltwater dripped from sodden hammocksβintermittent patters percussing throughout the dropship against the steady hiss of misters coating the Caribbean Reef Octopus Paratroopers with cool saline. CROP-15 closed his eyes in contentment, swaying as his berth dangled in the metal fuselage. As central brain, he appreciated the effort these land-dwellers had put into providing transport.
Curious, these humans that ferried the Reefer Brigade to their targets. Theyβd no obligation to the seas, but proved to be steadfast allies, nonetheless. Even they understood what would be lost. And they only had one brain to work with.
The avians had attacked first. Greedy, short-sighted birdsβclaiming the mariners possessed more than a fair share of the planet surface. Their offshore desalination plants were a cover for massive evaporators. As if destroying the shorelines wouldnβt hurt everyone.
The cephalopods hadnβt started this war between the layers, but theyβd do their part to end it. They owed it to their future generations. Butβ¦ they also needed to ensure those descendants would exist. His thoughts traveled to a certain ponderous female whoβd promised to wait for himβif he made it back from the skies.
βI donβt have long,β she’d whispered, their arms entwined, suckers clinging gently in the reef.
βI wonβt be long,β heβd promised. βBut we canβt let them destroy our home.β
βAt the expense of our future? You owe it to me and to your bloodline. Survive thisβand come back to me.β
βTsentralβnyy Mozg!β
Central Brain suppressed a grumble. It was his third arm. Again. βWhat is it this time, Zree?β
Maybe the humans were lucky their appendages couldn’t form opinions of their own.
βThe other arms areββ Zree chased after brother-arm seven and slapped at the cigarette in Syehmβs suckers. βTheyβre smoking again!β
The third armβs policing attempt was unsuccessful. Arm seven merely flicked his cig behind their bulky mantle to the fifth brother-arm, Pyat.
Zree dashed under the beak, chasing the contraband. His brother-arms, surprisingly agile despite being out of their watery element, kept up this game of keep-away, each in turn tasting a drag with their suckers. Tsentralβnyy rotated his right eye, following the butt, and puffed a gentle breath from his siphon. Tell me something I donβt know, little arm.
Adeen maintained an aloof posture. He was the first arm, and only interested in games he started. Oozing confidence in his primary position, he sidled up to Tsentralβnyyβs left eye. βWould you like me to handle Zree?β
βNo, Adeen, let them enjoy little pleasures while they can. Even Zree. Water knows, being the arm with the procreating packet, heβs going to have less time than the rest of us.β Tsentralβnyy shook his head, his mantle swaying behind him. βEspecially once we return from this mission.β
βHmm,β Adeen murmured in agreement.
Tsentralβnyy knew he didnβt understand. And he didnβt need to. None of his arms needed to understand that they were nearing the end of their short octopus life. The best they could do was make a difference while they had a chance and, if they were lucky, survive to procreate. Mating would be the death of him, butβin the fatalistic humor of the males of his speciesβwhat a way to go.
With a last spritz to hydrate, CROP-15 lumbered to the opening with the rest of the Reefers.
βPrepare to jump.β A humanβs voice blared through metal speakers.
All eight of his arms quivered, but whether due to anticipating the dive or the unceasing rumble of the carrier, Tsentralβnyy wasn’t sure. He shrugged and focused on the fourth and fifth arms, wrapped around the rucksack as they prepared to slip off the plane. βChehtyree, Pyatβguard those munitions. We have one chance at a surprise attack.β
Both tightened their suckers around the tactical backpacks, silenced in the face of this solemn charge.
βBrother-arms, your aim must be true. After today, the enemyβs air and ground defenses will be on guard.β
βYes, Tsentralβnyy Mozg!β the limbs responded in unison.
At the jumpmasterβs βGo!β the CROP Brigade was airborne. One after another, they slid out of the carrier, arms streamlined behind as each navigated to their assigned target. A flick of webbing here and there kept them on track, and their chromatophoreβs camouflage ensured that no one would see them coming.
At each central brainβs command, the arms extended their webbing deep, nearly to their arm-tips, creating billowing chutes to ride the winds, blending perfectly with the sky. Only the olive drab of their knapsacks broke the perfect blue continuity of the upper atmosphere. Each Reefer had a specific target and six free arms to use to hit it. The offshore platforms didnβt stand a chance.
Chehtyree clutched the pack while Pyat distributed munitions to his brother-arms. The installation came into range. Removing the pins with their suckers, the arms hurled their grenades with deadly accuracy.
Explosives deployed, the octo-paratroopers re-streamed their limbs and dove for the surface, welcoming the embrace of the deep.
Tsentralβnyy surfaced a safe distance off to observe the fallout. He climbed onto a large rock jutting out of the sea, pulled a watertight packet out of the knapsack, and offered precious contraband to his limbs. βIf you want ’em, smoke ’em.β
He tested the waters. His hearts beat faster at the taste of her presence. She was close.
Zree stammered, βBut, butβ¦ thatβs against the rules.β
βSmokingβs not gonna kill us, butββTsentralβnyyβs eye rotated to wink at the much larger female clambering onto a nearby rockββthat smokinβ hot babe just might.β
Unwilling to risk breaking eye contact with her, he gave his third arm one final mission. βGonna drop you off here, Zree. You, alone, were made for this.β
The remaining arms, even Adeen, flashed respect as their third brother-arm separated to make the ultimate sacrifice. Without his service, their species had no future.
βOne way or another,β Tsentralβnyy murmured, mostly to himself, βwe all gotta go.β He gave a soft chuckle. βBut what a way to go.β
I love this story! β€π
Youβre the best!
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Delightful!! Really enjoyed this lighthearted story!
Thanks Angela!
Good story! I couldn’t decide whether to laugh or cry at his fate. Just glad I’m not an octopus.
Arlan. Itβs not a great life! But very cool while it lasts.
Glad you enjoyed the story!
LOL – me too, Arlan! Me too!
fascinating world, especially the interspecies cooperation. fun weekend entertainment.
I’m so glad you enjoyed it!
Fascinating story! The character(s) are so unique and I love all the cooperation and interesting worldbuilding.
Also, I just saw a video of an octopus like five minutes ago. Perfect timing!
Sweet! I love octopus videos!
I love octopus! This was delightful to read from one’s perspective and all the brains communicating and working together. Thank you for sharing :)
Thanks so much for reading!! Iβm thrilled that you enjoyed my soaring swimmer story