Exploration Devastation. by PleaseStepOnMeDamnit
“Touchdown in 3-2-1”
With
a roar, the landing ships engines slowed the rapid descent of the vessel,
settling it onto the ground with a bump. Outside the window, the verdant plains
of the distant world disappeared in a cloud of smoke from the backwash, fading
away as the engines slowly shut down.
“Orbital,
Lander confirms touchdown, all systems nominal on shutdown. Ambient outside
temperature 21 Celsius, Windspeed 5 kilometers per hour, Air composition safe
for human respiration.” The auburn-haired woman stared down at her computer
screen as the report from the ship’s sensors became lines of data.
“Lander,
this is Orbital, touchdown is confirmed. With pressure and temperature
considerations, you should not require any life support equipment. Jumpsuits should
be all you need. Bring pistols for defense but that’s about it. Good luck Jennifer
and landing team and stay safe. We’ll keep an eye on planetary from above.
Orbital out.”
“Hey
Hikari, pop the door open, I want to breathe some fresh air. I’ve had too much
machine life support air mix for my taste, and I want to breathe something
natural.”
The
black-haired Asian woman quickly complied, pressing a few buttons next to a
panel, before a door automatically opened with a hiss. The three waited for a
moment as the musty cabin air was cycled out for the clean, natural oxygen of
an untouched world.
“Much
better.” The one man aboard the ship turned away from his console. “Captain,
what do we need to take?”
Jennifer
scanned over her handwritten list. “Water, some food, sample collection tools, cameras,
our sidearms, first aid kits and that should be it. We’ll be sending some up to
the ship, and we have some analysis tools here to work with. For you, Lucas,
I’m going to need you to carry the laptops so we can do some work outside. It’s
a beautiful day and it’d be a shame to not stop to rest for a bit and get some
sun, or well, star while work.”
Lucas
responded by saluting with his dainty hand, brushing his short blond hair out
of the way in the process.
“Alright,
let’s get organized and head out. Ready equipment in 5.” Jennifer ordered,
already sliding her laptop into the insulated bag.
After
spending the next several minutes loading up their gear, Jennifer stood by the
doorway, staring out to the verdant fields besmirched with patches of grey
moss.
“The
untouched surface of an alien planet. Very few explorers get this opportunity
so savor it. We’ll be the first humans to set foot in this pristine place, free
of the politics, conflict, and bureaucracy of the Federation. A world fraught
with opportunity and natural beauty that we three are fortunate enough to take
that first step. So, who wants to set foot first?”
Lucas
sighed, methodically taking step after step down the metal ramp until the steel
under his boots was replaced with the dirt and grass of a hitherto untouched
alien world.
“Earth
Date, May 14th, Solar Year 2112, Human contact established with
uninhabited alien world MYX-330c” Lucas recites into his recorder. “We once
again continue the Federation’s mission of greater exploration and
understanding of our galaxy’s planets.”
“You
could’ve picked something more interesting to say, y’know.” Hikari commented,
leaning on the doorframe of the ship. “Something about small steps and giant
leaps and all that from 150 years ago.”
“I
couldn’t come up with something good enough to say.”
“No
worry let’s get this exploration on the road. From the maps given to us from
Orbital, there’s another forest clearing a half mile from here, so let’s head
that way and we can stretch out and get some work done under a real sky.”
Jennifer
and Hikari stepped down from the ramp onto the ground. Quickly configuring her
GPS, Jennifer pointed out into the distance.
“That
way. I’m curious to see how far this grey moss spreads. We can research it in
depth later.”
Little
did the explorers know that the grey moss on the ground was far from the base
plant matter the three assumed it to be. Down below, millions of teeming
miniscule beings lived in vast city societies. Despite their stature, the speck-sized
humanoid beings carved out for themselves an advanced society. Despite their
advancements in science and technology, they had little hope of contacting
outsiders. Because of this, when the humans appeared in the sky, they ran to
welcome them. To the people, they appeared more like gods than beings like
themselves. With the sun at their back, they resembled some form of divinity,
prompting an almost religious response in the streets below. Thousands cheered
at their appearance, and many more dropped to their knees in reverence, hoping
to beseech the mercy of the divinities looming above their world.
