“Get up, step out of the suit, and put your hands behind your head.” the man tells me.
“Like hell.” I reach for the gun, and he fires. The rounds dig sizeable craters before I crush the gun in his hand. He screams in pain, then slumps to the floor as I backhand him with a massive gauntlet, snapping his neck.
The next round to be fired comes from behind, hitting my forearm and smashing it into a bloody pulp. I stare at the smoking remains of my arm, then slowly sink to the floor, clutching the bloody stump. I hear voices and footsteps as someone rushs up behind me. I don’t care, the pain is killing me, and nothing else seems to matter anymore. Someone unclips my helmet and connects something to my implant.
“Ok, got it, someone get her hand out of the way.” My muscles have stopped obeying me, and I can’t move.
“Go.” The ‘snip’ of internal surgical units is so much louder in my own suit. The scalpels take off my arm just above the elbow, and I see a white star of pain as the stump is cauterised. Oh god the pain… the pain! I want to run, and yet the pain keeps me on the ground, trying to curl around the pain which has become my entire universe. I feel the cool nick of a hypo-spray against my neck, and I lose any thoughts of trying anything. Someone reclasps my helmet on, and I’m hoisted up on to their shoulders. My body bounces around inside my suit as they jog down a corridor, turn, stop, and move again. Stop. Move. Seconds later I’m looking upwards at the red Martian sky, but I barely notice, my nerves jangle each time as the stump thumps against the surgical units and I just want the pain to stop.
…laughing as I look out to sea. Not the black water of now, but the deep blue of before. There’s not a cloud in the sky, and somewhere off in the distance I can hear children laughing. I lie back on my towel, and let the sun stroke me with it’s soft rays until I fall asleep…
…rain lashes against my face as I sprint through the school gates and over the playground. A flash of lightning lights up the buildings, before returning them to their grey undertones. I leap up the few stairs into the classroom, and a burst of thunder rattles the windows…
…tracking Elliott through the sights, leading, judging, firing, watching the paintball explode against his side. I snicker quietly and locate my next target…
July 4th, 2041
2312 Hours SET
Dim light floods in slips in through my half-opened lids. What happened? I remember at look down at my left arm. It’s suspended in a tank of liquid, weavers spinning the beginnings of muscle and tissues over the alloy bone structure.
“She’s awake.”
“It’s far too early. Put her out again.”
Voices, and then consciousness slips away.
…watching Ryan run through the incessant downpour to me. Wrapping his arms around me, his face lowering to mine upturned…”
“…take the opportunity to welcome our newest member of the team, Dr. Rebecca L. Chang.” Applause fills the small auditorium. I take a deep breath and step onto the small stage, over to the podium. I look out over the crowd, taking a few moment to gather my breath and smooth my suit…
“…serious repercussions for the future of life on the Earth’s surface. We recommend immediate dispersal into the underground bunkers…”
…Ryan lies in the bed of the medical section, his skin a pale yellow, the wounds taking over his body. Watching his breath getting shallower and shallower…
“…missiles with various payloads of nuclear, biological, and chemical warheads have struck the five continents, killing much of the population, we now have no choice but to cut off all contact with outside for the next…”
“…initiate the program for genetic manipulation and breeding of clones. All personal are required to give blood, skin, and egg or sperm samples…”
July 16th, 2041
0100 Hours SET
I struggle into consciousness, and immediately regret it. A migraine bangs away inside my head. I pull myself up, and cradle my head on my knees, wrapping myself into a ball. After a few moments, the pain passes and I cautiously look out into the world. I’m lying on a bed, wearing a pair of cotton short and a singlet. The air is warm enough that I only have a sheet covering me. The bed is a relatively simple affair, made of tubular steel, covered by a thin mattress. My left arm is now whole, the skin bright pink and unblemished where the medi-bots rewove skin, bone and muscle. The room is small, just large enough for a couple of beds, toilet, and basin. A quick inspection reveals a vent and light set into the ceiling with solid grills covering both of them. The door is locked. I sit back down on the bed with a sigh. Nothing here is familiar, design lines are slightly more curved, and colour means something more than a contrast or warning. Despite the aesthetics, it’s obvious I’m a prisoner.
After a few hours staring at the ceiling counting the number of tiles and depressions, some exercise, and more counting, the door opens to admit a man wearing strange clothing and long black hair tied behind his head carrying a portable terminal. He wears a pair of silver rings which seems to actually go through his left ear. He doesn’t seem to be wearing any rank insignia, and I don’t know which part of him to stare at first. He’s tall. Taller and bigger than most people I’ve ever met and his face is heavily creased. He briefly gazes at me with something akin to pity, and sits down on the edge of the other bed.
“So,” he begins. “What’s your name?”
“Rebecca Chang.” he nods and writes this down on the terminal.
