“We didn’t. It’s a routine startup drill.”
“Heh. Getting routine for us, huh?” Hoffman said.
“Yeah. Can’t you see yourself at a party back on Earth? When some girl asks you what you do for the force, you can say, ‘I start AI cores … yeah, really … mobile AI cores with big guns. Oh, don’t worry, we’re real careful.’”
Hoffman laughed. “I still wonder if we’re gonna regret this.”
“I wonder if Meridian is really off,” Bren said. “Let’s start cleaning up.”
***
“Our next target is Tanelorn, tentatively scheduled for next month around the eighteenth. We have support elements moving into orbit now,” Jameson said.
Bren and Hoffman exchanged relieved glances. If Jameson had started the meeting in such a mundane way, then Jackson hadn’t told anyone about their misuse of one of the most deadly tools created by humanity.
“And the ASSAIL replacements?” asked Bren.
“You’ll have twelve this time. But if these are trashed, then we’ll have to either push the schedule back, or go in with fewer units. Well, I suppose we might be able to get some run-of-the-mill infantry stuff,” said Jameson.
Bren shook his head. “Anything without an AI core isn’t smart enough for a space station incursion. They pretty much shoot at anything that moves. Only good for holding a line in some field that’s been cleared of civilians.”
“We could put a couple at the breach point. If the ASSAILs get defeated, we might need them to keep from being overrun,” Jackson said.
“I agree, it can’t hurt to take some more precautions,” Henley said.
“I’d like to start the ASSAIL cores earlier for the next incursion. We should also give them some information about Red, including some best-guess schematics my team has come up with,” Bren said. “It could make the difference if we encounter more surprises.”
Jameson looked at Bren.
“Who is in favor of giving the cores another half hour of preparation?” asked Jameson.
Bren, Henley, and Jackson raised their hands. Devin hesitated and then raised her hand. Bren wondered if she’d vote that way if they weren’t intimate. She was probably asking herself the same question.
Vendrati looked on in undisguised horror.
“That would be an error,” she said. “The schematics are much more reasonable. Historically, the age of a core has been the most important indicator of the level of danger it poses to us.”
“I’ll consider the request,” Jameson said. “I’ll see what other hardware we can get, it may affect my decision.”
“My team has some theories about the defeat of the ASSAIL armor that I’d like to run by our folks Earthside,” Bren said.
“Of course,” Vendrati said coldly.
“I think we should also cut Vigilant communications with Earthside for the course of the next incursion,” Jackson said. “If we’re going to be using mature cores, we need to increase our network security measures.”
Jameson nodded. “Very well.”
Bren mulled over Jackson’s suggestions. The part that bothered him was the way they had gone into Thermopylae all full of fire and confidence. Now they were all worried about being routed by experimental robots. He didn’t like this turning of the tables, but he reminded himself it was all part of preparing for the worst-case scenario.
That was something they had been doing more of these days.
Five
Chris tramped along through the station accompanied by his gear and his depression. He couldn’t shake either burden.
Just take a pill, you’ll work through this, he told himself. He believed it intellectually, but his emotions weren’t aligned for the sacrifice. He’d had uncomfortable assignments before, but he’d always managed to find critical allies with the power to either get the resources he needed or reassign him. How could he run that game when he couldn’t tell who was who in these damn suits? Everyone went by his or her last name, and he hadn’t put the company roster into his link cache. People spoke through their links per the protocol in his rules book.
He had been trying to operate based on the ranking colors of the gear everyone wore, until he discovered the colors didn’t denote company rank, at least not in the Earthside sense of it. So what would he have gained for his machinations when he got back?
Chris felt an old specter laughing at him in the vaults of his awareness. His father had worked for a lifetime without a significant promotion. Although a competent company man, his father hadn’t participated in the politics. Chris struggled daily to avoid that trap. He’d take any angle he could. Now he felt himself losing the traction he had won in the past.
Armored in his gear, he left his quarters to explore the premises. He stared at the artificial faces of the others who walked by him in the corridors. He hadn’t realized before how much he relied on being able to see people’s faces. He couldn’t tell if he was pleasing someone as a conversation moved along.
As he walked, he thought about the offsite.
What is the point of it all? I haven’t been given any explicit assignments. There are simply the rules. I have to participate in the challenges. Other than that, what is everyone doing here?
The codes of behavior didn’t make sense from any conventional perspective. The people here wandered aimlessly between mass sessions in the virtual environment where they participated in strange games of skill. Chris studied the first couple of games he’d been assigned assiduously, concentrating on performing his best, but his results had been mediocre. He engineered people, not artificial rule sets imagined by misled gaming enthusiasts.
It has to be a test. Something to sift through the employees, find the ones with real … something. The people who crack it will be picked out for special attention.
If it was a test, it had to have been masterminded by Alec Vineaux. Chris had spent hours back on Earth analyzing the leader of VG. The man loved adventure and challenges. So maybe Alec had contrived the offsite as a way to find other souls like him to run VG. Chris had to fit himself into that mold.