Their
jubilation turned to horror as the living gods continued their walk forward,
unaware of the civilization in their path. The three gargantuan beings raised
their soles over the city almost in unison, exposing millions to the worn
treads of their Federation issued boots. Like asteroids, they slammed down with
unimaginable power, instantly reducing entire districts into craters. The once
reverent worshippers shot to their feet and ran in terror as the unforgiving
lugs of the exploration boots. Meanwhile the three were completely and utterly
unaware, chatting amongst themselves in a booming, but incomprehensible
language.
Entire
districts were wiped from the map at once, pressed into greyish boot prints
speckled with splotches of blood from countless insignificant specks unable to
escape the steps of the enormous explorers. The government of the tiny world rapidly
responded, and across the city, advanced ion cannons desperately fired at the
giants, hoping to neutralize, or at the very least grab their attention. Blue
streaks of light arced into the sky, impacting the bodies of the three
explorers with bright flashes. To their dismay, the durable material of their
suits barely even flinched against the powerful attacks, the smoke quickly
dispersing to reveal the lack of scorch marks against their outfits.
Over
a million tiny beings were dead in a matter of moments, pressed like their city
into deep boot prints that were once a thriving, advanced society. Survivors
watched in tenuous relief as the gods walked away from the city, blissfully
unaware of the apocalypse they just committed against sentient beings.
“Doesn’t
seem to be any sort of non-plant life.” Lucas commented, scanning the sparse
forest around them.
“Interesting.”
Hikari replied.
A
few more minutes of walking left the explorers in the midst of a large
clearing. Large rocks sat positioned in the midst of a ring of trees, freely
exposed to the light of the planet’s star.
“Perfect!
It’s nice and warm here so we can get some work done while we examine the
area!”
Jennifer
skipped forward before dropping her bag next to the rock. With a dramatic spin,
she hopped onto the weathered grey stone, sighing pleasurably as she settled onto
the surprisingly comfortable surface.
Like
the ground before, a dusting of micro cities covered the rock in small patches.
Thousands of feet above the ground, the beings of the towns were isolated from
the other communities. Thus, they paid little attention to the frantic distress
reports of distant communities they had little association with. However, to
their horror, the same beings said to have already obliterated some of the
largest cities in the region soon appeared through the forest, and they were
completely powerless to stop them or even escape the rock as they made a
beeline for their location.
Jennifer’s skintight suit-clad ass
loomed ominously overhead, eclipsing their star with her skintight suit-clad
asscheeks before slamming down with apocalyptic force. The tiny beings below
barely even had a chance to react before the firm, curvy meteor instantly
flattened everything into crumpled debris. The unique culture and advanced
technology of such an isolated mountaintop community ceased to exist as
Jennifer parked her ass down on their home. A small cluster around her asscrack
huddled in fear, just barely surviving the end of their world in the dark.
“This
really is a comfortable rock!” Jennifer mused, absentmindedly grinding her ass
into her new chair.
Any
buildings on the outskirts of the impact zone were quickly erased beneath the
suit-clad meteor, scraped away by the tight fabric of her jumpsuit. The few
survivors in her crack wailed in despair as a tsunami of flesh scraped their
last vestige of safety, embedding the crushed remnants of buildings and survivors
alike into her suit.
“Lucas!
There’s another rock, take a seat!”
“Sorry, I need to use the
bathroom, I’ll come join you in a minute!”
Jennifer
waved in acknowledgement as Lucas trudged off into the woods. Within a few
moments, the forest thickened, granting him a shield from whatever prying eyes
might be out as he found a suitable spot.
