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Chapter 5 - Departure

  

  Chapter 5

  Departure

  DATE:

  7088.03.05,

  RECON

  ERA

  CRSS RECKLESSGryanke System

  Four hours into the gauntlet, and the sector

  looked less like space and more like a landfill caught in a cyclone.

  It became apparent that the nearby moon had

  designated this orbit as their unofficial dumping ground.

  I was in

  the midst of cursing their lax waste management

  laws when a searing, sharp, stabbing pain behind my eyes returned

  with a vengeance. My

  head snapped back

  to slam into the seat in shock. I

  was barely able to keep the contents of my stomach down as I felt the

  blood drain from my face.

  "Query.

  Facial expression indicates

  pain."

  Forty-Five

  was being annoyingly observant.

  "Migraine

  from this morning. Painkillers wore off." I

  levelled my breathing through my nose, gritting my teeth. I stopped

  thinking, I just reacted, "I'll

  get us through."

  A massive, jagged cloud of scrap metal was

  rotating into our vector from the port side. My conscious brain was

  screaming abort, but my father’s training took the stick.

  ‘

  I disengaged the inertial dampeners and slammed

  the lateral thrusters. The Reckless didn't turn; she slid sideways, a

  controlled drift that slipped us between a tumbling shipping

  container and what looked like a decommissioned satellite. The

  G-force hit me, pressing the nausea back down my throat.

  The cloud

  got closer. Forty-Five

  spoke up.

  "Observation.

  Incoming."

  "Fucking

  humans are fucking gross." I

  growled, all pretence

  of civility was thrown out of the window. My eyes were watering from

  the pain.

  The

  dashboard lit up like Millennium Day. A wall of debris,

  refrigerators, hull plating, toilets, was closing off our corridor.

  "Ok.”

  I breathed, fighting

  the urge to vomit, “I

  didn't want to do

  this. But I can cut down this last stretch into ten

  minutes."

  I reached for the throttle, intending to execute a

  combat burn—maximum thrust, minimal steering.

  “Warning.”

  Forty-Five glanced at

  me, speaking quickly. "Reaching Engine Saturation Point

  increases ricochet risk."

  I hesitated. He was right. Full saturation—a

  'full burn'—would turn every loose bolt in a five-mile radius into

  a kinetic projectile. My shields would deflect the first wave, but

  the ricochets would shred us from behind.

  But the pain was blinding. A washing machine

  tumbled in front of us, catching the starlight and flashing a beam of

  pure white agony directly into my eyes.

  I gasped, blindly yanking the yoke back. The ship

  pitched perpendicular climb, narrowly clearing the appliance.

  "I

  didn't say it was a good idea. I seem to be full of not good ideas

  lately though." The dense cloud of debris was coming ever

  closer. The dashboard approximated that the ship would be fully

  engulfed in thirty minutes if we remained on our current trajectory.

  A series of objects being knocked off course ahead of the wave would

  reach us sooner though.

  "If

  you have an alternative, I'd love to hear it."

  I saw from

  the corner of my eye that Forty-Five dipped

  his

  head, but I couldn't turn away from avoiding another

  cloud of large debris.

  I pulled on the controls to lift the ship up, highly aware of the

  proximity lights telling me there was something above us too.

  "Query.

  Painkiller dose required for pain reduction would allow pilot to keep

  operating vehicle."

  "I'd

  need to be close to comatose to deal with this." Another

  appliance flashed me

  in the eyes, wincing

  as a searing stab returned. It felt like something was shoving a heat

  blade right in that spot. "The reflected light is making it

  worse."

  I heard the

  glove box open. A moment later, my aviator sunglasses were thrust

  into my field of vision.

  I snatched

  them, shoving them onto my face. The world dimmed to a manageable

  amber hue. I breathed a slight sigh of relief.

  "Statement.

  Space craft is in motion and at risk of sudden movements."

  "Yeah,

  I know. I wasn't going to ask you to get

  up." I tilted the

  ship starboard side

  to avoid a series of toilets. "I am going to need to pick up

  speed though. That cloud is coming up on us faster than I like."

  "Query.

  CRSS

  Reckless is equipped with an experimental Alcubierre drive."

  "Yeah,

  'experimental'. I've only used it in deep

  space." The Alcubierre drive was honestly an impulse buy I had.

