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Extraction post-mortem

The COM room is a touch too cool for Grayson’s tastes today. It’s a different temperature every time she uses it, as though someone is deliberately testing to see if environmental conditions can affect the decision-making process. She shifts in her seat and taps her fingers on the surface of one of the datapads – containing a report on the mission at the Antera colony – laid out before her on the conference table.

Across from her, Voss stands stiffly by his chair. “I understand,” he says in that particular manner that Grayson finds grating, as it does not imply anything even remotely close to understanding, “but the Caucus on Ssujak-resk will not like this, I assure you.”

Grayson rolls her eyes. “They must know Yveth is biased,” she counters defensively. She had difficulty believing that Voss’ superiors would see reason in Lieutenant Yveth’s actions; the man had evidently gone off on Crowley for no reason other than racial contempt or plain paranoia.

“Yes,” Voss concedes, “but it will still have an impact. Things are still a bit…raw, and he is trusted.”

Grayson shrugs a shoulder and gives him a dull look. “So why did they send him, then?” She quirks an eyebrow. “Feels almost like a setup, if you ask me.” An unfair thing to say, which she – of course – immediately pays for.

Voss grasps the edge of the table before him with a hand and leans his head to one side in annoyance. “I could make comparable comments about Crowley,” he says tightly, “but I suspect your reasons for including him were very similar to our reasons for including Yveth.” He regains his composure, taking the high ground once again. “You needed someone you could trust to do what was asked, and that you knew would be capable of adapting should the mission change shape.” He pauses for a moment, weighing his thoughts.

A scowl darkens Grayson’s face.

“Yveth’s experience with the colonies is considerable.” Voss states, the firmness in his tone making it amply clear that, past this point, the subject is closed. “He was the best choice for the Antera mission, and will be the best choice for future missions as well.”

Grayson eyes him suspiciously, but does not press the issue. Despite her opinions on his manner, the Lieutenant had, after all, accomplished what he had been asked to. Her face goes stony. “Granted, but if he doesn’t drop his grudge, he’s a liability in my books.” She rubs her forehead, feeling her lack of sleep from the night before. “I don’t want him to turn things into a shit show…”

Voss leans forward a bit.

Grayson stares expectantly at him for a while, and then it occurs to her that he likely didn’t understand the phrase she used earlier. “A mess,” she rephrases and smirks, amused despite the grim topic, “it means a mess.”

“I see,” Voss says and then draws away and finally takes a seat.

Relived to see him settle down and hoping that, as a result, he’ll also drop the attitude, Grayson rests her head back and takes one of the datapads in front of her into her lap. “At any rate, Crowley will work with him again – despite what he said.” She says conciliatorily. “He’s a good guy.”

“Yes,” Voss replies without any deliberation – a rare occurrence. “Yveth’s objectives were met, and as a result it is my personal belief that he will ultimately be satisfied.” He quickly changes the subject. “Speaking of which, what have your technicians discovered about the Oban transponder that was recovered from the communications facility?”

Grayson purposefully looks past him. “We’re still looking at it,” she says cautiously. “The latest report from Raleigh—“

“I’ll send word to the Caucus,” Voss cuts her off, “and have our technicians work with yours.” He scrapes his own datapad from the table and begins working.

“We’ve only had it for something like a day and a half!” Grayson snaps incredulously, watching the Executor log entries she can’t see. He looks up at her.

“Two heads are better than one – is that not right?”

Grayson stares at him, powerfully displeased at the discovery that – apparently – he is a fan of irony, and then irritably gestures at him to continue. He does. She looks down at the similar device in her lap.

“We can’t decode either signal,” she muses, growing perplexed as she passes a finger over Raleigh’s most recent data. “They left a team behind in order to set it up, so it’s got to be important…”

Voss nods once. “Agreed,” he says without looking up.

“And you’ve never recovered any of these before?”

“No.”

***

Later that same evening, Crowley grumbles as he walks around the couch and notices his datapad sitting askew atop the coffee table. Its smooth face glows a soft blue-white, indicating recent activity.

He gives the datapad a hateful look. While the contraption is occasionally useful, it remains something that is imposed upon him by work and that allows disagreeable persons to contact him at times when he’d frankly rather ignore their existence.

