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Syn-En: Pillar World

Page 2

by Linda Andrews


  “Admiral.” Shang’hai’s smile slipped off her face. “Life signs in the pods are Syn-En.”

  “What!” Rome leapt to his feet. “We don’t leave anyone behind. We wouldn’t.”

  Bei double-checked his roles. He’d lost one hundred thirty-three men in the last six months. He could account for every one of them. But there were platoons of his men in hidden posts everywhere. Could one of them have been overrun? “Double check.”

  “I triple-checked.” Shang’hai chewed on the end of one of her dreadlocks. “It’s reading as Syn-En.”

  Bei confirmed her reading then sent his own transmission. Using his command codes, he demanded an identity. Nothing. Even dead Syn-En obeyed identification orders. What the hell had the enemy done to his men?

  “It’s a trap.” Rome planted his fists on his hips. “It has to be.”

  “Indeed.” All of Bei’s logic circuits reached the same conclusion. But what if they were flawed? “Set an intercept course.”

  Iggy’s ears folded back against her head. “I detected a Human signal when the life pods ejected.”

  A file replaced the burning debris on the screen.

  Alarms flared in Bei’s skull.

  The wormhole opened. A Founders’ dreadnaught poked its weapon-laden nose across the event horizon. Its rocket turrets registered as armed.

  Chapter 2

  Nell Stafford blinked, clearing her swimming vision. In all her one hundred sixty-five years, she’d never seen anything so horrific. And she was supposed to treat and heal people without getting emotional. A child lay on the gurney before her. A child. She would gladly live to be three hundred and fifty and be perfectly happy remaining ignorant of this cruelty. Heck, she’d even sleep for another century and a quarter, curled up next to her husband, if that would help. But it wouldn’t.

  This was war.

  Ugly, putrid war. With its deliberate infliction of pain and suffering on the innocent.

  In the cavernous prep area of sick bay, Syn-En orderlies triaged the badly wounded. Stretchers lay side by side, creating rows of mangled flesh, thirty beds deep. Human first aid workers offered drinks of water, changed bandages, and monitored vitals. Lumps of people gathered along the bulkheads like pebbles cast ashore from the backwash of battle.

  Nell cleared the wad from her throat. Focus on healing those you can. I need to focus. She inhaled deeply. Her knees trembled from fatigue and she yawned.

  The pungent scent of body odor and blood mingled freely with the sharp sting of disinfectant. A passing orderly brushed her back, then shuffled toward the surgical bays without stopping. A patient moaned on his gurney. More wounded groaned and bled out on the metal deck of the sick bay. The sounds of agony drowned out the hum of the engines of the NSA starship Nell Stafford. Across the receiving bay, a medic stepped back into a pile of severed synthetic limbs. An avalanche of Syn-En hands, arms, legs, and feet tumbled across the deck.

  Most patients didn’t even notice.

  The four year old on the gurney in front of Nell turned her head. A crooked index finger pointed to the severed limbs. “Uh-oh.”

  “Uh-oh?” Some expressions must be universal. Or else the little girl’s parents had recently been abducted from Earth and sold to the Founders for medical experimentation.

  “The Yea-Sayer will tattle.” The little girl’s hazel eyes widened, and the scar running across her forehead turned white.

  Nell tried her best to ignore that scar and the scores of others. Four years old and the first time she’d seen the sun was on the starship’s view screens. Tears prickled Nell’s nose. Stupid, stupid Founders. She hoped the universe dropped a dungheap of bad juju on their collective heads. “What’s a Yea-Sayer?”

  “A bad ‘un.” Dark circles ringed the little girl’s eyes and her cheeks were sunken. Malnutrition bowed her limbs and stained her baby teeth. One side of her head was shaved, revealing where the leads and the lines had fed her a trial drug cocktail. The sparse downy hair on the other side didn’t cover the barcode tattooed on her gray scalp.

  The universe was full of bad ones. Most wore the skin of the Founding Five.

  Time to get to work, to take away the little girl’s pain. Nell wiped her hands on her black uniform tunic then rubbed them together and hummed the theme song to Gilligan’s Island. Her favorite TV show from childhood didn’t comfort as it once had. Static electricity sparked blue between her palms before the fermites answered her call. A thin cloud at first, then it thickened. The air around her hands sparkled and misted with the atomic-sized particles. With a flick of Nell’s fingers, the fermites shrouded the little girl like floating lace.

