Sentenced to War
Page 9
As he looked at it, he realized something was missing.
“Wait a minute. What about my battle buddy? I keep hearing about it, but I don’t see it here.”
“Your battle buddy? Oh, you mean the CCR-32 Didactic Interface. I explained that. Item Number Twelve.”
The words battle and buddy were not in the official name, and tech didn’t really tell him what it was.
“And this thing, what does it do for me?”
“Well, it’s a modular reactive QA and data repository with recast capability.”
“A what?”
The man frowned, then said, “Think of it as an AI that is implanted inside your skull.”
“WHAT?”
This was getting into Genesian or Deimer territory, and that had to be illegal, even now.
“An AI, sort of. You’ll be going places where there isn’t an undernet. The battle buddy, as you Marines call it, will have petabytes of data on hand for you.”
“That’s just a library, then, of sorts,” Rev said, a little relieved.
“More than that. Your battle buddy will be able to foresee what you need in a given situation and provide it without being asked. And as I said, it’s a reactive QA. You’ll be able to hold internal discussions with it. For your DC designator, research has shown that capability will be particularly important.”
That caught Rev’s attention. He still didn’t know what his designator was going to be. He knew it would be Direct Combat, but that could be in any one of eight broad fields. He hoped it would be in either the Zero-Five field, armor, or the Zero-Four, mech.
“You don’t know? You’re going to be a Zero-Two. Zero-Two-Three, to be exact.”
Rev’s eyes grew big. Zero-Twos were Reconnaissance, the Marines who went out alone or in small teams, without the armor that protected the rest of them.
And Zero-Two-Three? Rev waited a second as the knowledge surfaced from his upload.
Rev was going to be a Raider!
Still in shock, Rev was taken to the operating room. A Raider? He didn’t have the mortality rate of Raiders in his upload . . . probably something that the brass did on purpose. But it couldn’t be good. They were the DA, the Direct Action component of Marine Recon, and they went out, almost naked, for all practical purposes, behind enemy lines. Where recon squads tried to avoid the enemy, Raider teams made contact as their mission.
Alone in the room, lying on the operating table, an IV dripping saline into his arm, he waited, his thoughts bouncing back and forth in his skull like a bird trying to escape a cage. He was sure he’d have gotten Armor or Mech, which together made up over seventy-five percent of DC. He’d never considered Recon, and he certainly would not have selected it given the choice.
When the door into the room finally opened, his nerves were so frayed that he yelped. Actually yelped.
Five people walked in, three civilians in medwhites, a Marine in medwhites, given the Lieutenant Colonel’s silver leaves attached to the surgical cap on his head, then one more person, a woman with an insignia Rev didn’t recognize on her cap.
“Reverent Pelletier, I’m Doctor Annalyn, and I’ll be heading Team One of your transformation.”
“Team One?”
“Yes, Team One. The process will be completed in four phases and will take approximately twenty hours, barring unforeseen complications. My team won’t be doing the entire process. There will be two more teams involved. We’ll get started in a few minutes, so do you have any questions for me?”
“No, ma’am.”
“Very well. Colonel?” she said.
“Recruit Pelletier, I am Lieutenant Colonel Randalf. I’m your advocate for the process. And this is Red-Master Kumar of the Frisian Host, the Congress of Humanity observer.”
“Observer?”
The Host was the military arm of the Frisian Mantle, the traditional strategic opposing power and sometimes enemy of the Union. That was before the Centaur invasion, of course, but even if they were now allies to fight a common enemy, there was still tension and more than a little distrust between the two nations. Rev never imagined he’d meet a Host, much less have a Host officer here in the operating room with him.
“Yes, observer,” the red-master said in an easy-going voice. “Just making sure you only get the approved mods. Can’t have a bunch of Union super-soldiers running around after we defeat the Centaurs, right?”
She sounded like she was joking, but Rev thought what she said might be pretty close to the truth.