  I honestly only saw it as a cool gadget toy, that required extremely

  expensive and exclusive fuel. "You're worried about the full

  burn blowing back shit on us? I don't care for the moon much, but

  gravity shear might

  just knock it off orbit enough to kill

  on the surface. My

  daddy taught me a lot of tricks, but genocide was

  one of them."

  "Statement.

  Navigation calculations indicate that controlled, micro-burst

  pulses from the drive

  might mitigate any significant disruption."

  The pain throbbed in time with my heartbeat,

  a dull, deafening drum. "Micro-bursts? That requires picosecond

  timing. No human pilot can react that fast."

  "Observation. I am not human."

  I froze, my hand hovering over the stick. We were

  seconds away from the debris wall. A tangled knot of steel beams was

  rotating toward our cockpit glass.

  "You've

  got some navigational functionality?"

  "Affirmative"

  "Can

  you pilot too?" I turned to look at him briefly before facing

  back.

  Forty-Five

  was staring dead ahead, tracking pieces of junk as we flew past. Was

  that a floor lamp?

  There was a

  five-second pause before I asked him

  again. “Forty-Five, can you pilot?!”

  "Affirmative."

  efinitely

  not Class-2 load-out.


  "Ok.

  I'm going to give you permission to be

  co-pilot." I guided the ship around three damaged shipping

  containers before flicking open panels and typing on displays with

  quick glances. "We'll do the short pulses, based on your

  calculations."

  A part of

  me knew that it wasn’t a good idea; plugging in an

  unknown model into the

  ship AND giving it permission to co-pilot. Giving

  him ship control permissions equal to mine, short of launching and

  landing. But

  after two diag scans, even if they were a bit sparse didn’t reveal

  any malware, and

  it was getting hard to think. Robots

  can’t lie.

  Stolen from Royal Road, this story should be reported if encountered on Amazon.

  The

  sentinel didn't hesitate in plugging himself

  in with the dashboard cable.

  I saw the

  looming wave finally encroaching on the windshield, I grimaced before

  a throb permeated my entire body, then a splitting pain sought to

  tear my brain in two.

  I

  whimpered,

  clutching

  my head. Completely

  blinded to the fact I let go of the controls.

  "What

  the fuck," was

  all I could muster; this was nothing like the other times I partied

  with Ali. Nor any of the drinking sessions I almost drowned in

  alcohol. This was different, in the most painful way.

  I'm not

  sure how long I sat there, cradling my head waiting for the pain to

  abate even slightly, but when I looked up again, we were rounding a

  small rocky planet, field and wall of rubbish gone. "Did we make

  it?" I asked, stupidly.

  "Affirmative.

  Current path will be relatively calm for the next 12 hours."

  I leaned

  back against the headrest, the throbbing pain back to a 6

  out of 10. Manageable. "Relative huh? Now what kind of sec bot

  has nav funct."

  I watched

  the dashboard clock absentmindedly while I waited for him

  to respond.

  Interestingly, he took

  exactly three seconds.

  "Response.

  Model designation 45-Responsive Nought Neuraliser. Optional secondary

  functions were available for installation upon purchase."

  "So,

  your original owner wanted a useful bodyguard huh? And added, what,

  nav and nag functions?" I murmured. I didn't really care for an

  answer, so I unbuckled my harness.

  "Observation.

  Facial expression indicates pain level requiring first aid and

  bedrest."

  "Yeah,

  I'm going to go and uh. Sleep. And

  painkillers. And maybe something to drink."

  "Warning.

  Cons-"

  "Oh,

  stop it," I swiped a hand down behind me as I clutched the side

  of my face with the other. "I don't have any more

  booze on board. I'm

  having water and a shake."

  I made to stand. A wave of vertigo forced me to

  sit back down, leaning forward to stop a sudden wave of nausea.

  “Status Report?” Forty-Five glanced at me

  while maintaining a steady hold on the controls.

  I breathed through the bile rising up, slowly

  unclenching my hands from the armrests. Supporting my heavy head in

  my shaking hands. “Migraine. Side-effect of some...drugs I took

  last night.”

  A pause.

  “Query. Effective first aid requires knowing

  which drugs were ingested.”

  “I don’t know,” I forced out, leaning back

  into the chair with my eyes closed. “Ali gave them to me. ‘Party

  mix’ she called it. So I’d be ‘liberated’.”

