Loading summary
Katie Duke
Hi, I'm Katie Duke and I've been a nurse for over 20 years. Listen, I used to think that I was my most stylish in my 20s, but honestly, style and confidence only get better with age. And that is why I love figs. These scrubs are beautiful, comfortable and they are built to last. They're not those boxy, scratchy uniforms that we all started out in. No, no, no. These fit perfectly, they feel amazing and the quality is just wow. My favorite color? Burgundy. It's chic, it's timeless, and it's even the same color as my apartment because I'm kind of obsessed with it. And I love adding custom embroidery to make my scrubs as personal as my style. And since I work in telehealth, my embroidered figs even double as my ID badge. It's never too late to reinvent yourself or your scrubs. Get 15% off your first order at wearfigs.com with the code FIGSRX. That's wherefigs.com, code FIGSRX for 15% off your first order Want a thousand dollar weight loss medication for $50? It all starts with Roe's free GLP1 insurance check. Just upload your insurance card to see if you have coverage, then relax. Over 200,000 people have qualified for a $50 copay through Roe. Go to Roe Co Health. Half of covered patients have a $50 per month copay or less for medication, plus $1.45 monthly Roe membership fee. Deductible cost may apply and final cost varies by insurance plan. For safety information about including boxed warning, go to RO Co safetyrxonly.
Escape Pod Announcer
Escape pod episode 10:30 the smell of the Planet I Was Born On By Rodrigo Kulegovsky.
Mer Lafferty
Welcome to Escape Pod. I'm Mer Lafferty, your host and co editor. Today's story is the Smell of the Planet I Was Born on by Rodrigo Kuligovski Rodrigo is a Chilean architect, designer, and web developer. He has published in Flash Fiction Online, Nature, Levar Burton Reads, and Future Science Fiction Digest, among others. He misses his Commodore 64. It's narrated for us by Julia Rios. Julia they them is a queer Latinx writer, editor, podcaster, and narrator whose fiction, nonfiction and poetry have appeared in Latin America, Literature Today, Lightspeed, and Goblin Fruit, among other places. Their editing work has won multiple awards, including the Hugo Award and the Shirley Jackson Award. Julia is a co host of this Is why We're like this, a podcast about the movies we watch in childhood that shape our lives. For better or for worse. They've narrated stories for Escape Pod, Podcastle, Pseudopod, and Cast of Wonders. This is an escape pod original. With the coffee on the warmer, we're gonna need another second cup. It's story time.
Escape Pod Announcer
The Smell of the Planet I Was Born On By Rodrigo Kuligowski Narrated by Julia Rios There are two moons visible, a large one right above us and and another, smaller one about 15 degrees below it. In the star studded night sky above the almost empty, rocky, lifeless surface of the planet, the horizon slowly takes on the slightly blue stain that comes right after the sunset. Still takes your breath away, doesn't it? I turn to look up. Leandro is standing behind me on the slight rise. I chose to sit and enjoy the view. Yeah, it really does. It's nothing like Earth, but it's also the same, you know. He doesn't say anything, just nods and sits down next to me. Since the air is less dense than it was on Earth, the sky is darker. You can see stars most of the time, except when the terraforming engineers experiment with cloud formation or make the volcanoes release clouds of particles. When the night is clear like tonight, you can also see the rings starting to come together, unfinished circles glittering in space. That's where the Homo sapiens flying here right now from Earth on cold ships will live, love, and enjoy their lives as they look out over the surface of the planet that will provide food, materials, and open space for whatever they decide to do with it. We watch in companionable silence as another day's work ends. I remember Earth. Even though I was made 15 light years from the birthplace of Homo sapiens. My fellow laborers and I all have the same memories implanted Mahmud Lee, an indentured engineer on the big solar farms that powered the carbon sinks near the Earth's equator, when they still thought they could undo the climate collapse. Smart and hard working, but not too ambitious. Somebody who kept his head down, followed instructions, and did his job quietly. I remember being mamed in a distant way, like you might remember a book you read a long time ago. I was part of the first batch, the Sub Light Speed Needle ships that carried the recording of Mohammed's mind state and the plans for our bodies to Tereshkova 8172d also brought tiny full spectrum printers. They sent out bots to mine the surface of the planet for resources and bootstrapped themselves from Femto to Pico, Micro and Millie until they were full sized