---
Lucas
stood in front of a large tree, barely paying mind to the teeming civilization
at the base as he unzipped the flap on the crotch of his jumpsuit. Millions of
tiny specks could only watch on in horror as an enormous penis, far larger than
even the largest skyscraper this cluster could hope to build, aimed its
gargantuan head squarely at their society.
“Mmm”
Lucas quietly moaned as a yellow tinted stream began to spill from the vast
slit. Some began to run, while others hugged their friends and confessed their
sins to the deity on the spot, accepting the futility of their existence in the
presence of such casual display of power.
Less
than a moment later, the first drops of urine slammed down on the city below.
Anyone in the targeted blocks was disintegrated instantly, crushed to
unrecognizable gore under the sheer weight of the piss. Buildings smashed and
crumbled, carried away as the drops turned into a biblical flood, an
unstoppable wall of foul yellow liquid, building rubble and bodies. The flood
radiated from the impact site, washing away over a thousand years of continued
habitation with something as simple as a young man relieving himself. From
ancient ruins to the most modern towers, the urine stream claimed all,
sentencing millions to a humiliating and horrifying end.
In
less than a minute, a city of millions was in ruins, reduced to piss-stained
ruins because a young man chose the spot to relieve himself. What few survivors
looked into the sky at the harbinger of their apocalypse, smiling and humming
to himself as he dried himself off and tucked the monster back into his pants.
Many cried and some cursed the cruel god’s destruction as he wandered away,
leaving behind an ammonia-scented desolate grey patch, all that remained of a
thriving society.
---
Jennifer
lightly hummed to herself as she eagerly tapped away at her laptop. Pausing for
a moment, she looked around the quiet forest as a light breeze fluttered her
hair. From above, the entire planet appeared lush and green, a fact all the
more apparent by the verdant foliage on the ground. Despite how vibrant this
world was, it was increasingly perplexing that there was basically no animal
life. Advanced plant life dominated this world, yet as far as she could see,
even insects seemed absent. As she mused, her fingers relayed her thoughts into
the text file on her screen.
Meanwhile,
Hikari was otherwise occupied as she leaned against the other rock, her mind
far from work as she dozed off in the sun.
“Man,
I wish I could sunbathe right now.” She moaned, stretching herself against the
warm stone before falling back asleep.
Hikari’s
stone was also home to another colony of tiny cities. Like twin meteors, each
ample breast slammed down on the city. As her body weight pressed down, an
unstoppable wave of suit-clad titflesh rushed out in all directions, crunching everything
in its path. The legs of the miniscule beings were far too insignificant to
escape the tsunami as their world was effortlessly pressed out into a thin dust
of crushed buildings and pulped tinies.
Several
minutes later, Lucas returned.
“This
grey moss seems kind of peculiar. It’s everywhere. I’m going to start
investigating it.”
“Go
for it, give me a moment to finish this and I’ll come join you.”
Hikari
pushed herself off of the rock and said “I’m going to go explore a bit more,
let me know what you find” before wandering off into the forest once again.
Jennifer returned to her
spreadsheet as a strange whine suddenly resonated in her ear. Instinctively,
her hand slapped the annoyance out of the sky, her momentary annoyance quickly
being replaced by an awareness of how she might have just killed an
undiscovered alien species.
Unbeknownst
to her, one of the nearby tiny cities, after receiving a distress signal from
the other towns, had launched their own mission to catch the attention of the
invading behemoths. A great flying machine lifted off the ground and rushed
towards what the specks inside assumed was her ear. Thousands of feet rushed by
in an instant as the advanced aircraft levitated into the sky, hoping to
attract the attention of the harbingers of their apocalypse. However, their
leader barely had time to get started before a hand rushed up and slapped the
annoyance from the sky, obliterating the craft in a brief fireball that likely
failed to even register as a scorch mark on the massive glove.
Jennifer
peered close at her glove at the remnants of the smashed insect.