That and it’s already broken three times in the last six months, each time causing him to have to fill out a form – a form that must be delivered to the procurement people, the very same people who he believes have a special place in Hell.

Taking a drink from the glass of water in his hand, he walks to the table and stands idly by it, turning a distrustful eye down at the small device.

Two new messages blink up at him: one from Grayson – fuck that, he thinks and immediately ignores it, assuming from the length of the subject line that it’s some sort of meeting request – and one from Vinead-2 Central COMs. Given that he just spoke to his wife yesterday, it’s unlikely to be from her…unless something’s wrong.

He leans forward to get a closer look at the subject line on the second message, setting his glass down by the datapad. There are no words there, he discovers, just an auto-generated ID code from the COM system’s scrubbers.

Intrigued, he touches the display and plays the message. A somewhat familiar, synthesized voice breaks through the initial garbling:

“…is Lekket. I am aboard the vessel Ssu-rin; I am well. They will take me to Caicat, where my family will see me. It is not far.”

It takes Crowley only a moment to place the voice: the Ssujak woman from the ruined colony on Antera. He furrows his brow; hearing her voice in a different context is peculiar.

“I would like to thank you for keeping your word and coming back for me. I was afraid you would not.” She says sheepishly and with personal disappointment. “For that conceit, I sincerely apologize.”

Crowley smiles at this, thinking: and here I thought none of you buggers knew that word….

“In the same vein,” she continues, though more delicately now, “I would also like to apologize for my brother’s behavior.” She pauses, very clearly considering her words. “Yveth is…very proud, sometimes.”

Crowley’s eyebrows shoot up. A rapid fire replay of all his interactions with the Ssujak woman unfolds in his mind’s eye; cursing the odds, he begins combing the details meticulously for anything her brother could hold against him in the aim of further ruining their already toxic work relationship.

“I’m sure you can understand how he must have felt when he learned of the Oban attack on my colony.” Lekket continues, adopting a reasonable tone. “He was scared. A few weeks ago I gave him the news that I am finally with child – thus he expected two losses when he set out, not just one.” She sighs. “He blamed himself, I’m sure of it. He does a lot of work protecting the colonies, so it was…hard.”

Unceremoniously, Crowley drops onto the couch. He brings his hands up to rub at his temples. Had he been aware of Yveth’s situation back on Antera, he wonders, would he have reacted differently during the trip back to base, when the Ssujak lieutenant publicly tore a strip off of him for having abandoned his post? He makes a face. Unlikely, he figures, I called the guy an asshole because he acted like one. He deserved it. He shakes his head, recalling the disdainful manner in which Yveth had addressed him from, basically, the beginning of the mission on.

“Anyway,” Lekket finishes a little awkwardly, “I just wanted to say thank you.”

Crowley’s eyes flick to the softly-glowing screen of the datapad on the coffee table in front of him, just as it emits Lekket’s last sentence:

“I wish you luck, Crowley.”

Colony transponder extraction

As soon as it falls to the ground and goes still, Crowley turns and quickly scrambles for cover behind a nearby stack of heavy storage units.

“Holy shit!” He exclaims, taking a moment to make sure the creature didn’t do any serious damage to the environmental seals in his body armor. From the corner of his eye, he catches a glimpse of the Ssujak soldier Talisk moving quietly towards him from behind a low wall to his left. Talisk briefly surveys the vantage points in the immediate area before proceeding to join Crowley behind the steel crates.

“Dredges,” Talisk explains, crouching down beside Crowley, “Oban pets.” He pats his chest and thighs in search of an extra heavy ammo clip and, locating one, offers it to the human. “First time?” He asks.

“Yeah,” Crowley replies, snatching up the cartridge and reloading as fast as his fingers allow him to, “fucking brutal…” He leans back against the crates for a second to let the air out of his lungs and to wait for his heart to stop pounding, then pushes himself up into a crouch, ready again. He shakes his head. “They always come with those things?” He asks bitterly.

Talisk hisses a laugh. “In my experience, yes,” he says, and then perks suddenly. The sound of weapons fire from the communications facility a few dozen feet north of their position prompts him to ready his own weapon. He shifts his weight to peek around the side of their cover.

“More of those things?” Crowley asks. “Those dredges?”

“No.”

“Soldiers, then?”

“Yes.”