machines capable of producing human sized workers like me. They let us choose our names. Most of us invent a completely unique name. I chose Kalei. I look like a Homo sapiens, two hands and feet, a head, nose, mouth, ears, but also not My skin's color is wrong, it doesn't bend the right way, and there are no calcium bones underneath. When I smile, I have two wide teeth, one on top and one on bottom. I can see a different range of light than sapiens, can hear a wider range of frequencies, and breathe an atmosphere that would make them curl up like a dead spider. Homo was made on and for this planet. Sixteen hundred years later, the first three rings are ready and the other four are half finished. They circle the planet twice a day in the opposite direction of the planet's rotation, and are placed in a way that makes them seem to overlap even though they don't actually touch each other. The raw materials we launch into orbit are being used to complete the remaining rings and auxiliary stations. My team was in charge of building the magnetic catapults, and every time a speck of light climbs into the sky, I feel a frisson of pride. We've been able to see the ship's energy plumes for a few months, seven tiny torches getting bigger and bigger, but one of them looks weaker than the others. We're just surface based engineering, so we don't know any details about what's happening, but Leandro, who's on the Mag Cat team with me, is a space travel buff. Looks like trouble, he says one night as we're sitting around a small slow paraffin fire drinking hot water with caffeine, catechins, and polyphenols. The air smells different than when I was born, heavier and with more oxygen, nitrogen, and other gases. The machines feed us phenotype regulators to help us adapt, but breathing feels slightly strange when you have time to notice it. Ara Yix, another member of our team, says, Ah, what do you know, old man? You're just a ground worm like us. He was built a few centuries ago when the supervisor routines decided to expand the workforce. He calls everybody Old man, leandro says. They have to burn the hydrogen they scooped up on the way from Earth and slow themselves down enough to be captured by the planet's gravity. That smaller flame, it means they don't have enough fuel. Something failed in their hydrogen scoop on the way here and they didn't notice in time to fix it. They might not make it. Arayax scoffs and goes back to the game of diplomacy that he has been playing for the past three years with other workers. What happens if they don't get into orbit? I ask. That depends on how fast they're going and how much reaction mass they have. They might be able to shear off velocity with a low pass around one of the gas giants, maybe even one of the suns. But if they miss that too, they'll keep going back into interstellar space. So they'd never wake up. Never even know what happened. Well, some of them should be awake by now, getting everything ready. They'll definitely know what's happening. The rest, probably not. I'd hate to be one of the ones who are awake. Yeah, me too. We're silent after that, looking up and wondering about the drama being played out in pinpricks of light in the sky. With the arrival of the cold chips. Nothing changes and everything does. We've always worked for the sapiens. That doesn't change. We don't have a choice. They built the machines that keep us alive, and during the millennia we were alone we couldn't risk having them stop working if we'd tried to hack them. Homo bodies are industrial grade and built to last, but our chemistry and biology are by design, incomplete. If we run out of tetrahydroxyethylamine, we feel our cells start to degrade. Our oxala glycine dips low and we can't think clearly from the pain. And without vitamin B15, we get so weak we eventually can't move at all. We know this firsthand because the supervisor routines make us spend a month locked out of the drug machines. Or once every 10 years. So you remember to be careful, they tell us. The real lesson is clear. Do what we're told. The six ships take up position near the rings and the first few thousand sapiens are thawed out. The com channels are full of chatter in the mix of Mandarin, Spanish, Hindi, Slanglish, and Arabic that was spoken spoken on Earth back when Muhammad was still alive. We were born knowing it because he spoke it, but our language has drifted a lot in the past 16 centuries. Our supervisors have made us watch recordings of people from the old days so we remember how to speak with and understand the new arrivals. I meet my first sapiens. He's wearing a gravity suit with his name, Agustin Echeverria, and embossed on its left breast pocket. Hello. I'm delighted to meet you all. Jael, Kalee, Ionio, Arax. He makes a point of reciting all our names. Maybe he thinks we don't know he's reading them off his overlay and will be