“Poor
thing” she muttered, before she noticed a nearly infinitesimal glow emanating
from the tiny remains. Reaching into her bag, she fished out a magnification
device and held it up to her eye, revealing the source of the glow. As the
shock of what she had just annihilated washed over her, she turned to Lucas,
himself experiencing the same realization.
---
“Damnit,
threw a lace.” Hikari muttered, stopping for a moment to kneel. As she grasped
the thick strings to lace up her boots, a bit of the grey moss, smaller than
her boot, caught her eye. Something seemed off about the tiny patch, and as she
dropped to her hands and knees, the truth unveiled itself to her.
Down
below there appeared to be some form of strange alien civilization, an utterly
miniscule society consisting of dust-sized beings, complete with what appeared
to be advanced vehicles and technology. The tiny people below, having heard of
the giant’s approach from the distress signals of the other cities, recoiled in
horror at the sight of the unimaginably huge woman, her towering boot set
precariously close to their tiny world.
“Is
this some kind of…” She muttered aloud, growing more and more curious about the
miniscule world beneath her. She suddenly began to think about the other
patches of moss the three of them had trampled, and the realization that they
had almost certainly exterminated millions of tiny sentient beings beneath
their bodies. These beings were likely just as creative and intelligent as
themselves, and had likely created advanced technologies, societies and
cultures and societies, just for these three invaders to come from the stars to
wipe it all out in an instant under their boots like common dirt.
Hikari
pondered her options. She needed to tell the others about her findings, to
inform them about her discovery that the planet was teeming with sentient life that
they needed to study. On the other hand, the more she thought about how many
tiny societies she had obliterated, the more the idea aroused her. She stared
down at her jumpsuit-clad breast, lightly dusted with remains of the moss she had
laid down on earlier. For a moment, she thought if any of these beings were
still somehow clinging to her, microscopic bits of sentient life, left
terrified and embedded in the tight fabric of her outfit. Just the simple act
of laying down led to millions bursting against her breast, and the idea sent
and electric tingle down her spine. Besides, what were they even going to do
with these societies anyway? They were too small to be of use, and much too miniscule
to actually research. Why shouldn’t she enjoy them how she wanted?
Hikari
rose to her feet, raising her leg as she drew in a sharp breath. The once
relieved people broke into a terrified screaming once again, as the light of
their star was blotted out beneath the black, lugged tread of her boot. Bits of
dirt, debris and remains of other societies rained down on their world,
crushing anyone unlucky to be in their path. Slowly, her boot descended with
the impact of a moon colliding with a planet’s surface. She arched her back,
shivering slightly as she imagined the terror of the little beings, and the
instant that the millions of screams that were instantly silenced as her boot
crashed down on the city. She moaned, hearing the slight crunch of buildings
crumbling, shattered to unrecognizable twisted metal and rubble under the
single step of the small girl’s shoe. She imagined the bits of the city
fortunate enough to be between the deep treads, pockets of life amidst the
ruins of the city. Their sky would be replaced with the black tread of her
shoe, surrounded by enormous dark pillars, and cast in darkness as they huddled
together in terror. As she twisted her foot, she pictured the pockets of safety
were effortlessly grinded to dust as the black pillars smashed over the
buildings and people, destroying the last little bit of what was once a city
teeming with life.
After
a few moments of twisting her foot back and forth, she lifted, revealing the
ugly brown dirt smear that was once a city. After giving the scuffed patch of
dirt a quick glance, she began to walk away from her secret massacre, looking
around the still forest before her watch began to ping.
A few minutes of walking to the marked location on her map led her to a
small clearing where Jennifer and Lucas were talking.
“Ah, Hikari. Find anything in your solo expedition?”
“Um… not much of anything, really.” She lied, though truthfully little
really remained of what she did find.