“Well, let’s get this show on the road. He’s been prepped?”
“Yes. Confirmed,” one of the team answered.
“Lettie, are the adenoviruses ready?” Doctor Kumar turned to ask one of the others.
“Yes, sir,” the woman said, holding up a small cylinder.
“Then administer them, please.”
The woman pulled out a small mask from the end of the cylinder and moved to Rev’s head.
“Is that going to put me to sleep?”
“No,” the woman said. “These are your organic mods. I need you to breathe deeply when I put the mask over your face.”
She lowered the mask, covering his mouth and nose, and said, “Breathe.”
Instinctively, Rev held his breath. There was extinct rhino DNA inside of that.
Don’t be a wimp.
With a mental sigh, he took a deep breath, then another.
“We’ve got an eighty-four-point-three infusion rate,” the woman said.
“Good, good, then no reason to delay. Let’s put him under. Doctor Uribe?”
“Wait, that’s it? For the DNA stuff?” Rev asked.
He didn’t feel any different, and the process, for all his nervousness, was rather anticlimactic.
“Yes. That’s the easy part.”
“But I didn’t feel anything?”
“You wouldn’t. It will take time for the modified DNA and RNA to make any difference in your body. But they’re in there, believe you me. You should be noticing some differences in a couple of weeks. With some, you’ll never notice a difference. So, unless you have something else?”
“No, sir,” Rev said.
“In that case, Doctor Uribe?”
The doctor reached out to the IV line and said, “Mr. Pelletier, I want you to start counting down from one hundred.”
This time, Rev only reached ninety-nine.
11
“You feel any stronger?” Yancey asked the others. “I tried to do some pushups this morning, but I couldn’t even do thirty of them.”
“You did just have surgery, dipwad,” Orpheus said, throwing a crushed Sunny Orange cup at him.
“Really, Yance, you need to stop that. The docs told us to take it easy for the week,” Bundy said. He swept an arm around the white-painted room, the hum of the filter unit a constant reminder that they were still in a hospital, albeit one that looked like a resort.
“I know, but just a few push-ups. What could it hurt?”
“It could make you reject your augments, that’s what.”
Yancey flipped his hand at him as if brushing away a fly.
Rev didn’t know if all this was necessary. He was a little sore, especially around his joints, and the spider web—the netting under most of his skin—itched, but he didn’t feel much different. It wouldn’t do much good to argue, so why waste the energy? Besides, it was a week of lounging around, with their only duties being the twice daily scans and chowing down on the admittedly good food they were being served.
Rev rubbed the medical bracelet on his wrist. It was monitoring his condition around the clock, so he wasn’t sure why they needed the full scans.
Bundy leaned forward and quietly asked, “You remember Wight?”
Rev hadn’t really spoken to the big recruit. He was a volunteer, and unlike Bundy, he was part of the group that didn’t seem to appreciate the conscripts.
“You see him here?”
Rev looked around the room. Most of the class wer
e there, playing cards, watching the holo or just shooting the shit in groups. Other than their rooms, this was the only place they were allowed to access for the next five days.
“He was on the bus with us,” Tomiko said.
“I don’t mean then. I mean now. Or in the last two days since we got augmented.”
Rev had to think back, but he couldn’t remember seeing the recruit. Not that he was looking.
“I talked to Gorsovik, his buddy. They came in together. Instead of joining us here, Wight got taken to another ward after his procedure.”
“So?” Yancey asked.
“And today, well, he didn’t make it.”
“What? So, he’s going to be a Ninety-Nine now?” Rev asked.
“No. He didn’t make it. As in, he’s dead.”
Rev spun around to look at Bundy in shock. Dead?
“H . . . how?” he asked.
Bundy shrugged, then said, “Rejection, I’d imagine.”
“What do you mean, rejection?” Krissy asked, beating Rev to the punch.
“Rejection. His body rejected his augments.”