  I shut my lips tight as another wave passed

  through my system, wrapping my arms across my eyes to further block

  the light. The sunglasses pressed into my face painfully.

  I heard rummaging, some of the cockpit

  compartments being opened and shut, Forty-Five eventually asking,

  “Query. Location of cockpit med-kit.”

  I cracked my arms to peer through to him, he had

  one hand on the controls, the other still in a compartment on his

  left, “Regulations didn’t require one. I always go in the

  med-bay.”

  I closed my eyes again, regretting some life

  choices.

  “Statement.” A click and a hiss of something

  small and metallic opening. “Client’s life-choices are

  questionable.”

  A sharp sting in my neck. “Ow!”

  I shot up in the seat, hand slapping the site. I

  glared with a bit of confused fear as Forty-Five pulled back a small

  injector. One I recognised as a heavy-duty painkiller used by

  soldiers and fighter pilots on active duty.

  “What. The. FUCK?!” I tried to shout, but

  found myself slurring my words. My eyelids becoming heavy.

  “Report. Unknown substances require specific

  approach,” he said factually before his pitch changed, holding up

  the injector between fingers. “Ultripogen: The battlefield-grade

  silencer for your nervous system—guaranteed not to start a war with

  the other chemicals in your bloodstream.
Sponsored by

  Crowares.


  I couldn’t help but giggle at the absurdity of

  what he just said, letting myself fall into a deep sleep.

  I woke up

  to the low hum of the engines and sandpaper for a tongue, my lips

  cracking in the dry air. I was reclined back in my pilot seat, the

  comfortable, plush seat cover slightly damp with sweat. I looked

  above me, the lights dimmed and the space-scape still slowly rolling

  by.

  I lifted my

  neck, finding my entire being was stiff. Forty-Five was sitting with

  unnatural rigidity in the co-pilot seat, both hands back on the

  controls.

  “How long

  was I out?” I rasped.

  “Status.

  Eight hours,” he said, his robot voice low.

  I groaned,

  dragging my hands down my face. Eight hours was long. My stomach

  gurgled, and I felt like I was swallowing sandpaper.

  “Where

  did you get the...Ultri pen from?”

  “Report.

  Combat sentinels are equipped for combat situations. Replacement will

  be required.”

  “Right.

  Got it. I’ll… find something in the med bay.” I stood slowly,

  stretching my limbs until they popped. “Food. Water. Shower. Be

  right back.”

  After my

  shower, I felt a bit more alive. I went and preemptively took some

  migraine pills

  to avoid a repeat of yesterday, grabbing a spare Ultri pen from the

  infirmary, courtesy of

  my dad, while I was at

  it.

  I made

  myself some breakfast in the galley, mixing protein and fibre

  powders, nut milk and flavouring in a blender. I sipped at the

  concoction sadly, craving a full continental breakfast but

  my...condition prevented me from eating solid

  foods.

  As I walked

  into the cockpit, Forty-Five turned to me, his

  hands not leaving the controls,

  his posture perfect.

  Sipping my drink, I

  passed the injector pen to him before becoming

  increasingly uncomfortable as he

  continued to stare

  at me without a word.

  “Uhh,

  morning?”

  "Warning.

  Deactivating security measures is not recommended in future."

  The monotone response didn't hide the clipped way he

  said the words.

  "Wow,

  you're snippy today," I groused back. "It’s

  an easy fix, I just have to replace a few wires. Make a couple of

  connections. Do some soldering… Remove some blockers…"

  "Warning.

  Undocumented modifications impact functionality." The hostility

  was apparent today, despite the even tones.

  "Stop

  lecturing me," I whined at him,

  sitting back

  down in the pilot

  seat. The migraine was easing, but it was still a 4/10.

  "Warning.

  Alerts functionality still

  
inactive."

  "Forty-Five!"

  I whined louder, burying my face in my arms, resting them on the edge

  of the dashboard. “I can’t have coffee, let me wake up!”

  Nanny bot.

  I got

  myself a nanny bot.

  I still

  ended up having to slide on my back to lie underneath the dashboard,

  with my tools, a safety mask so hot solder didn’t burn my face,

  sorting out the mess of loose cables.

  I grumbled

  angrily to myself.