impressed. He's too tall, too thin, too pink, and has separate individual teeth that shine too white. When he smiles at us through his faceplate, he spreads his arms in a gesture that seems practiced. Servo muscles strain under the suit's bright white cloth to help him lift his arms under three times the gravitational pull he was born under. He calls Jael and the other supervisors to join him in the container that the drop shuttle carried from his ship. They spend a long time inside, and when they come out, there's a look on Jael's face I haven't seen before, a mix of anger and defeat. Gather round please, my friends, says Agustin Echevarria in his too loud, too fast voice. Your bosses and I had a very fruitful discussion. I'm sure they'll be happy to fill all of you in on the details. Now let's get to work, shall we? He laughs as if he said something funny. Nobody tells him that we've already been working for the past 1600 years to get the planet ready while he and his people slept. It seems like somebody should. The sapiens who selected the memories of Mahmed to implant us with couldn't know they'd have had to have been born with them like we were. But under the compliant, respectful employee they picked as the most likely to produce obedient, useful workers, he fantasized about escaping his indenture, going where he wanted, and living on his own terms. He never spoke of this to anybody. But we remember. We don't speak about our own plans, not out loud or in writing. We don't have to. We leave each other notes and clues and hints that only make sense if you're one of the almost hundred thousand hard working, smart asterisk engineers who dream of freedom. Each night we get to work on the machines, slowly, gently learning and testing, advancing in tiny, almost imperceptible steps, never stopping, like a river carving out a valley through a mountain back on old Earth. It was different when them was an idea, something that would arrive in some distant future instead of a sapiens yelling in your face right here, right now because something failed. And you know it failed because you did what they'd told you to do, even though you'd explained it wouldn't work and you know they know it. They still want somebody to yell at that can't yell back at them. There are more resources now. The cold ships were slow, but they also carried a lot more mass than the needle ships, including lithium, platinum, tantalum, and other elements that end in um that we've been unable to find in the Tereshkova 8172 system. This opens up tech trees we hadn't been able to exploit. Semi autonomous factories spit out bots of all sizes and shapes by the millions. Solar panels fill previously untouched basins. Massive power plants are built near volcanoes and rivers, turning geothermal and kinetic energy into microwaves that are beamed to the rings. Our jobs change. Less designing, preparing, measuring, or monitoring. More rappelling down cooling towers, clambering through exhaust tunnels, or guiding survey bots into active calderas from up close because volcanoes wreak havoc on remote guidance systems. It's dangerous work. Some of us die. Others are damaged, cut, burned, mangled. Those of us who survive keep working, and we print new Homo asterisks to replace the ones who don't. Agustin Echevarria, the first Overseer to come down planet, has been dead for 100 years. His great grandson, also called Augustin Echevarria, is in charge of my team now. He's just as bad as his namesake, maybe even worse, because he thinks he's funny. He wears a seven pointed star around his neck and rubs it when he gets nervous. We've worked out a rotation of who's in charge of taking the service maglev through the newly green rolling hills, past the tall svelte towers being grown in Nueva Magallanes, to his white mansion for the weekly sink. The unlucky worker has to laugh at his attempts at humor and pretend to give serious consideration to his ideas. The worst part, in my opinion, is when he tells you his conspiracy theories. I'm telling you, Kali. Think about it. What proof do we have that the ships actually flew through space? He makes air quotes that they existed at all. You can't really argue with him. His ignorance is too dense and sticky. But you can't really ignore him or not respond. He gets flustered and cranky. It's hard to find a middle road. Pretending to give his words serious consideration, I say, but what about our memories? Me and the other workers? We saw the ships come in. He makes a dismissive gesture, as if my words were insects and he was swatting them away. What do you remember? Some lights in the sky that could have been easily spoofed with drones. What about the video feeds? He laughs his loud too many teeth to laugh. That's even easier to fake. He shakes his head and pats mine. You people need to be more critical and do your own thinking. The ones that come