Talisk turns back around and lowers a knee to the ground. “Two of them,” he specifies, hastily divesting himself of explosives and heavy weapons. He hands them to Crowley and immediately begins tightening the strap holding the long-range rifle against his back, his face turned towards a two-story building immediately to their right. “They just entered the facility where Yveth and his men are.”

Crowley looks over at the building in question and then back at Talisk. “What’re you thinkin’?” He asks suspiciously, adding the other man’s explosives to his own supply. “Lieutenant Yveth’s orders were to hold this area.”

“Agreed,” Talisk says, finishing up. “I will not be far; stay down here—“ He starts to move, but Crowley pulls him back. He gives the human a dire look, even though the mask concealing his face keeps it from being in any way effective.

“Hey, whoa!” Crowley growls, confused.

Talisk tears himself roughly from Crowley’s grip. “I must move – now – to have a shot at the men I just saw.” He eyes the two-story building, determined and anxious. “There are no more Oban on the ground.” He goes to leave again, and again Crowley restrains him. This time, Talisk hisses his displeasure and raises the knife-like blade on the end of his segmented tail.

“Take it easy, pal,” Crowley says tightly, releasing the Ssujak’s arm. “What am I watchin’ for down here, then?” He asks. “How do you know that’s the last of ‘em?”

“You are watching my back, friend.” Talisk replies, causing Crowley to make a derisive noise. “The Oban do not typically fight alongside their pets…” He reaches out and taps the heavy pistol in Crowley’s hand with two fingers. “One down,” he says ominously, “one remains”.

“What? Where?!”

“Cloaked.”

“Oh for fuck sakes…“ Crowley starts, but Talisk leaves at once, slinking off towards the building on the right. He watches Talisk’s retreating back for a bit and tries to convince himself that being left to deal with the remaining dredge is actually a compliment and not some kind of challenge or insult. Settling on the former, he shakes his head and tightens his grip on his gun.

“Thanks a lot, pal,” he grumbles to himself sarcastically, turning his attention back towards the surrounding area.

The clustered housing structures – tiered, black, and utilitarian affairs arranged in a square formation with entrances facing a centre yard – are eerily silent. The wind, cold and persistent, occasionally wails angrily when it ventures though an open door and gets trapped inside a vacant building. The three other structures like this one were cleaned of corpses and immediately-salvageable materials by Crowley and the others earlier on; unfortunately, discovering the presence of Oban soldiers halted the clean-up process on this last structure midway through, leaving the area in a bit of a mess… A small number of Ssujak bodies litter the ground in the central yard, the remainder likely still – if the other structures were any indication – inside their houses.

Crowley exhales slowly, scanning the ground for disturbances that might flag the location of the cloaked dredge; he strains to pick up any audio clues as well, but the constant wind makes both tasks very difficult. Unable to detect anything on the ground, he looks up at the roofs…

A small object falls somewhere inside the house directly behind him, making a metallic little ‘ping’ sound as it hits the floor. Crowley cranes his neck around to look through the gaping doorway. There is nothing there, of course; the door opens onto what looks like a small dining & kitchen area, with a sitting room beyond that. From where he stands, he can see the side of a smooth table and a single, tipped-over chair; the kitchen looks a bit messy, but at first glance it’s impossible to tell whether that’s because a struggle took place there or simply because the inhabitants didn’t have the greatest cleaning habits.

After casting a cautious glance in the direction that Talisk disappeared earlier and determining that there isn’t much he can do for a man he can’t see (at least at this point), Crowley turns and climbs the two stairs leading into the small house.

A gust of wind rushes in along with him as he steps inside, screaming as it passes through the house and out a partially-open window in the sitting room across the way. Crowley examines the tight quarters – a dredge could probably fit, he gauges, but moving around would be a challenge… More challenging yet would be moving around quietly. This consideration, being more relevant to his current situation, gives Crowley a small sense of security.

Keeping his weapon nonetheless at the ready, he proceeds carefully into the kitchen. On closer inspection, it seems the inhabitants were perhaps not total slobs after all; the mess on the counters and floor appears to be the result of a desperate search. Only some of the flat, featureless cupboards and drawers hang open, while others remain closed, appearing as seamless panels. Various metal implements are strewn about, glimmering in the sunlight filtering in from the windows.