“I didn’t know that was possible.” Rev said.
“Come on, Rev. Didn’t you have to sign a release?” Tomiko asked.
“Well, yeah.”
“It told you about the possibility of rejection. Two percent, it said.”
Rev thought back. The tech had said something about complications, but since he had no choice in the matter, he hadn’t pursued that rather pertinent fact. Now he wished he had.
“I . . . I didn’t really read it,” he admitted.
Tomiko just rolled her eyes. Again. She was good at it. That, and fighting.
They were quiet for a moment, then Yancey shrugged and said, “I guess we all made it, so, sorry for him, but we’re in the clear.
“That doesn’t answer my question, though. Do any of you feel stronger? Do you, Bundy?”
“No, and I won’t.”
“What do you mean? No offense, but you could use a little more muscle, grandpa.”
“And I’m a zero-nine, armor. What do I need more strength for?”
“Wait, you didn’t get a strength upgrade?” Rev asked.
“No. Like I said, I don’t need it. Ten and I don’t need it in armor. Udu and Fyr don’t need it in mech,” Bundy said.
This was news to Rev. He’d assumed they’d all gone through most of the same modifications like greater strength.
“Well, then, what did you get?”
“Neurotransmitter booster, so we can react quicker—”
“I got that, too,” Rev said. “Quicker reflexes.”
“I think there’s overlap. But I also think that’s different. You got quicker reflexes, which are part of the reflexive arc. The signals just go to the spinal cord and back. You don’t have to think about it. For us,” he said, pointing to Ten, “we need to be able to see a need, then engage a target. Now, we’ll be able to take in data, process it, and react quicker. Same for the mech guys.”
“How do you know all of this?” Rev asked.
Bundy looked surprised at the question, but he said, “I asked Thump.”
“Who’s Thump?”
“My battle buddy, of course.”
Now it was Rev’s turn to be surprised. His AI had been implanted as well, but after the initial test upon waking up from the procedure, he’d cut it off. There’d be more time when he’d have to use it when they got out of their medical isolation and back to training. He never imagined that the Bundy had voluntarily started to access it, much less name it.
“Have all of you used your AIs already?” he asked the others.
He refused to call it a battle buddy. It wasn’t a buddy.
All except for Ten nodded.
Rev wanted to comment, but as he and Ten were evidently outside the norm, he held his tongue.
“OK, so you got this fast-nerve augment. What else?” Yancey asked.
“Integrated targeting and fire control, tactile terrain feedback.”
“Advanced medi-nanos,” Ten added.
“I think we all got those,” Tomiko said. “And ours are optimized for burns.”
There was a moment of silence. Rev didn’t know exactly what his medi-nanos would do, but the fact that the three armor recruits had something specifically optimized for burns was disquieting.
“But we all got the spider webs, right?” Yancey asked, looking around at the others.
“I got it, and mine itches like crazy. I don’t care what the docs say,” Rev said to the laughter of others.
“I’ll help you scratch those places you can’t reach,” Krissy said with a comical leer.
There were a couple of salty comments, and Ten said, “No bang-bang, you two. Can’t take a chance of infection while we’re in medical jail.”
Rev knew she was yanking his chain, but still, he could feel his face flush. Krissy was incorrigible, and sitting close by, and her gaze wasn’t entirely humorous.But he liked it.
“So, you treadheads don’t get superman strength. Anyone else?” Rev asked.
“I don’t,” Fyr said.
Fyr, like Udu, hadn’t been part of the original group, but after his duet with Tomiko, he was hanging out with them more often. He was a quiet, earnest man in his late twenties who gave up a journeyman position in the fabrication guild to volunteer.
“Which makes sense,” Bundy said. “We don’t need extra strength, and neither do the mechs.”
“I’ve got rhino DNA,” Tomiko offered.
“Me, too,” Krissy chimed in. “And you know what they say about rhino horns.” She tried to leer at Rev again, but couldn’t hold it and broke out laughing joined immediately by Tomiko.