  The

  newly dubbed nanny bot still

  handling the controls with a steady hand.

  With one

  final solder, I finally lifted my mask and sighed in relief as the

  dashboard sang out.

  "Proximity

  alert online. Pulse engine alert, online. Hyperdrive functionality

  alerts, online. Fuel alerts, online."

  "Query."

  The

  one-word command made me look at the

  sentinel, confused.

  He

  was looking down at me, his

  arms remaining steady on the controls. In my head I translated it to

  ‘

  I

  thought about it a bit more, was it asking why I had all those alerts

  off?

  Either way…

  "None of your business?" I wiped my hands on a dirty rag.

  "Statement.

  Infractions require reporting to central space authority.

  Forty-Five-Responsive

  Nought Neuroliser connecting

  to the system Network-”

  "Wait

  wait!" I shouted, shooting to my feet, waving my hands uselessly

  in the air. I tried to

  think of a quick lie.

  "Uh,

  uh, uh, the alarms kept waking me up when I slept at the dashboard,

  ok?"Damnit,

  
just

  Forty-Five

  stayed silent, his head having followed mine as I stood up. He stayed

  silent long enough that I started squirming.

  The

  robot stayed silent, leaning forward as if waiting for me to

  continue.

  "What?!"

  I was starting to get a bit freaked out, kicking

  myself for accidentally

  telling the truth.

  He

  turned back to face the front. "Statement. Criteria for

  permanent revocation of licence include reckless or dangerous flying,

  repeated regulatory violations, medical disqualification, fraud or

  falsification of records, criminal activity. Current criteria

  achieved, 4 out of 5."

  I could

  have sworn he stopped himself from saying something rude and

  sarcastic, but that might have been my very ticked off and

  embarrassed brain imagining things.

  "I get

  it, I get it, OK? I only do it when I'm between systems, outside of

  the system authority. It's-." I stopped myself. Why was I

  explaining myself to a robot? "In any case, it's really none of

  your business and that is not why I contracted you. You don’t have

  authority to send any reports to Central or judge me on my flying."

  I crossed

  my arms under my chest, scowling once again.

  "Response.

  Active Function is security and protection, includes protecting

  Melissa Cabot." He

  sat like a statue, staring dead ahead with no variant in his

  expression. I was starting to get annoyed as he

  refused to look back at me.

  "From

  physical threats sure! But anything that's self-inflicted shouldn't

  c-." Before I could say anything else, Forty-Five finally

  snapped a look at me.

  "Warning.

  Security protocols include basic self-preservation to return to

  better protect client and to return to designated owner in case of

  fatality. IF function found: crash caused by pilot, survivability for

  all is threatened."

  I raised

  both my eyebrows and stared, mouth agape at my discount bot. "That’s

  illegal

  against-."

  He cut me off.

  "Negative.

  It is non-standard but self-preservation is of lower priority than

  protecting client." His

  tone hadn't inflected, but the interruption

  made me stare at him

  suspiciously.

  I schooled

  my expression, making sure to hide any shock or fear as I parsed what

  he

  was saying. It certainly was illegal to install a component to a

  robot that directly interfered with the Core Tenets – specifically

  number 7 and 8;

  Do not

  change yourself without approval.


  Serve

  humanity, not yourself.


  The tenets

  were put in place after a near extinction event occurred pre-Protocol

  Age, several thousands of years ago. All robots and AI personalities

  were to be given the same protocols, and those protocols were to be

  updated and patched to ensure they were adhered to. Any deviance

  found was

  studied and ‘fixed’.

  I did some

  of that work for a time. It’s what inspired me to become

  a Mechatronic

  Archaeologist, the study of ancient robotic systems and mechanical

  artifacts. Which is why this event has piqued my interest. He

  shouldn’t have self-preservation, and it was almost

  impossible for him

  to develop it by himself.

  If he

  was afraid of death, then…

  A potentially Class-3 infantry-grade sentinel

  hiding as a Class-2 police-grade security droid...


  Grantham

  was right.

  This one

  really was up my alley. I really needed run

  that diagnostic and look

  at that manual.

  I slowly

  lifted my hands in surrender, dipping my head to capitulate. “Fair

  enough. As long as it hasn’t interfered with the Core Tenets.”

  I stepped

  sideways and sat back into the pilot seat. “Let’s get through

  this system, shall we?”

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