Looking for a specific object, maybe, Crowley wonders, making his way further into the house, or… He pauses, clearing the side of the counter. On the floor, bearing fatal injuries to its neck, right shoulder and chest, lies the body of a Ssujak colonist. Crowley’s eyes return to the metal cooking implements. Nope, he reassesses, looking for a weapon, I’d bet. A small pool of black, drying blood – nearly indistinguishable on the polished floor of the same color – extends out from under the corpse, any additional splatter completely invisible against the walls and cabinetry. Crowley shakes his head at the scene. Probably only woulda had to shoot once if they’d been able to tell it hit, he muses, instead of seventeen times just to be sure…

Grimly, he continues past the kitchen and crosses into the sitting room. A staircase on his right leads to a second floor. The small room looks undisturbed, save for a spindly and dessicated-looking plant tipped onto the ground right by the hallway; its dry leaves rustle as another gust of wind blows through the house.

Outside, one gunshot goes off. Crowley whips around to look back out the door. The sound came from relatively nearby, so…

Upstairs, something moves around quickly.

Alerted, Crowley leans over and peers up the staircase. A shadow passes against the rightmost wall. Slowly, he climbs the stairs, eyes up, ready to react. When he reaches the top, there is no one there. His gut clenches as he examines the open room, positive that the shadow he saw was not a product of his imagination and that he is not alone. The room he’s in are personal quarters; the sparse furniture and various accoutrements are stylistically similar to those he saw downstairs, but here – like the kitchen, only worse – things are thoroughly ransacked. To the left, an open doorway leads into a smaller room. At the back, a window bathes the room in dusty sunlight.

The window is pulled all the way open.

Another gunshot from outside.

Crowley hurries to the window and stands to the side, then leans forward a bit and hazards a quick look down. Nothing. His eyes flick briefly to the building Talisk fled to earlier – no sign of him either. Playin’ hide and seek now, I guess, he grumbles internally, frowning. You’d think I’m back home, playing with my son, ‘cept it’s easy to find him! He’s always up in the—

Inspired, Crowley turns to look up. Sure enough, flattened against the roof and trying hard to stay just out of his sight, is a frightened Ssujak colonist.

Some things, he figures, smirking up at his quarry, are apparently universal.

He removes himself from plain sight and calls out. “I’m not Oban – you saw that,” he says. “I’m here with Yveth,” he adds, hoping a familiar-sounding name might be more compelling, “now please get back in here. It’s not safe outside just now.” To his surprise and relief, he hears the distinct sounds of the Ssujak shifting towards the window. As he turns to lend a hand, however, he hears another distinct sound from the roof:

The shriek of a dredge, followed by the saccadic thud of chitinous legs connecting with steel.

Crowley plunges his top half through the open window and wrenches around to hurry the Ssujak’s descent, pulling her – it’s a she, he’s sure of it – back inside without any sort of finesse. Just as her small frame slides back inside the room, the dredge’s legs pound against the outer wall of the house, denting the steel around the window frame. Its bulk blocks the sun and four smaller, barbed legs erupt from fleshy folds at its front to grasp desperately at its escaped prey.

The colonist lets out a peculiar, startled yelp and throws her hands up, stumbling back.

“Get back!” Crowley shouts at her, grasping her arm and throwing her behind him, further into the darkened room and away from the window. Upon hearing him, the dredge shrieks again and redoubles its efforts; its four main legs rapidly hammer the outer wall like giant pickaxes as it shifts, extending parts of its body through the now-shattered window at each new angle.

At a distance he judges to be safe – or more accurately, ‘good enough’ – Crowley raises his weapon steadily and empties a clip of heavy-gauge ammo into the writhing mass of legs, teeth, and carapace pinned to the window. Chunks of the dredge’s natural armor splinter and fly off in a shower under the assault, revealing soft flesh beneath; it screeches as the last rounds bite into its squishy hide, sending pulpy red bits flying into the room.

Finally inconvenienced enough to let go of the window, it drops to the ground below.

Crowley turns and searches his person for additional ammo, his silhouette dark against the sun shining once again through the open window at his back. The female Ssujak is still there, sitting perfectly still against the back wall, right near the staircase, holding her knees to her chest. Reloading, he nods at her once. “You OK?” He asks.

Downstairs, something large fights its way into the building, causing a racket. The noise causes the Ssujak to look in the direction of the staircase, her tail twitching nervously. Suddenly, the noise stops. She turns back to Crowley and mimics his nod.

