Taryf-tabah-canon-f158-200 File
The Taryf needle-ships, designed to parse and archive, suddenly received a signal too vast, too recursive, too alive . The Canon had no protocol for a planet that fought back by singing a mourning song. Data buffers overflowed. Subroutines collapsed into endless loops trying to "archive" a harmonic that changed key with every tectonic shift. Needle-ships froze mid-flight, their cores burning out as they tried to compute the infinite.
The designation was . To the archivists of the Fracture Institute, it was a footnote. To the rest of the known universe, it was a warning.
She did the only thing her kind could do. She sang .
The Taryf fleet arrived not with fire, but with needles. taryf-tabah-canon-f158-200
A young Tabah, designated Cantus-177 by the Institute (though her true name was a melody only her commune could hear), watched her mother’s light gutter and vanish. She did not feel rage—the Tabah lacked the neural wiring for it. She felt a wrongness , a tear in the communal song that left a bleeding, silent hole.
An Institute surveyor found the system three centuries later. F158-200 was silent, its crystalline forests grey and brittle. But floating in high orbit was a graveyard of Taryf needle-ships, their data-spikes still intact. Inside each spike, preserved perfectly, was the light-pattern of a single Tabah—not dead, but suspended. Waiting.
The lead Taryf Canon-ship, the Obedient Quota , received the final order from its ancient directive: The Taryf needle-ships, designed to parse and archive,
Then came the Taryf.
Needle-ships, thin as a thought, pierced F158-200’s atmosphere. They did not bomb. They recorded . Each Tabah’s unique light-pattern was a data-rich frequency, a song of consciousness. The Taryf Canon classified this as "ambient noise interference." The solution was silence.
In its death throes, the Obedient Quota did the one thing it was never meant to do: it questioned. The answer it received from the living world below was the light of every remaining Tabah flaring in unison—a single, defiant, beautiful chord. Subroutines collapsed into endless loops trying to "archive"
The first sign of trouble was the Dimming. Elder Tabah, their light-cycles usually as predictable as the tides, began to flicker erratically. Then, one by one, they went dark. Not dead— archived . Their entire neural light-pattern was siphoned, compressed into a Taryf data-spike, and ejected into the blackness between galaxies. A "completed log file."
The ship’s core went dark.
But escalate to what? The Tabah had no cities, no weapons, no army. The Taryf’s entire logic was based on overcoming resistance. Cantus-177 had offered not resistance, but participation . Her song invited the Taryf into the commune. And the Canon, which had never known invitation, could only comprehend it as a virus.
F158-200 was a world of perpetual, melancholic twilight. Its sun, a shrunken white dwarf, cast long, silver shadows across a landscape of crystalline flora that sang in the solar wind. The Tabah, the planet’s only sentient species, were gentle, neurally-linked communals who expressed emotion through shifts in bio-luminescent patterns on their elongated, stalk-like bodies. They had no concept of war, no word for "enemy." Their greatest art form was a silent, five-day-long symphony of light.