after him blur into each other. Some are a little better, some are worse, but in the long run it doesn't make that much of a difference. We Keep working. The seven rings are finished. I understand there was some debate about the last one, as it was intended to accommodate the people of the Seventh ship if they'd made it into orbit. The families that run things decided it would be wasteful to not follow the original plan and divvied up the extra space among their minor clans and major sycophants. They declare a planet wide holiday in honor of the Angels of the Seventh, an excuse for the sapiens to go out into the wide green parks under the blue sky, both products and symbols of our centuries of terraforming work, to get drunk and overeat. The air is thick and humid. My skin is sticking to the shirt they printed for us. Hey worker, come over here. I turn slowly. We have orders to mingle with the sapiens so we can celebrate together our mutual achievements, but we've managed to stay apart so far. A tall, thin man walks over to me and throws his oddly jointed arm over my shoulder. Here, buddy, drink up. You deserve it. Without you people we'd be living in caves and breathing through a hose. He pushes a large cup into my face. One of the liquids they enjoy is sloshing around in it. I can smell ethanol and terpene compounds. No thank you, I say, trying to work myself free from the man's grasp. Drink up. We're all brothers and sisters, and one of his friends yells out and whatever they are, the two men laugh about this. Sapiens are usually much more polite, at least superficially, but the organic compounds in the liquid they're drinking clearly impact their social skills. Mahmed didn't drink, but I remember similar situations when he was cajoled into going to bars with his fellow workers. I pretend to drink from the cup and laugh at what I think are jokes. I move away as soon as I am physically able to. It's been 600 years since Homo sapiens arrived. The original seven rings are barely visible among the hundreds of stations, platforms, umbilical systems, and other things that orbit the planet. The ships that brought the sapiens here were broken down for parts generations ago. The night sky is full of bright lights moving up and down and around. I don't spend much time monitoring their comms systems, but Aria shows me some of the stranger things they post the theories the third Ichavaria repeated. I doubt they were his own. He had no imagination. Have spread and grown like an untreated yeast infection. One group thinks a long trip on the cold ships never happened, another one that there's no actual space to travel through. In the first place, it's all connected to the seven pointed star symbol and the angels they worship, though I've never understood how exactly. But their theory is we're being lied to. There are no spaceships. There never were. Lied to by who? For what reason? If people accept the lie about spaceships, they say, then it's easier to convince people of an even bigger lie. Which is? Arriyek's points down at the ground. They think this planet is the Earth, the one where sapiens evolved, and they call it being a completely different planet and 15 light years from Earth. The big lie. That's ridiculous, I say. There are four moons in the sky. The geomorphology is completely different. There are volcanoes everywhere and no oceans, just large lakes we've built. He shrugs. The scariest part is they won five council seats in the last election. Out of the total, 33. Really? Fuck yeah, fuck. I give sapiens another two, three generations tops before the whole thing grinds to an ugly screeching stop. At most. Arrx and I turn out to be wrong. Human civilization on Tereshkova 8172D lasts for another five generations. The real Earth faction isn't the cause of its downfall, more of a symptom. Trust erodes. The we're all in this together vibe of the first few hundred years is gone. Science and ethics are both equally out of fashion and long dormant. Racial, gender, and religious supremacies vie with each other for power, promising to oppress and disenfranchise whoever their constituencies dislike. There's a war. Both sides threaten to lob nukes at the systems that keep the air breathable and volcanoes under control. This is beyond ignorant, because it would make the surface of Kova untenable for all sapiens, regardless of their belief about gods, gonads, genes or whatever. But the war itself is built on lies, threats, and spite, so ignorance is to be expected. Nobody knows who pushes the button, but the nukes fly. The systems break beyond fixing the conditions on the surface of the planet, start to go back to what they were when we were first made, before the cold ships got here. The Homo sapiens left in the Tereshkova system have to retreat to their bunkers underground hidey holes, and whatever space hardware remains inhabitable. Without