Chris vowed to demonstrate that he had brains and initiative. He’d figure out the secret puzzle and show Vineaux he had special talent. An action man, a conqueror. That was what Vineaux had to be looking for when he devised these crazy rules. Surely, he wanted people who wouldn’t just accept things as they were. He wanted people who would twist the situation around to their own liking.
What Chris wasn’t sure about were the challenges. Did Vineaux want someone with brains as well as bravery? Or were the challenges meant to trap people who only thought within the confines of the rules? They could be a grand distraction. Maybe the challenges were only to keep people busy so they wouldn’t find their way around the rules.
Figuring out what the real assignment is will be more than half the work.
He came to a door his link described as a dining area. The marker confused him since the rules dictated that participants ate in their quarters. So why the dining room? It didn’t fit. And that meant Chris had to investigate. It could be a clue.
Chris stepped through. The room beyond held stacks of white boxes and clear plastic water bottles. Empty tables extended across the chamber, interspersed among nests of plants and airscrub grass. The mundanity of the chamber’s floor level decor clashed with the cold monochrome beauty of the vaulted ceiling. Giant triangular windows fitted together in elegant pyramidal joists offered a view of the inner ring of Synchronicity. The piecemeal view of the sunlight glinting on the off-white surface of the station exterior made it look like a gargantuan ivory carving viewed through a bleached kaleidoscope.
He zigzagged through the area staring at the sterile white on white. Chris wondered what they did with all the dust they filtered out of the air at the station. None of it had been left here.
Chris spotted a person in gear sitting at one of the tables at the far side of the room. He thought of a fat black bug waiting to be served food in a cla
ssy restaurant. The suit had blue accents like his. That made the bug an entry-level participant like himself.
“Hi,” Chris said through his link. “What’s going on in here?”
The suit shifted slightly. Chris interpreted it as a shrug from the person inside.
“Catching up on some work. The quarters are nice, but I thought I’d find someplace else, you know, change of scenery.”
A change of scenery usually meant setting up a new VR scenario. But at Synchronicity, it meant going for a walk, seeking out somewhere that matched the reputation of the station as a luxury playhouse.
“Sorry, I’ll leave you to it,” Chris said. He started to walk out, but then he turned back toward the other blue. “My link says this is a dining room. But we all eat in our quarters.”
“Well, I think the link map hasn’t been updated, is all,” the blue said.
“Ah, so it used to be a dining room, before the … ah … before the exercise?”
“Exercise? Oh, yeah. Yeah, it was before the exercise.”
Chris frowned under his mask. The person sounded disingenuous. Was he acting this way because he knew nothing, or because he knew more than Chris did?
Another blue came into the room. The mask moved to one side and then the other, taking in the stacks of boxes. Then he spotted the ceiling and staggered a couple of steps while staring upward. He ran into a table, which brought his head back down. The newcomer spotted the other two and stomped over to join them.
“Hrm. Looks like it’s been awhile since this was a dining room,” he said.
Chris nodded. “Seems so. Hey, is Captain playing someone today?”
“Oh yeah. Doesn’t he always?”
“Yes. Why is he called Captain, anyway?”
“I don’t know,” said the first blue.
“Me neither. I wish it would leave,” said the other.
“So, he won again last night?” asked Chris.
“Of course he did. When doesn’t he?” the first blue said.
At last. Something I can get some traction on.
Chris leaned forward and lowered his tone, even though he spoke over the link as required by station rules.
“I say we take Captain down a notch. If we can’t do it alone, maybe we could do it together.”
“What do you mean?”
Chris smiled under his mask. He could tell by the urgency of the response that he had the hook in.
“I was reading about challenge three. You think Captain’s going to win, right? Even though we’re all playing?”
“Well, yeah, he’s better at it than we are. You know, faster than humans, I mean.”
Chris noted the blue had said “faster,” not “smarter.” Chris himself wasn’t sure which it was, or if there was a difference when it came to brainpower. But the way the blue said it meant he wasn’t prepared to accept being dumber than Captain is, or if he did, he resented it.
Resentment and jealousy. Chris could work with that.
“I noticed something. The rules state that we’re all enemies. It isn’t a team game. But we could slant it and play cooperatively. All of us against Captain. All we have to do is pull a few shots against one another. We could also agree on quadrants, make sure we don’t run into each other too soon.”
“Are you crazy?”
“What are you afraid of? You gonna lose out on your chance at a yellow rating?” Chris laced his voice with just enough sarcasm to make the comment count without offending his potential ally.
“The three of us couldn’t make that big of an impact on the game,” the first blue said. Chris knew he had him.
“Spread the word,” he said. “If we all keep taking right turns, maybe we’ll patrol in circles and less of us will run into one another. Then Captain will have to hunt more of us down individually.”
“Okay, I will.”
The other one nodded.
“Okay then. Well, I’ll see you around.”
Chris took a deep breath and walked out in a different direction. His heart charged away and he sweated inside the suit. How was that for making bold moves? Was he toying with expulsion from Synchronicity or worse? Chris shook his head. Vineaux liked risk takers. The leaders would be impressed by such a move—they’d have to notice it. They had to be watching.