“When were you born?”
“Second of February, Twenty-Twenty-Two.”
“So that would make you, what? Nineteen?”
“Yes.”
“Bit young to be toting a gun isn’t it?”
“Not really.” he gives me a look that says he clearly doesn’t believe me, but lets it go.
“So. Which of those bodies was your superior then?”
“None of them.”
“Really? So you were in command then?”
“Maybe.”
“That means yes. Who was your immediate superior?”
“I don’t think you need to know that.”
“I think I do.”
“That’s nice.” I stare him down, willing my eyes not to water.
“Who gave you your orders Chang?” He says, standing up. “You sure as hell didn’t decide to attack just because you were having a bad day. We had you monitored from the moment you moved orbit. You were synchronised with too many other groups. Now. Who ordered the attack?” I keep my silence. His fist comes out of nowhere, hitting me in the jaw and bashing my head against the wall behind me. My vision blurs, and he hits me again. I fall over, face down on the bed, clutching at the pain. The bone won’t break, and the bruise will fade in a few hours, but it still hurts like hell. He flips me over easily with one hand and kneels on me, his legs pinning my arms and shoulders. He wraps his large hands around my neck, choking me. “Who?” I try to talk, and he relents, relaxing his grip slightly.
“Commodore Khallas.” I gasp, not particularly wanting to die for not speaking someone’s name. He nods, gets off me and leaves abruptly, taking the dropped terminal with him.
The next week passed without incident. I was given three meals a day, rather than the two I was used to. Every couple of days, I would be provided with a clean sheet, a towel and change of clothes. Occasionally I would go over some of the files or play one of the simple games I had stored in the implant. Sometimes, in a fit of delusional unfitness, I would madly exercise, working out till my muscles refused to move and I fell to the floor, exhausted. Mostly I slept, catching up on the lost hours.
July 24th, 2041
1430 Hours SET
“…69…70…71…72…” As I pull myself up into my seventy-third situp the door opens and I sprawl back in surprise. The man who tortured Khallas’s name out of me stands in the doorway, looking down on me with a touch of amusement.
“Hi.” he says, without a touch of friendliness.
“Thought you’d forgotten me.”
“Hardly, but we’re in transit, and we’d rather talk with you somewhere with a few more… facilities.” I shrug. Whatever.
“Ok. So why are you here?”
“To deliver a package.” He turns and calls outside. “Bring him in.” A pair of gaurds bodily carry Donner in, gently lie him on the spare bunk, and leave. “Have fun.”
“Wait!” I say, trying to think of something, anything for contact with the outside world.
“Yes?”
“What’s your name?”
He stares at me for a few seconds, then shrugs. “Travis Craven.” He says, and is gone.
I sit cross legged on the other bed, chin resting in my hands, watching Dooner. His legs are still pink where the fresh skin created by the replacement process has yet to age and pigment. His once muscular body has turned thin, his breath shallow. A quick search of my limited personal files brings up no record of a Travis Craven and I quickly abandon any further investigation. An hour or so later Dooner finally breaks consciousness. His pale blue eyes crack open and he stares at the ceiling for a few moments before carefully pushing himself into a sitting position to look at me.
“Hi.” I smile wryly at him.
“What happened? I remember… shooting… and my legs… then nothing.” He looks down at the pink replacements with a cross between confusion and amusement.
“We’re prisoners.” I tell him. “I don’t know where we are. Nor who is holding us.”
“The Kadreli?”
“No. Humans.” Dooner looks at me like I’m crazy. “I’m serious. You know what Wilson was saying in that vehicle? How it was made for humans? He was right.”
“We’ve been captured by hostile humans?” He stresses the last two words with disbelief.
“Yes.” Again the look. The door opens without a warning, and Travis walks in carrying a chair and a terminal. A figure in familiar battle armour enters behind him, carrying a familiar large calibre weapon. I note with a sinking heart that the safety is off, the laser sight on, and the semi-transparent 30 round magazine is full of low velocity hollow points. The old MAPW-17a may lack the sophistication of later models and only sport one magazine and barrel, but 25mm hollow-points will shred human tissue just as easy, not matter what gun fires them. The guard takes up position behind me. A second battlesuited carrying an unfamiliar long weapon stands guard in the doorway. Clearly they don’t want us to leave. I note the design of the weapon away for further research and turn my attention to Travis.
“You,” he says, setting up the chair and sitting down in front of Dooner, “What’s your name?” Dooner looks at me, and I nod.
“Dooner.”
“Just Dooner?”
“Yes.” Travis looks mildly surprised and notes something down on his terminal.
“What is your rank, serial number, squadron and positioning.”
“Serial number 03-03574125. Lieutenant in the 9th Squadron, 7th Legion. We were stationed on a base somewhere in the asteroids.”
