
News: First reports coming in of Relay re-activation in the Sol, Parnitha, and Harsa systems. Diplomatic and economic consultants are cautiously optimistic about the re-emergence of interstellar travel.
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The year is 2204, and it is a time of great change. Following the destruction of the Reapers at the hands of the Shepherd, and the corresponding devastation of galactic civilization which was caused by the extensive damage to the Mass Relay network, the stars are a cold and forbidding place. Countless billions of sentients were extinguished by the Reapers as they cut their bloody swathe across the cosmos, entire worlds depopulated, and the industrial backbone of civilized space broken cleanly. This alone would have been enough to hurl the galaxy into a dark age, an age of regression and recovery, but combined with the simultaneous effective loss of faster-than-light travel which the Relays had enabled, truly marked a black day for galactic civilization.
That is not to say that all is dark. Though much was lost, much remained - many worlds were spared even a taste of war personally, though all know brothers and sisters who did not return from the battles over Mars, and Earth. Though the Relays were destroyed, interstellar travel could still be effected slowly, using less efficient methods of superluminal transit. Though in her triumph the galaxy had come together to rage against the dying of the light, now each race and entity looked inward, to their own affairs. Trade routes to foreign powers had become impractical for all but the most precious of goods, and so self-sufficiency became the watchword of the new galaxy; high-expense colonization efforts were abandoned, manufacturing reprioritized, and the slow languid reconstruction effort begun.
Some despaired. To have fallen from such heights where a man could go from Thessia to Palaven in an afternoon, to be forced to look up at the same star year after year - is there any more cruel fate than a bird whose wings have been taken from it? But the majority of the races of the galaxy shouldered their burdens and concentrated on the very real work before them. World after world had to be cleared of the charred debris of war. In lawless sectors where little authority remained, new organizations rose to power, some noble and seeking to protect the innocent, others piratical and focused only on exploiting the fiercely depleted militaries of the galaxy. Political consensus remained in some reaches, able to be sustained by goodwill and the tattered remnants of the extranet comm buoys, while other systems had had too much and took up the mantle of self-government, unwilling to be beholden to foreign powers.
That was, until September 2nd, 2196.
That was the date the infamous Makewell Report was published on Earth. An unprepossessing blue sky project, researchers looking at the shattered remnants of the Charon Relay, made an alarming and strikingly hopeful discovery; the device, thought completely destroyed by the Shepherd's actions to end the Reaper threat, was not nearly as dead as presumed. Blasted, shattered, yes - but ancient mechanisms were working, slowly, year after year, to draw together archaic pieces and meld jagged remnants into a new cohesive whole.
The Relay Network was healing.
With the revelation that interstellar travel would, one day soon, once again be commonplace, entities across known space refactored their priorities. Vast manufacturing teams, from those worlds which could afford to spare the material, began studying the restructuring process and coaxing it toward fruition. The information set the extranet on fire, and previously isolated worlds consigned to their fates as dying backwaters began political maneuvers to bring skilled engineers from former overlords to repair their own links to the galaxy.
On January 16th, 2204, the Thessian Relay was switched back on, making the first true connection to the Silean Nebula in decades. A new age of discovery, exploration, rebuilding, and danger is upon the galaxy. What has changed out there, beyond the light of civilization? Who now can be counted on as old friends reassess geopolitical priorities, and new powers begin to navigate the delicate dance of politics? From the embers, fire awakens.
In the darkness of space far beyond the light of that yellow-white primary, a dim blue pulse gathered strength. It was flickering, at first slowly, then gradually more rapidly. Nearby the faces of onlookers were illuminated by the gathering radiance, cutting away the lights inside their assembled vessels. Some wore expressions of hope, some joy, and others impassive faces designed to hide trepidation.
"We just crossed the inflection threshold!"
The words were greeted by a boisterous cheer from the assembled scientists, engineers, and military officers as they crackled across the intercom. With the point of maximum stress passed, they could be sure, at least as far as the models could tell, that the Relay would stay in one piece. Their repairs had worked, supplementing the old Prothean designs in a haphazard but effective harmony.
A sudden, blinding flash. Eagerly those who were close to the main telemetry console crowded around. The distance to Arcturus wasn't formidable, and with the extranet bands to the cluster still open, it only took a few minutes for the relayed signal to begin pinging back.
A steady beep-boop beep-boop began to sound through the ship, and the earlier cheers were completely overshadowed by the new round of jubilation. Men and women embraced, several bottles of champagne were popped nearly simultaneously, and immediately a festive air overwhelmed the vessel. The Relay was open! And if this Relay could be opened, the other Relays could be repaired and opened again. The galaxy, once more, could be connected.
Not everyone, however, was celebrating. A small dour group of Navy men were clustered toward the rear of the scientific vessel, drinking, yes, but drinking more as men at a funeral than those at a wedding. It had been hard for Earth to be isolated, hard for the galaxy to be isolated. But now the door was open. And information about what had taken place out there, in the wider void of space - that was sparse, and oftentimes difficult to believe. They would have to be ready. They were stepping into a whole new world.
Embers of old lives. Embers of old wars. Embers of old ambitions. The door was open, and with it came a storm, wild enough to bring all these to sudden flame.