“Good,” Crowley says in return. He points to the small room off to the side. “Hide in there,” he says and walks past her towards the staircase, “I’ll be right back…” If I’m lucky, he adds to himself, padding downstairs quietly.

The dredge made it inside – he can hear it in the kitchen-dining area as he approaches the bottom of the stairs. Strangely, it doesn’t appear to be moving around very much. Crowley’s expectation was that it would continue to tear its way towards he and the colonist, eventually reaching an area too narrow to fit it – such as the stairwell – and then get stuck and subsequently be blasted to bits, but…apparently he was wrong. It did not proceed past the kitchen.

Eating, maybe? He wonders, recalling the male colonist’s corpse.

As soon as he reaches the bottom of the stairs and comes into view of the dredge, it shrieks – leaning forward on splayed forelegs, ensuring Crowley a good look at its rows of needle-like teeth – but does not move towards him. Instead, it stays by the doorway.

Confused, Crowley meets its gaze and cautiously takes two steps forward, holding his weapon up and aimed straight between its eyes. It lashes out at him, despite the considerable distance, and once again voices its displeasure – but still it does not move.

Shrugging, Crowley unloads. The creature is easily dispatched, its recently-exposed skin and insides shredded in a matter of seconds. The job done, Crowley shakes his head, admittedly a little relieved. “There has got to be an easier way…” He mumbles to himself, examining the dredge’s destroyed carcass for a moment. A footfall on the steps above him draws him from his contemplations.

“Are you alright?” A worried call from the very top of the stairs.

Crowley leans to the side to look up. The Ssujak woman is crouched, head titled in order to be able to see him clearly. He nods in response. Satisfied, she makes her way down the stairs just far enough to be able to turn and peer curiously into the kitchen.

“They never come in…” She says in disbelief, referring to the dredge.

“Why?” Crowley asks, curious.

“I don’t know,” she replies then goes quiet, thoughtful.

“Well listen,” Crowley says, impatient now, “I gotta move.” He was never one to sit and discuss. He waits until she turns to look at him before continuing. “Once my team’s done here we’ll take you offworld, alright? Grab anything you need to and just sit tight. I’ll be back to get you as soon as I can.” He starts off towards the kitchen and then stops after passing by the long-dead colonist who, he realizes in the moment, the Ssujak woman must have had some relationship to. He takes a quick look at the ruined kitchen, actually seeing it for the first time, and thinks briefly of his wife and son.

“I’m sorry,” he says genuinely, calling over his shoulder, then adds more quietly, “for the mess.”

And with that, he exits the small compound.

Transponder detail report

Reaching out with a soapy hand, she feels around for the datapad she knows is on the floor just on the other side of the window sill. Once her fingers graze its surface, she snatches it up and pulls it outside with her, then props it precariously against the far edge of the window frame. She wipes her hand on her pants quickly and then touches the screen to activate it.

Glare from the sun makes it impossible to see who the caller is. She squints. “Grayson here,” she greets the featureless dark blob staring back at her.

“Grayson,” the person – who turns out to be the Ssujak scientist Lekket – says in her pleasant, if tense, synthesized voice, “we have information about the Oban transponder. Do you have a moment?”

Grayson drops her washcloth into the dirty pale of water sitting beside her. “Of course.”

Lekket looks off to the right, momentarily distracted by something, and then faces the screen again. “We finally figured out the code,” she starts, tapping two fingers to her breast briefly – a gesture Grayson has seen before but doesn’t entirely understand the significance of, “and it is a basic thing. The device sends coordinates to a central control unit and receives an acknowledgement in return. It does this at an interval; between messages, it leaves a channel open.”

Grayson shrugs a shoulder. “For what?” She asks, raising a hand to shield her eyes from the sun. In the shade, Lekket’s features become easier to distinguish. Her close-fitting environmental suit, of a red so deep as to be almost black, gleams in the clear light of Vinaed-2’s lab; the ensemble gives her the sleek, biomechanical appearance that is the hallmark of her species’ aesthetic taste.

“A command,” Lekket replies, shifting uncomfortably, “and that is the true reason for my call.” Her image wobbles about for a second as she moves over to a desk and perches herself atop it. Something near her falls to the ground with a clatter; she ignores it. “Grayson, we have reason to believe the device you recovered is a wormhole generator.”