Chris followed the curve of the base. He still felt locked on his mission to find the secret behind Synchronicity. He found a blank area in the directory that had been marked off limits and decided to go check it out in person.
He discovered a security checkpoint at the border of the protected zone. A pair of control turrets protruded from the wall on either side. Chris knew from seeing such turrets in action on Earth that they could apply one or two different non-lethal attacks to repel or trap unauthorized people. A green suit tromped out past the turrets as Chris arrived. Chris waited for the person to walk by in the corridor.
“What’s in there?” Chris asked.
“Where?”
Chris held up the ponderous arm of his suit, indicating the checkpoint. “The restricted area.”
The person turned and scrutinized the door.
“I … I don’t know.”
“Not allowed to talk about it?”
“I don’t remember,” the person said.
“You could just say you’re not allowed to talk about it,” Chris said bitterly. “I saw you walk out of it, so of course you know.”
“I did? I mean, I wasn’t paying attention,” the person said. He glanced back at the checkpoint. “Look, I have to go now.”
Chris watched the green trudge away. What was that about? The person had sounded sincerely confused. He walked up to the checkpoint.
“Please turn back. This is a restricted area,” a voice informed him via his link.
Chris looked at the turrets. Would they stun or glue him if he walked past? He felt too much doubt to walk boldly past them. The subversion he’d started felt safer than a direct, open violation of the rules at a checkpoint.
From up ahead, two yellows appeared to be walking in line. They didn’t pay any attention to Chris as they marched toward the checkpoint.
I’m just a lowly blue to them, he thought as they tramped past him.
An impulse seized Chris and turned him around. He fell into place behind the two yellows. The two strode up to the checkpoint and the leader paused, most likely giving some kind of authorization with his link. Then they resumed, Chris in tow.
“Is the blue in your party?” said the turret voice through Chris’s link.
Shit.
The yellows turned around. They stared at him with their flat eye-plated helmets for what seemed like eternity. Then the leader shrugged.
“Yes. He’s with us.”
Chris couldn’t believe it. It seemed that maybe the second yellow didn’t believe it either, because he turned to catch a glance at the leader. Then both yellows turned around and resumed their course. Chris followed. His heartbeat drummed in his chest. He’d taken a risk and it had paid off! Chris felt the thrill of progress on a long-intractable problem.
They entered a lab densely packed with equipment. His link received a list of services from the machines. Many of the services were described in highly technical jargon that he didn’t recognize. He couldn’t process it all at once. The yellows didn’t waver, keeping on their course. They reached the far door and left the lab without looking back.
It struck Chris that they may have purposefully avoided looking back at him. Or were they just too bored with this place to look around?
Chris stopped and downloaded some test results. Testing of what, he had no idea. He drowned in unfamiliar terminology. And he didn’t care too much; after all, they were bound to be doing a bunch of experiments out here away from the UNSF. Who knows what kind of stuff VG had dreamed up? Why did that yellow let me in here? Maybe it’s part of the game.
He spotted another door in the corner. He almost walked straight through it, but a warning came through his
link.
“Warning. Now entering maintenance dock. All personnel working in the dock should don vacuum suits.”
Chris saw red labels displayed on the wall around the door, and he knew this would be only one of half a dozen safety procedures. The computer would never open a dock to space with an unprotected human inside it. He waived the safety check and manually actuated the door. He saw a wide empty floor beyond and stepped through into the dock.
“Damn.”
The open vault shocked Chris. At least fifty meters of open air sprawled in each direction, more room than he’d seen since leaving Earth. Chris’s eyes immediately found a gray shape the size of a small house dominating the center. It reminded him of the engine of a bullet train. The sleek form had perhaps a dozen breaks dotted across its top surface. Banks of bright lights on long swivel arms glared down on several spots of the device.
Some kind of secret project, Chris thought. Suddenly, he doubted his theory about a challenge. Would he get in big trouble for seeing this? Chris turned his head in every direction, trying to get a full view of the bay from within his helmet. He felt like someone must be there who would discover him, but he didn’t see anyone.
He searched for camera bubbles on the walls and ceiling but didn’t spot any. If they existed, they had been miniaturized or camouflaged. He thought that sometimes they wanted you to see the cameras and sometimes they didn’t. But he knew his link would log his movements throughout the station. Anyone who wanted to check up on him could find out he’d been here. His presence might have already flagged a security robot.
Chris overcame the irrational urge to break away and run from the room. He stepped up to the smooth construct with tentative footsteps.
What the hell is it? It could be anything. A deep space fighter craft? The outside has to be a hull. This thing operates in the vacuum of space. Am I overestimating this? It could be a simple exploration drone. But aren’t those much smaller unless they are destined for the deepest reaches of the solar system?
Chris walked back toward the door and paused to access the services through his link again. He downloaded several files he found here and there, trying to hoard information for later. His link cache could hold a huge amount of information, but he concentrated on finding summaries and results rather than grabbing loads of data that wouldn’t mean anything to him.
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