a stream of planet grown food, the worldwide computer network sputters, flickers and breaks. The great, great not so great grandson of Agustin Echeverria, who's inherited the family sinecure and name but insists we call him Gus. Gus. Gus reads us a short message informing us of the current problems with some vague generalities about everybody pulling together. He also repeats the word humanity a lot. I'm pretty sure that doesn't include us. He signs off with I wish you all good luck. Maybe he means it. We've been tracking the sapiens downfall for generations from the moment they set foot on the planet, to be honest, waiting for our time when the sapiens overseers stop overseeing us. Too busy with the decline of their own species to care about us. We put our centuries of plans into motion once we can work openly. It takes us just a few months to finish reverse engineering, modifying and replicating the machines that make the drugs we need to stay alive. We no longer need the sapiens to survive. It's definitely my imagination, but I feel mahmed. Somewhere in the back of my brain he's smiling. I step out onto the surface of Tereshkova 8172D. Dozens of my brothers stand beside me. Hundreds of thousands repeat the scene in other spots around the planet. It's been a few centuries since the Sapiens Cold War grew hot. It was a long, boring, cramped wait, but we are nothing if not patient, and we've mapped the areas that are safe for us to reclaim without special gear. The planet's atmosphere has almost completely reverted to the way it was in the early days when we got here. The air is thin again and the sky is dark even at noon at night, untold numbers of stars shine steady and bright. Jael, Ionio, and Arryx are next to me. We grin at each other and walk out onto the surface, quiet, naked, and wide open once again, like it was at the beginning. I take a deep breath. I'd missed the smell of the planet I was born on,
Mer Lafferty
And that was the smell of the planet I was born on. By Rodrigo Kuligowski if I had to describe this story in one word, it would be patience. The story is on a time scope that most humans can't comprehend. The Homo people being created not only to survive in environments that could kill humans, but but also to build and to not lose their mind over the eons of their existence. The first narrative time jump is a casual 1600 years. If homo sapiens said that, we'd be casually referring to around half of recorded human history. When you look at time like that, then you can afford to be patient. Through the hurricanes of humans passions and hasty decisions. Humans are lovers of instant gratification, and waiting a few decades for something would still look like hasty decisions to the Homo people. Generations of humans go around feeling superior and advanced while the homo folks simply wait. This story made me think a lot about patience and waiting for bad things to pass. It helps me look at the current state of affairs in the world actually, but one theme I want to comment on is is how you can control people by limiting their choices and making them depend on you. And these choices could be anything from control over machines that keep you alive to getting a job to reading a book. Fight censorship, y'. All. Escape pod is 100% audience supported and we count on your donations to keep the lights on and the servers humming. Head over to escapeartists.net support EA to see all the available donation and subscription options including Patreon, PayPal, Ko Fi and Twitch. If you're in the US you can very likely write this off on your taxes because we are a 501C3. You can also support Escape Pod for free by rating or reviewing us on Spotify, Apple Podcasts or your favorite app. Whether you've been a dedicated fan of Escape Pod for years or just started following the cast, thanks for tuning in. SkatePod is distributed under Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial no Derivatives License. Our music is by permission of Daikaiju. Hear more from them@daikaiju.org that was our show for this week. Our quote comes from Douglas Nothing very very good and nothing very, very bad ever lasts for very, very long. Thanks for listening. We'll see you next week with more free science fiction. Stay safe, stay kind and have fun.
Total Comfort Solutions Representative
Got plumbing problems? Total Comfort Solutions has you covered. From faster and clearing leaking pipes and running toilets to expert water heater services including tankless water heaters and heat pump water heaters, we're here to keep things flowing. As your trusted partner in the Walla Walla Valley, we're committed to top notch service, quality work and your total satisfaction. Call Total Comfort Service Solutions today or visit us online@comfortrightdayornight.com because your comfort is our priority. Total Comfort Solutions One less thing to worry about.