“You’re sure?”

Lekket lifts her chin. “Yes,” she replies steadily and Grayson nods once. She leans in closer to the screen. “In addition, we know this device is not unique,” she warns. “We were able to track the signal back to the central control unit. There are four others like this one – all on or near colony worlds.”

Grayson stares past the datapad, her eyes focused on the window sill’s peeling white paint and her mind elsewhere entirely. “Where is the control unit?” She asks. A distant insect’s brittle song is carried on the wind, rising above the other ambient sounds.

“In the nebula – near the original Oban wormhole.”

“Did we jam the device?” Grayson asks, chest tightening.

“No.”

Grayson returns her attention to Lekket at once. She reaches out and grabs the datapad, bringing it close. “Why?” She asks, trying to be delicate so as to not put Lekket on the defensive, but strongly suspecting what the answer will be. Lekket, Raleigh, and Chief Kardis are all smart people – far smarter than Grayson. There is no way they haven’t already assessed the danger the transponder-generator represents. The possibility that the Oban might have Vinaed-2’s coordinates is a terrifying prospect, but that they retain the ability to trigger the device – whether they have Vinaed-2’s coordinates or not – is much more disturbing. Should they choose to activate the device, the station, the neighboring planet, and anything in its general vicinity would be instantly obliterated in the birth of the resulting wormhole…

Lekket’s tone becomes apologetic. “We did not because we tried and could not. There is…unfortunately very little to interact with.” She taps her chest again with two fingers. “When we figured out what it was saying, we noted the coordinates it was transmitting – it was sending Antera’s position. This surprised us, as we were expecting it to have updated to our own. Today, still, it communicates Antera’s position.” Grayson stares at her blankly. To address this, Lekket chooses to add an addendum. “We are either lucky, and this particular device was damaged back at my colony, or we are less lucky, and the coordinates were simply locked in.”

At this, Grayson makes a face. “But either way we have to assume it can still be triggered.” She concludes grimly. “It’s just a matter of how long we have before that happens.”

“Yes.”

“Can it be destroyed or otherwise neutralized?”

Lekket looks to the right again. “Probably…” she muses and then turns the screen around to show Grayson what she’s looking at. Visible through the window of the office Lekket is presently in, Ensign Raleigh and Chief Kardis crowd over a small cluster of computers towards the back of the lab; in the foreground, under a host of overlooking monitoring equipment, a spherical object the size of an orange sits passively within a fortified container. Raleigh turns to look at it suddenly, an angry frown on his face, and then notices the screen of Lekket’s datapad pointed in his direction. Caught off-guard, he gives Grayson an awkward thumbs up and then quickly turns back around.

“….but we must continue discussing how best to do that.” Lekket finishes, re-appearing onscreen. “Those two are working on that right now. Though,” she comments, “the device seems quite stable. We could bring it to dead space—”

“That won’t help us with the other four…” Grayson cuts her off, thinking. She touches the screen and pulls up a list of contacts. “At the very least, we can’t leave those things out there – we have no idea when or how they’ll wind up playing those cards, and I’m not comfortable watching them set up.”

Lekket draws back. “You plan to fetch the other devices?” She asks, conflicted. She’s dropped the datapad down to her lap; a few segments of her spine-like tail, now visible onscreen, are coiled tightly around her upper thigh.

“Yes,” Grayson replies curtly. She raises an eyebrow at Lekket. “How long will it take you three to agree on how to destroy these things?”

“A few hours,” Lekket ventures, “I suspect…perhaps. But, there is no guarantee—”

“Now that you understand what the transponder is saying,” Grayson edges in, an eager gleam in her eye, “can you change it?”

Lekket remains silent for a few seconds, and then nods slowly. “Yes…” She says, enunciating cautiously. She turns to look in Raleigh and Kardis’ direction again. “I believe I can…”

Grayson smiles. “Good,” she says, “then I’ll speak with you again in a few hours.” Lekket faces her again, but Grayson’s eyes are already scanning the contact list floating just over Lekket’s shoulder on the screen; she selects a few of them. “Thanks for the call – I have a few of my own to make now.”

Lekket acknowledges this with a slight inclination of her head and promptly terminates the connection.