  Her gray skin glittered before the fermites disappeared inside her body. She giggled then clapped a hand over her mouth and glanced around.

  “It’s okay.” Nell shifted her hand to the tot’s head. “You can laugh. You’re safe here.”

  The girl flinched.

  Nell’s fingers twitched and her stomach cramped. Touch should comfort, not bring the fear of pain. Clenching her teeth, she gently set her hand on the girl’s forehead then swept aside the downy brown hair. “Do you have a name?”

  “Here.” The little girl pointed to the barcode. “Tahexa was learning me, but Odeha said no. I wouldna need it for long.”

  “That’s because they knew you’d be rescued.” Curses exploded inside Nell’s head. The doctors had turned the little girl over to Nell because of all she had suffered. Nell’s fingers bucked and her skin tingled. Double dog damn, she detected an enemy’s passive sensor. As if using a child as a human lab rat wasn’t bad enough, the Founders had inserted a spybot in her abdomen to make sure the girl served them until the end of her short life. Nell would stockpile the radioactive material then shove it where the sun never shone, up the nearest Founder’s caboose.

  The little girl blinked and cocked her head. Pink flushed her skin and her cheeks rounded. Little by little her bowed limbs straightened. Even her teeth turned white. “What is rescued?”

  “Taken someplace where no one can hurt you again.” With their work done, some of the fermites streaked toward Nell’s hands. They formed silver rivulets writhing up her arms. An ache pulsed at her back and the pads of her feet.

  “Oh. I dead?” The little girl bit her bottom lip. “You an angel to take me to my mother and father?”

  Nell gulped cold air. When her knees wobbled, she braced her hands on the gurney. Cold metal leached the warmth from her palms. Death was synonymous with peace. Glancing at the patchwork of scars on the girl’s bare skin, Nell faced the ugly truth. She would have prayed for death if she’d spent her life as a lab rat.

  Unfortunately, the Founders had a far worse fate in store for Nell, if the Syn-En lost the war.

  And they were losing the war.

  But that would change.

  Maybe it already had. The few Syn-En soldiers who hadn’t been deployed to other posts walked a little lighter. Her husband, Bei, and his team must be making mincemeat out of the Founders’ convoy. She hoped he blew up one ship just for her.

  And all the patients she’d seen today.

  Nell had stopped counting at a hundred. Her back ached and her arms trembled from bending over the wounded all day. But her part was easy—the fermites did all the healing. Hearing her call, fermites left the little girl’s limbs and gathered in a haze around Nell’s hands. “You’re not dead, sweetie. And I’m no angel.”

  Neither was she completely Human. Her skin and parts of her internal organs were made up of the same NeoDynamic armor that made up the Syn-Ens’ dermis. She even had silver patches when she became emotional. Which was… most of the time. Especially lately, when the newest batch of refugees arrived. As for fermite commander—that superpower had manifested itself just as the NeoSentient Alliance declared war on the Founders.

  Stupid move that.

  The NSA wasn’t prepared.

  And it showed in the hundreds of worlds lost to the enemy and the faces of the refugee
s as the Syn-En had retreated again, and again, and again.

  “Sweetie?” The little girl raised her hand as the last of her scars faded. Her bloated belly subsided, but fermites swirled around her belly button, visible above her cloth diaper.

  Nell blew her blond bangs out of her eyes. How do you explain sugar to someone who’s never tasted it or anything sweet? “Yes, Sweetie. Because you’re a cutie pie.”

  “OK.” The fermites repaired the little girl’s hair. Her barcode faded to gray. “I Sweetie Cutie Pie. It easier than…” She pointed to the disappearing numbers and letters.

  Nell quickly tapped the code into the medical system. “And far more appropriate, too.”

  She added the girl’s new name, Sweetie Cutie Pie and cross-referenced it with her details. If her parents were on one of the transport ships, they could find their daughter. Were they even looking? If she had a missing child, Nell would never stop until she found her. Her insides knotted. But she didn’t have a child, wasn’t even pregnant after six months of trying.