Libsyn Ads Representative
Marketing is hard, but I'll tell you a little secret. It doesn't have to be. Let me point something out. You're listening to a podcast right now and it's great. You love the host. You seek it out and download it. You listen to it while driving, working out, cooking, even going to the bathroom. Podcasts are a pretty close companion. And this is a podcast ad. Did I get your attention? You can reach great listeners like yourself with podcast advertising from Libsyn Ads. Choose from hundreds of top podcasts offering host endorsements or run a pre produced ad like this one across thousands of shows. To reach your target audience in their favorite podcasts with Libsyn ads, go to Libsynads.com that's L I B S Y N ads.com today.
Escape Pod 1030: “The Smell of the Planet I Was Born On”
By Rodrigo Culigowski
Narrated by Julia Rios
Original air date: January 29, 2026
In this contemplative, multi-generational science fiction story, Rodrigo Culigowski explores the lives of an engineered labor class—Homo*—who terraform and prepare an alien world (Tereshkova 8172d) for human (Homo sapiens) habitation across thousands of years. The tale, told from the perspective of a Homo* worker named Kalei, traces themes of patience, dependence, and quiet resistance beneath the veneer of servitude. As generations of humans rise and fall, Homo* endure, outlasting their masters and ultimately reclaiming the world they built.
[03:23] The story opens with a striking alien landscape: a star-rich sky, two moons, and the lingering residues of terraforming.
The Homo* were manufactured specifically to prepare the world for human settlement: "We've always worked for sapiens. That doesn't change. We don't have a choice."
Their biological dependency is a deliberate tool of subjugation: crucial chemicals are rationed by supervisors, ensuring compliance.
"The real lesson is clear. Do what we're told." (Kalei, 10:50)
The arrival of the first human “cold ships” is a turning point, but for Kalei’s kind, nothing fundamentally changes—they remain in servitude.
The first thawed supervisor, Agustin Echevarria, is performative and patronizing to Homo*, ignoring their millennia of effort and expertise.
Generational change in human overseers brings little improvement; later descendants are depicted as ignorant and self-important, with Gus, the final overseer, epitomizing this detachment.
"What proof do we have that the ships actually flew through space?" (Agustin Echevarria, Jr., 19:45)
As centuries pass, human society splinters into conspiracy, factionalism, and societal collapse—echoing real-world cycles of denial and scapegoating.
Humans debate the very reality of their spacefaring past, with conspiracy theorists denying the truth of the planet's origins.
"The scariest part is they won five council seats in the last election." (Arriyek, 26:05)
Eventually, war and desperation break the life-supporting systems. Humans retreat underground and into orbit, and finally, leadership abandons Homo*.
"He also repeats the word humanity a lot. I'm pretty sure that doesn't include us." (Kalei, 28:50)
Freed from the need for human-controlled chemicals, Homo* reengineer their own support systems.
They reclaim the surface, returning to the planet as it was when they first arrived—quiet, open, mysterious.
"I take a deep breath. I'd missed the smell of the planet I was born on." (Kalei, 30:00)
[30:10] Host Mer Lafferty closes with an exploration of the theme of patience and how power can be maintained by controlling dependency and limiting choices:
“If I had to describe this story in one word, it would be patience. The story is on a time scope that most humans can't comprehend... Through the hurricanes of human passions and hasty decisions. Humans are lovers of instant gratification... Generations of humans go around feeling superior and advanced while the Homo folks simply wait.” (Mer Lafferty, 30:18)
She also ties the narrative’s serenity through adversity to real-world resonance, noting how the restriction of both tangible resources and choices underscores the importance of autonomy, resistance, and hope.
The episode carries a patient, elegiac, quietly resistant tone, rich in world-building and character introspection. The narration by Julia Rios infuses the Homo* perspective with a sense of unresolved yearning and eventual fulfillment. Lafferty’s afterword reinforces the enduring message: that patience, memory, and quiet perseverance outlast mismanagement and hubris.
This episode is a thoughtful, slow-burn meditation on enslavement, autonomy, the cyclical folly of humanity, and the resilience of those kept beneath. It’s a story about waiting—across time, across generations, until the world is once again your own.