Turlough uncovers the colony's taboo past
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Turlough inquires about the lack of deep bunkers on Frontios, suggesting an alternative approach to protecting the colony, and Norna explains their use of a quarry for shelter.
Norna reveals that Captain Revere forbade underground digging, and Turlough seeks the reason behind this law.
Norna shares a childhood memory of Captain Revere explaining why they couldn't dig underground, stating that 'the earth was hungry'.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Curiosity masked by detached amusement, but the underlying skepticism simmers as he senses evasion
Turlough leans into the interrogation with a strategy of deliberate enquiry, deploying historical examples to expose contradictions in Frontios' survival practices. His tone suggests wry amusement, yet his questions carry the sharp edge of skepticism, peeling back layers of enforced silence with insistent precision.
- • Uncover the truth behind Frontios' avoidance of underground shelters
- • Expose inconsistencies in Captain Revere’s decrees to weaken institutional authority
- • Official justifications are likely incomplete or deceptive
- • Colonial survival practices must be scrutinized through external lenses
Reflective, laced with lingering childhood awe and creeping adult horror at the remembered phrase
Norna shifts from clinical detachment to vulnerable confession as the questions grow more intimate. Her voice carries the weight of a taboo long internalized, revealing through reluctant anecdote the deeper horror that the earth might be the cause of the bombardment rather than merely a target.
- • Protect the colony’s delicate social fabric while navigating Turlough’s sharp inquiries
- • Reveal just enough to satisfy curiosity without breaching the full burden of the truth
- • The prohibition was meant for the colony’s survival, though the rationale remains incomprehensible
- • Authority figures do not explain, they decree—and compliance is survival
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The quarry is referenced indirectly through Norna’s explanation of its conversion into a medical shelter, serving as a narrative hinge between past utility and present prohibition. It embodies the colony’s former resilience and current enforced stagnation, representing both practical ingenuity and the taboo against digging deeper.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The state room surfaces in memory as the site of childhood interrogation where the phrase 'the earth was hungry' was first uttered. It looms as a symbolic throne room of Revere’s authority, where innocence once listened and learned fear through metaphor.
The research room provides a sterile chamber for interrogating unspoken laws. Fluorescent lighting flickers over cluttered surfaces as procedural normality masks mounting tension, where science brushes against the colony’s most feared secret—endorsed by institutional silence and enforced by decree.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The Military Authority enforces Revere’s decree through absolute edict, transforming survival practice into a taboo yet preserving the mythic warning 'the earth was hungry' as the only explanation allowed. The decree’s enforcement silences scientific inquiry and buries colonial instincts beneath authoritarian fear.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Norna's childhood anecdote involving Captain Revere and the decree 'the earth was hungry' mirrors her later sharing as an adult of the same law with Turlough, reinforcing the historical continuity of Revere's decrees against digging."
Norna exposes Turloughs avoidance of work"Norna's childhood anecdote involving Captain Revere and the decree 'the earth was hungry' mirrors her later sharing as an adult of the same law with Turlough, reinforcing the historical continuity of Revere's decrees against digging."
Norna reveals forbidden digging past"Norna's childhood anecdote involving Captain Revere and the decree 'the earth was hungry' mirrors her later sharing as an adult of the same law with Turlough, reinforcing the historical continuity of Revere's decrees against digging."
Turlough and Norna uncover hidden passage"Norna sharing Captain Revere's childhood decree from Frontios history that 'the earth was hungry' and forbade digging underground directly links symbolically to her and Turlough later noticing the same 'hungry earth' in the cavern's rock formations that seem to actively pull and draw objects into the digesting rock, echoing the same historical continuity seen in Frontios decision making processes."
Turlough and Norna uncover hidden cavern"Captain Revere's childhood decree that 'the earth was hungry' symbolically parallels the eerie, sentient rock walls in the Tractator caverns that seem to actively digest and draw in matter, echoing the same inexplicable hunger."
Turlough and Norna enter the glittering cavern"Captain Revere's childhood decree that 'the earth was hungry' symbolically parallels the eerie, sentient rock walls in the Tractator caverns that seem to actively digest and draw in matter, echoing the same inexplicable hunger."
Turlough and Norna encounter the Tractators