  Perhaps it was for the best.

  Now was not the time to bring a child into the world.

  Nell’s shoulders bowed. Never might work. Could she find a day on the calendar called ‘never’ and pencil it in? She shook off her depression.

  The fermites buzzed near Sweetie’s belly button where a black cube slowly emerged. Propping herself on her elbows, the little girl eyed her stomach. “What that?”

  “It’s a spybot. The most despicable thing ever invented in the known universe.” And that included that orange drink. Nell shuddered. No way would she ever drink that stuff again. The astronauts could have it. She snapped her fingers and the spybot dissolved in a spray of fireworks. The fermites twinkled out to nothingness, but she felt them skitter along her skin.

  Time for her reward. She reached under the gurney for the two chocolate shakes the first aid worker had handed as she passed. The pouches were warm, but it was chocolate. The all-natural, all-temperature treat. She handed one to Sweetie then wrapped her tongue around the straw sticking out of the other.

  Sweetie accepted the silver pouch but pointed to where the black cube had been. “What do?”

  Chocolate and sugar flooded Nell’s mouth. Closing her eyes, she fell into the next best thing to Bei’s arms. Chocolate made everything better.

  “What do?”

  Too bad the magic didn’t last. Opening her eyes, Nell released the straw and finished her swallow. “It helps the bad guys.”

  In so many awful ways.

  She hoped the Devil created a brand new corner of Hell for the spybot’s creator. Nell would buy a ticket to see the jerkface suffer. Lots of tickets. And a pitchfork. The gift shop in Hell was bound to have some when she visited.

  “Drink up.” Nell tapped the little girl’s pouch.

  “Hurt lots?”

  “No hurt, just goodness. Yum.” Nell rubbed her stomach.

  Sweetie licked the straw then wrinkled her nose.

  “Not like that. Like this.” Nell demonstrated until her pouch collapsed. “Mmmm.”

  “Mmmm.” Humming first, Sweetie mimicked Nell. Her cheeks tightened and the straw darkened. Then her hazel eyes lit up. “Mmmmm.”

  “Mmmm.” Chocolate was its own special language. Lowering her pouch, Nell winked then glanced across the room.

  A dark haired woman stood in the corner. Her green eyes locked with Nell’s.

  The hair on her nape stood straight up, and her throat tightened. In the span of a heartbeat her hands flashed the same silver as her pouch. Yet it wasn’t fear that trickled through her but curiosity and familiarity. Was this Sweetie Cutie Pie’s mother? Nell raised a hand to wave her over. The pouch filled her vision.

  “Nell Stafford!” Doc shouted behind her.

  She jumped at the sound of her name and fumbled with her pouch. She caught it and squeezed. Chocolate bubbled out the straw. She licked it up. With the way the war was going, chocolate might soon be rationed. She looked across the armada of occupied gurneys for Doc.

  A green diagnostic beam shot out of the Chief Medical Officer’s wrist, heading for her. Doc Cabo frowned and a lock of black hair flapped against his forehead. The sclera of his brown eyes darkened as he merged with the Wireless Array.

  Nell stiffened. Great. The rat fink was probably telling her husband that she was in the sick bay. All the Syn-En tattled her every movement to Bei. Life sucked with two thousand over-protective mothers constantly hovering nearby. She held up her drink. “I ate lunch.”

  Two bites before she couldn’t swallow anymore because of the pressing guilt. She could do so much more, and there was always something to do. Wounded were everywhere. She could help them.

  Doc’s beam died and his lips pursed. “How much did you eat?”

  “Enough.” She wiggled the straw to reach the drink pooled in the corners of the pouch.

  On the gurney, Sweetie sat up. The motion transmitted through the gurney despite the locked wheels.

  He stopped in front of Nell and planted his hands on his hips. “Two bites is not enough.”

  Darn it. There hadn’t been a Syn-En in the lunchroom. So who else was spying on her? She resisted the urge to squirm. She was an adult. It was her lunch hour, she could eat if she wanted to. “I was full. And they were really big bites.”

  “Your power cells are at twenty-five percent. You need to sleep for eight hours and eat, then repeat it before your next shift.” Black stubble dusted his rounded jaw, an effect he cultivated because his new bride liked it. Doc pointed toward the doors. “Out.”