I flinch at the last part involuntarily. Clearly Dooner hasn’t quite understood that despite their human appearance, these people are just as much the enemy as the Kadreli.
“Really? So you were in command of young Rebecca here then?” Dooner looks confused and I start to protest, but the guard behind quietly silences me with a massive gauntlet.
“No, she was my Wing Commander, I served under her.”
“Of course. My mistake. Where was the location of this asteroid base?”
“I don’t know, I was not trusted with that responsibility.”
“Wing Commander Chang? What was location of the asteroid base.”
“I don’t know.” I reply as honestly as possible. From my position on the bed, I close my eyes to hid the glint of the visual implants and scroll through files for anything pertaining to capture and detection of the critical ‘roid bases. The file runs, and everything on my eyes clears away instantly. I open my eyes and look at Travis. From his face it’s clear he doesn’t believe me. “I’m sorry, I don’t know.”
“Really?” Without warning, he grabs Dooner off the bed, slams him face first into the wall and efficiently dislocates his shoulder.
“FUCK!” Dooner screams, gritting his teeth in pain.
“I will ask you one more time Chang. Where is the base?”
“I don’t know!” I yell at him, fighting against the iron grip of the guard behind me. Travis grabs Dooners flopping arm, and pulls and twists it. Dooner screams in agony, tears running down his face.
“Tell me, Chang, or I will rip both his arms off, and he won’t have the pleasure of having new ones attached. I close my eyes in despair, and the program responds instantly.
~Are you being interrogated for base co-ordinates?~
~Yes!~
The program obliges and I relay them to Travis, trying to make it sound like I’m reading them from memory.
~Legion War Council notified. In no way should any Legion attempt to board the station without proper authentication from an Vice Marshal Officer or higher past this date.~
I look at Travis, my mouth set in a hard line.
“Thank you.” He says sardonically. He relocates Dooners shoulder with a crunch, and they leave, the door slamming shut behind them. Dooner curls into a ball on the bed, whimpering quietly.
July 25th, 2041
0330 Hours SET
In the fuzziness of sleep, I try to turn over and fail. I try again, and this time, I can feel the cold steel around my wrists and ankles.
“Good morning Chang. Welcome to your own private hell.” Travis again. I clench my eyes shut, not wanting to see where I am. “Stop pissing round Chang, and look at me.” I reluctantly open my eyes and stare up at the smooth features of Travis Craven.
“What do you want?”
“Information, as always. And if you don’t give it freely, we can extract it.” I glare up at him, wishing to wrap my hands round his thick neck. “Now,” Travis smiles, as if at some silent joke. “What does the Earth Organisation want with Sol Corp?”
“I don’t know what your talking about.” I say in confused burst of honesty.
“Liar.” He reaches for something under the bed, and pure pain bursts through my nerve endings. I scream out in pain, my body arching without control against the manacles. After a few seconds that feels like hours it stops, and I fall limp against the table. Sweat drenches my body and clothes. “What is the current status of the Legion forces in orbit around Earth.”
Hours pass. More pain. Even more questions. Travis goes over many subjects, changing tack every few minutes. Silence brings pain, Not knowing brings more, false answers and contradictions brings even more. At one point, he simply cranks he level up and leaves me there for what feels like days, but was in all probability only minutes. I lay there screaming, my muscles tearing themselves apart as they instinctively try to wrench free. When he returns, I gibber incessantly, and tell him anything and everything, nonsense spewing forth from my mouth, and sends pain shooting through me. In the end, my body gives up, and drops me into unconscious to hide.
August 23th, 2041
0300 Hours SET
~This can’t go on, that’s the fifth time in three days. We have to escape.~
~I know.~
~How then?~
~I have a plan…~
August 24th, 2041
2000 Hours SET
The door opens to admit a battle suited guard bearing our dinner on a pair of trays. He stops momentarily, trying to work out where I’ve gone. I drop on him from my position above the door and scrabble for purchase on the armour and grab at the external helmet clasps. He drops the trays and tries to reach for me, hampered by his suit. I finally get the helmet off. Wrapping my legs round his chest for support, I crash the helmet onto his head. He falters and reaches for his sidearm. I don’t even both try to get it off him, and simply bash away with the armoured headpiece. He fires wildly and Dooner takes a hit and falls. Blood spurts, and the guard crashes to the floor, nearly crushing my legs. Blood and brains oozes from where I smashed his skull in. Quickly, I strip the guard of his armour and put it on.
The jack for the implant has been removed, but the armour seems to respond anyway, albeit slower. I take Dooners tags, drop them into an external pocket and slam on the helmet, double checking the clasps. Everything seems to be voice controlled so I ask for a map and disconnect all outgoing transmissions. Evidently I’m on a large cruiser, with a very high cargo capacity. I plot a route to a cargo elevator and kick open the door with amplified muscles.