“Well, we might have found sentient life on this planet.” Lucas
responded by pointing at Jennifer’s gloved hand, on which a small patch of the
city moss was perched.
“We’re trying to figure out what to do about this. Honestly, I don’t
know if it’s even worth reporting. We can’t exactly study their culture well
enough, and I bet they wouldn’t want to share after we’ve crushed so many of
them. Yeah, they’re sentient, but they’re also basically living dirt.”
“If it means anything, I crushed one town under my boot, and it felt
good to step on.” Hikari quipped.
“Obviously we shouldn’t just wipe them all out, no way the three of us
could anyway, but we might as well just overlook it and say plant life only.
What is the Federation going to do with microbes anyway?” Jennifer commented,
looking down at the helpless civilization in her palm. “What do we do with
this?”
“Have fun with it?” Hikari replied. “Just slap someone’s ass with it,
it’ll feel great.”
“Maybe you could like… grind it on my crotch?” Lucas added, blushing
slightly through his request. “I’d like to feel some burst there.”
“I got a better idea.” Jennifer replied, gently unzipping his fly with a
sly smile. “It’s been too long since I’ve had a good look at this monster.”
With a gentle touch, she removed his rapidly erecting penis from the flap,
rubbing at it to encourage its growth.
“There’s no one here but us three, except countless microscopic eyes.
They’re about to be crushed though so don’t worry about what they might think.”
Hikari spotted another city on the ground and bent down. Her gloved hand
plunged into the ground, gently uprooting the civilization from the ground.
“Let me join in, I want to try rubbing some into his balls.” Gently reaching
into his pants with her free hand, she gently tugged his balls out of the flap,
exposing them to the cool afternoon air.
The
crowd in Hikari’s hand stared into the sky as the feminine boy’s hairless balls
loomed ominously overhead. The smell of sweat and musk replaced their once
clean air, and the people choked on the thick stench as his bodily functions brutally
punished the people without even needing to touch them. High above, their
captress cooed slightly as she cupped his testicles.
Lucas
moaned and tensed up as the cool sensation of a miniscule buildings tickled the
sensitive area. The city stood no chance against the unimaginable weight of his
balls effortlessly smashed everything they touched. As Hikari’s hand curled,
more of the city was ground into his sweaty testicles. The loose skin quickly
rolled over anything and anyone in their way, sending buildings crumbling into
the street and onto the fleeing beings before the full weight of the balls
effortlessly pasted what was left.
While
Hikari massaged her friend’s testicles, Jennifer quickly wrapped her hand
around his shaft. The trapped city crumbled to dust on contact with the taut,
firm flesh, and anyone who might have survived the apocalyptic meeting of a
girl’s hand and a man’s cock soon found themselves caught in the middle of a vast
hand job. With every pass of Jennifer’s gloved hand, the survivor count
dwindled, smashed into the glove, debris, or folds of his cock.
“Jennifer,
I’m almost there!” Lucas grunted through the pleasure, prompting Jennifer to
aim his cock down at an untouched cluster of cities.
“Do
it, drown a city in your cum!” Jennifer replied, before she felt the organ
pulse in her hand.
Thick
white ropes of syrupy liquid burst from his cock and slammed down on the town
like meteors. The smelly gunk crushed down any buildings and began absorbing
anything in its path as it spread out, washing away structures, and flooding
the respiratory systems of anyone in its path, drowning them in the vile goop.
“You
bad boy, look at what you did. All those tiny specks just died because you
came.” Jennifer teased, wiping a drop of semen from his cock with her thumb
before slowly licking it off, swallowing the syrup and any stray bits of speck
or debris adhered to the surface.
“But
Captain I—”
Jennifer
shushed him with a finger. “We’ll discuss your punishment in the ship when we
get back. For now, how do we explain this to Orbital and the Federation?”
“Assessment
of planetary life. Plant material and microbial life only in the sector we
explored. Low likelihood of sentient or higher cognitive lifeforms.” Hikari
recited mechanically.