Rev shook his head. “Lewd, unprofessional, and possibly criminal.”
“Guilty,” Tomiko said, snorting.
“Private Regis, report to Exam One,” the voice came over the intercom.
“Time to go get prodded,” Krissy said, standing up. “They need to make sure I’m not going all mutant on them.”
“Don’t bend over in there,” Yancey called out to her as she walked to the door, and he got an upraised middle finger in return.
Something was bothering Rev about all of this talk.
“Maybe you don’t need max strength in a tank, but it can’t hurt, right? And if your tank goes down and you have to leave it, wouldn’t it be better to have it?”
Bundy grimaced and looked at Fyr, then Tomiko, then Cricket. None of the three were going to answer, so he cleared his throat.
“The less we get done to us, the better in the long run.”
“What do you mean?”
“The rot,” Udu said.
Rev frowned. The only thing he knew that was called the rot was the cancer-like disease that ravaged the Eucharans during the Corolla Wars. But he couldn’t mean that, right? The Eucharans were sad victims of their attempt to become gods.
“What are you saying?” Yancey asked, his good mood gone.
“The rot. When we try and control nature, it sometimes fights back. The more we change, the higher our chance of contracting it,” Bundy explained.
Rev went numb. What had he gotten into?
“So, what you are saying is all of us are going to get the rot?” he asked, not believing what he was hearing.
“No, not necessarily. But they want to limit the changes to what we actually need for our mission. And the mechanicals, like your spider web, that won’t do anything. But the organics, even the biosynths, they’re what can be dangerous. And you Zero-Twos and Threes, and the Zero-Sevens—you get the most augments. That’s why they gave me armor. I’m sixty-seven, and my cells aren’t as healthy as yours. I’ve got a much higher chance of getting the rot,” Bundy said.
“And you’re a volunteer, not a convict,” Udu said.
“I don’t think that’s what it is,” Bundy said, sounding as if he might be trying to convince himself.
“And they screw us convic
ts over?” Rev asked, incredulous.
Only it wasn’t just that, he suddenly realized. It was cell health and stability. His initial interviewer had mentioned his cellular stability and lack of genetic drift. She probably had this in mind from the beginning, he knew, and she tried to steer him to DC. And he’d let himself be herded, thinking she was doing him a favor.
Tomiko moved closer and put an arm around Rev’s shoulders. “It was in the release.”
“I didn’t read the damned thing,” Rev said, voice bleak.
There was an awkward silence, then Yancey burped and said, “What the hell do we care about the rot? The Centaurs are going to kill us long before that.”
And something broke inside of Rev. His anger fled, and he started laughing.
“Hell, we won’t last a month, right? Who cares about the rot?”
One-by-one, everyone joined in.
Yancey got up and grabbed Rev around the neck, then gave him a sloppy kiss on the forehead. “So, who’s going first? You or me, buddy?”
“Recruits, refrain from physical contact while in the rec room,” one of their minders announced over the intercom.
And that started a new round of laughing.
Yancey gave the speaker the finger, then sat in Tomiko’s lap. “How about this, leech?”
“Did you just call her a leech?” Tomiko asked between laughs as she pushed him off. “She might be Navy.”
“Navy? Might as well be a leech.”
“But one who outranks your recruit ass!” Cricket said.
It took a couple of minutes before they managed to get back to a semblance of normalcy. Finally, they just sat in silence. Their relative mood was much, much better. Rev knew he had to come to terms with what had been done to him, but Yancey had it right. With a seventy-eight percent mortality rate, rot would be the least of the worries for most of them.
Rev slowly looked at each of his fellow DC recruits—no friends. Three years from now, most of them would be dead. It was a sobering thought.
“How many days until our discharges?” he asked, the germ of an idea forming.
“One thousand fifty-three days and a wake-up,” Cricket said. “Why?”