  She reached behind her to clutch the gurney. “I have patients.”

  Sweetie’s warm leg brushed her fingers.

  “And I’m out of patience.” Doc’s brown eyes narrowed. “Go. Now.”

  Working on a preteen boy behind her husband, Davena Cabo dusted fermites from her cinnamon-colored hands. Ebony corkscrew curls bobbed around her oval face and her ever-present smile widened as she helped the boy down. “Come. We’ll take our patients to their rooms.” Her black eyes twinkled. “You two get to go to school and learn all sorts of amazing things.”

  Her slender hand waved away her cloud of fermites before she helped the preteen down from the metal bed.

  Flesh padded the boy and a healthy color flooded his cheeks. Although he slid off the gurney, he held tight to the edges as if not expecting his legs to hold him. They hadn’t when he’d been brought in. “Does school hurt?”

  Nell raked a hand through her hair and tugged the tie from her ponytail. The edges brushed her shoulders just as they had six months ago. It didn’t grow anymore. A side effect of the fermites infusing her blood.

  Davena blinked. “I don’t think school hurts. Nell?”

  “Not usually. But peer pressure can be a pain.” Turning back to her patient, Nell mentally cast aside her thoughts and slid her hands under Sweetie’s arms.

  The little girl hung limply in Nell’s grip.

  Anger surged through her veins. Was Sweetie so used to being posed and moved around like a rag doll that she didn’t even try to help herself? The Founders had a lot to answer for. Once the Syn-En and the NeoSentient Alliance started to win this war, she’d suggest holding the bad guys accountable. War Crimes at Erwar. She pictured the headlines and the Bug-ugly Scraptors and the evil elves squirming on the stand.

  “Is something wrong?” Davena cocked her head to the left.

  “No.” Nell focused on the present and carefully lowered Sweetie.

  Her bare toes curled on the metal deck and her diaper hung low on her thin hips. Sweetie bent over and raised one leg then the other. “Doesn’t hurt.”

  The boy held out his hand to her. She staggered over to him and thudded against his side. He swayed a bit then set his hand on her back and laughed. “That used to knock me over. Remember?”

  Nodding, Sweetie tucked her thumb inside her mouth. “I like this experiment.”

  Nell’s mouth opened. Experiment, her
aunt’s hairy tush! What she did wasn’t in anyway related to the Founders’ evilness. How could anyone even think such a thing?

  Davena rose on tiptoes and kissed her husband’s cheek.

  Doc glanced around the room. A few of the Syn-En medics smiled. He grinned and skimmed his knuckle down her forearm before holding her hand. Energy caused the synthetic hair on his arms to stand up straight. “Use your fermites and tie her to the bed to get her to rest. Bei will have my implants if anything happens to her.”

  “I’m rather fond of your…implants.” Davena squeezed his hand before releasing him. “I’ll be back soon.”

  Doc snorted and turned away from his wife. “Back to work, people. There’s nothing to see here.”

  Medic Queens snorted. “That’s because all the interesting bits are in the WA.”

  Davena ducked her head, using the curtain of curls to shield her blush.

  Nell tucked her hand through her friend’s arm and dragged her toward the double doors. “You’ll get used to it. In about a hundred years.”

  “Thanks. It’s not that I’m ashamed of what we do…”

  Nell could almost feel sorry for those twenty-first century celebrities. Nah, they volunteered to be recorded. “Yeah, but it’s not like you want that video out there for every Tom, Dick, and Harry to watch.”

  “I don’t think I’ve met those Syn-En.”

  Right. That was an Earth saying, and Davena’s people had been removed from the planet only God knew when and had been transplanted on Surlat. She was learning. Everyone was. Nell raised her free hand. Fermites sparkled on her skin like body glitter but a strip of silver remained. She peeked in the corner.

  Drat, the woman had left. Guess she wasn’t Sweetie’s mother. Nell yawned.

  “Nell?” Davena lowered her voice to a whisper. The double doors opened.

  Sweetie and the boy walked through and turned left.

  “The other way.” Nell directed them. When they glanced back at her, she pointed to the right. “That way.”

  Heads bent together, they swung about and headed toward the school rooms.

 

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