“That
sounds good,” Lucas muttered as he cleaned himself up. Any specks that had
managed to survive were quickly entombed in the tight jumpsuit as he zipped up
the flap, sealing them away in darkness.
“Alright!
We are the only ones who need to know about what we did here. Hopefully the
Federation doesn’t decide to do something with this planet so maybe we can come
back some day. I don’t think they’ll terminate it or mine it out but who knows
what’s in the ground here. I certainly wouldn’t mind being a goddess to these
little microbes.” Jennifer accentuated her last point by lightly kicking a
mound of dirt, spraying part of a tiny city with a shower of enormous rocks. “Ready
to head back to the ship for debrief? I think Orbiter wanted us to possibly
stay overnight so maybe we can head back out and find some more civilizations
to put in their place.”
The
others nodded in agreement, and the three began to traipse their way back
towards the ship. From the ground, the survivors of the apocalypse watched on
in relief as the harbingers of their extermination walked away from the scene
of their devastation, casually chatting, and strolling from where a few hours
ago, a thriving, ancient civilization once stood, now reduced to a pathetic
remnant of once what was.
---
“Alright,
boots off, put them in the decontamination box so any little stragglers get
destroyed.” Jennifer directed as the three stopped inside the ship’s airlock.
The
three removed their boots and set them down into the small box. The few tinies
stuck to the gargantuan footwear could only watch as their world was cloaked in
darkness. Outside, they could hear a few faint beeps before the inside of the
box was filled with a strange bluish glow. Within moments, their skin began to
rapidly warm, before a burning sensation dropped them to the ground. Intense
pain wracked their bodies as the burning radiation shredded their DNA,
obliterating their organs and cells. Within a few minutes, the ionizing
radiation in the box snuffed out any living things unfortunate enough to be
clinging to the footwear.
The
three explorers, meanwhile, had already forgotten about the pests they
sentenced to death. Jennifer immediately settled into a chair and began her
debrief with the Orbital station while Hikari and Lucas got to work on their
reports from the couch.
A
few hours later the star began to slip below the rapidly darkening horizon.
Jennifer sighed, stretching her arms as she submitted the final report on their
findings, replacing the reality of their experience with boring technical
information about plant data she picked up during her research. Moments later, a
message from Orbital flashed across her screen.
“Lucas,
Hikari, stow loose items and prepare vehicle for takeoff. Orbital has called us
back to the mainship.”
Jennifer
quickly slid her backpack and laptop into her locker while Hikari and Lucas
gathered their things, locking them into their containers. Lucas rushed to take
his seat at the cockpit, sliding on his headset as he began to power up the
ship.
The
remaining tiny beings near the ship watched as the vessel their gargantuan
destroyers appeared in suddenly began to start up. The deafening roar of the
engines drowned out all other noises, and the light breeze turned into a warm
gale as the ship lifted into the air. As it turned, the glowing blue circles on
the back of the ship pointed at their world before flashing bright. The
backwash of the engines became a scorching superstorm, melting, burning, and
erasing any survivors in the city before rushing away into the sky.
“ETA
2 hours to Orbital, they’re on the far side of the planet so we got a bit of a
hike to get to them. Autopilot is engaged, so we’re free to move about the
cabin in a bit once we cross 100 miles from the surface.” Lucas reported,
scanning the screens in front of him.
Outside,
the blue sky faded into the inky blackness of space, pockmarked by an infinite array
of twinkling lights. Jennifer unbuckled her seatbelt and slowly approached
Lucas’s seat.
“Don’t
think I forgot about your punishment, why don’t you come with me, and we’ll see
how you can address your infractions before we get back to the station.”
Jennifer cooed into his ear.
Lucas’s
face flushed red, and his hands shook as he unlatched his belt.
“Yes
captain.” He muttered, before Jennifer grabbed ahold of his collar, dragging
him to the couches in the back.