The hatch is ripped of it’s hinges and crashes into the far wall. People cry out in surprise and I sprint out and to the left. I round a corner to run straight into a battlesuited marine. He starts to raise his sidearm in reaction and I smash it out of his hand, and turn and run. The suit accelerates to it’s full 55 kilometres per hour as I pound down corridors, the floor bending under me. I belt through a mess hall and the external mics pick up the sounds of gunfire behind me. Craters appear on the walls ahead of me. Forgetting about safety, I engage the suit thrusters and start bouncing down the deck at close to eighty kilometres per hour, swerving this way and that. Chairs and tables splinter under my progress as I simply smash through them. The hatch opens to admit some luckless person who dies as I crash through it like an drunken avenging angel. I flex the blades built into the arms, and they dig into the walls as I try desperately to control my vector. Dents appear in the walls, ceilings and floor as I oscillate between them and bounce down corridors. Another battlesuit gets tackled as I roar through a junction. This one carries a loaded auto-cannon which I take from him before ditching luckless marine against the nearest wall. At some point I misjudged a corner and ended up going sideways. My armour is starting to show signs of wear and tear, and several systems have already failed, as well as most of the external sensors. The entire ship is alerted as my news of my mad flight spreads. Those in battlesuits fire at my careening figure and everyone else simply gets out of the way. The cargo lift appears ahead and I crash into it’s far wall, trailing sparks and fire. Very carefully, I tap the button for the nearest external airlock. The doors close and I slump to the ground, sporting a thousand bruises despite the internal padding.
Halfway down, the lift stops and then starts to rise. Thinking quickly, I change the magazine on my stolen auto-cannon on to an explosive magazine on my belt, and open fire on the floor. Shrapnel fills the lift, and anyone not in full armour would deafened, then shredded by the flying steel. I clip the auto-cannon to my side and start to tear away at the hole with what remains of the claws, enlarging it to allow me passage. A hundred meters below, I can see what looks like a belly air-lock. Hoping I have enough fuel to last, I jump through the hole and engage the thrusters a few seconds later.
The jets give out five meters above the bottom of the shaft, and I feel every gram of the 500 kilo battle suit as I crash to the deck. Far above, I can see the lift starting to starting to come down. The inner airlock responds to the manual override, and the outer one responds to several rounds of explosive 25mm ammunition.
Instead of the expected quiet warehouse, the airlock opens to a crowded hanger. A thousand hard-suited figures crawl along the length of the giant cruiser, parts and machinery scattered everywhere. I walk quickly, avoiding people, hoping the battle suit gives makes me inconspicuous. I duck behind a large piece of machinery just as the first of my purses venture out into the open. I engage the zoom built into the suits optical pickups – thankfully, the main ones are still operational – and run a practised eye over my pursers. A black heart adorns their shoulders and chest plates, and they appear to have individualised suits, rather than the generic one I took. All carry the triple magazine MAPW-17c with high explosive rounds. Only slightly outdated space-age weaponry that’s more than a match for my outdated 20th century weapon. I forget about fighting a battle and start off down the deck again. I know it’s only a matter of time before one of them thinks about the third dimension.
Two hundred meters down the deck I’m proved right as a laser dot swirls across the deck in front of me. I instinctively roll to the left, come up on one knee facing the other way, and search the vacuum for my airborne purser. My implant obliges, relaying everything I want to know. I run three rounds across his flight path, and he runs straight into them, either killing him, or propelling him far enough away not to matter. I run down the deck, keeping cover between them and me the whole way. I roll behind a burnt out turbine and take a peek behind me. Only a few have ventured out into the open, most are scrambling between items of cover, peeking out or using the builtin sensor packs on their auto-cannons, afraid of me as I am of them. I start running again, crouching as low as the suit permits. From the laser sight dots dancing around, it’s pretty clear that some of them are having a hard time working out where I am now. From the looks of it, the suits are modified or copied legion suits, and lack some of the extra sophistication. All the better for me, I think as I dodge my way down the deck towards the open space at the end.
Vacuum is a funny thing, you can hear people talking through concrete a hundred meters away, but utterly fail to notice a shuttle ten meters away until it enters your peripheral vision. The sight of a shuttle alongside caused me to throw myself to the ground, and dive behind cover. Judging from the manoeuvres that the shuttle pulls, the pilot is either insane, a genius, or both. She throws it over me, flips it over and slams it into the deck between me and my pursers. The side door opens, and someone in a hardsuit gestures wildly with both hands to get in. Figuring I can’t get in any more trouble than I’m already in, I scramble past the ventral laser turret and into the main cabin. The pilot doesn’t even bother closing the door, simply guns the shuttle up, out the end of the dock into open space.
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