Extinction: The Will of the Protectors

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Extinction: The Will of the Protectors Page 37

by Jay Korza


  Jack’s features seemed to soften just a little bit. “Look, Seth, I know that you’ll be an actual employee in just a couple of weeks—I’m the guy who recommended you—but you’re not one now. And even when you are employed and you have signed all of the non-disclosure agreements, you still won’t have the secret clearance needed to deal with this situation.”

  “I wouldn’t tell anyone that you let me help out. I just thought maybe you’d like to know how the fighter went down.” Seth was pushing now and he knew it.

  Jack sighed, and then touched a button on the conference room table. The button sent a command to the room’s control center and caused the doors to lock and the windows to become opaque so no one could see in. The room also initiated the counter-electronics measures that would keep anyone from spying on the room’s occupants with any of the known intrusion methods that were out there.

  “If you speak even a word of this to anyone, your career will end before it begins. And no one else in the Coalition will ever hire you again.” Jack waved his hand to indicate the seat in front of Seth.

  “Understood, sir.”

  “We already know how the fighter went down. We knew within the first hour of receiving the flight data. What we’re doing now is trying to figure out how to make sure no one else knows how it went down.” Jack rubbed the bridge of his nose, obviously exhausted.

  “I don’t understand. Why are we trying to cover this up? Two soldiers died in the crash. Don’t they deserve the truth?” Seth was starting to wonder about the company he was soon to be employed by.

  “Look, I don’t like it either but sometimes we have to look at the greater good. Those brave men are dead and nothing we do will change that. It doesn’t matter if we say the crash was our fault or theirs; their families will still get their death benefits and they will still be buried as heroes.” Jack sat back in his chair and waited for a response.

  Seth was even more puzzled now. “Why would we say it was our fault?”

  “Exactly.” Jack leaned forward again. “If we say it was our fault, then we may lose the contract on the fighter project. Best-case scenario is our fighters all get grounded for months or even longer while we do millions and millions of dollars’ worth of testing to show that this accident was an isolated incident. Which is exactly what it was. If we say it was operator error, then none of that happens.

  “Trust me, Seth, if I thought our fighters weren’t safe, I’d recall them myself even if it meant my career to do it. Do you understand now?”

  “No. I don’t.”

  Jack was back to his exhausted look. “What part of it? Saving the company or saving our jobs?”

  “I don’t understand why we would say it was our fault or theirs when it was neither.” Seth was truly lost and he could tell Jack was also.

  “Well, someone or something has to be blamed.” Jack thought maybe he was too tired to explain it well enough to Seth.

  “Right.” Seth was wondering whether Jack was so far gone that he was a little delirious right now. “But, how about we blame the person or persons who murdered the pilot and gunner”?

  “Okay, now I’m truly lost, Seth. Please tell me what the hell you’re talking about.”

  “Look.” Seth reached for a datapad and was surprised when Jack didn’t stop him. Seth took a moment to find and pull up the information he was looking for. “Right here. It wasn’t an accident or user error. Someone added a line of code here. It changes the plasma intake tolerance levels. Not by much, but it does.”

  Jack looked at the code and wasn’t sure but thought maybe Seth was correct. “Okay. Maybe there is altered code but that doesn’t prove anything. You know that these pilots and crew chiefs have altered our specs in the past because they think they know better than us. This tolerance change wouldn’t cause the failure we’re looking at.”

  “No. It wouldn’t”, Seth admitted. “But, couple that with this other line of code here, along with a slight physical alteration to the intake valve here...” Seth pulled up some detailed photos and scans of the wreckage.

  “This isn’t looking good.” Jack was putting the pieces together now.

  “This still isn’t the complete picture. I’m guessing there are several other line changes and maybe even some other physical alterations. I’d need access to everything we have to put together a proper synopsis and theory.” Seth looked Jack in the eye. “But I’m sure these guys were murdered. This was not an accident, theirs or ours.”

  “But why?” came the rhetorical question.

  “Angry girlfriend or wife. Crew chief hated the pilot or gunner. Military or corporate espionage. Who knows? But we might be able to find out.” Seth started looking through more data as Jack didn’t seem to care now.

  “If anything, I’d say corporate espionage. How many spouses have the ability to do this to a fighter jet?” Jack picked up his phone to make a call. “Keep working on this. From now on it’s just you and me. I’m sending everyone else home. I want to keep this close to the vest for now.”

  Seth started making a work area for himself at the conference table while Jack notified the rest of the team that they weren’t needed anymore tonight. Seth was actually a little impressed with the story that Jack concocted to make it seem less odd that the most important project of the decade suddenly became not important at all.

  By morning, Seth had all of the pieces to the puzzle and put them together to show the sabotage the fighter had been subjected to. The only pieces missing were who and why. The how and when were perfectly clear. Jack sent Seth home and said that he would call later when he had more information. For now, Jack was taking this straight to the top, on his own.

  Seth knew he couldn’t take another day in his own lab being this tired again. He sent out a message to his team and gave them the day off, explaining that he needed to take the project in a new direction but he was too tired from working on it all night. Without Seth in the lab with his new equations and ideas, there was no reason for anyone else to show up.

  Seth fell on to his bed and was immediately unconscious. He woke several hours later, a bit refreshed but still tired from two days of very little sleep. He had ten messages from his girlfriend, starting off friendly and then progressing through worried and ending up at angry. Where was he? Why hadn’t he called her? Was there someone else?

  Seth tried to call her first but she didn’t answer. Not knowing whether she was busy or just mad, he left her a message, trying to be as nice and penitent as possible. He then showered and checked his email for messages from Jack. Nothing.

  Seth ended up eating dinner alone and watching some old movies from the comfort of his couch and boxer shorts. He was still recovering from a lack of sleep, so he never really thought it was odd that he wasn’t receiving his usual texts or messages from friends and family. No email either. No electronic correspondence of any sort, not even spam.

  The next day, he finally realized that something was wrong. After waking up, showering and getting ready for the day, he finally noticed the lack of contact with anyone outside his apartment. Seth decided to head into the lab and check his accounts from the university’s data connection to see whether that made a difference.

  Seth left his apartment, half thinking he would find the planet deserted as though he were in some sort of “last man alive” scenario. That would certainly account for the lack of human contact he had yesterday. As he got to the street, he saw that that theory was blown out of the water: the streets were just as crowded as usual and not a single zombie or alien mind control device was in sight.

  When Seth got to his lab, he did run into one problem. His access code wasn’t working. He tried it several times but the light stayed red and the automatic lock never clicked open. A moment later, campus security showed up.

  Seth smiled when he saw Doris. “Hey there! I haven’t seen you in a while but I’m glad you’re here. Can you let me in? The lock is messed up and won’t let me in.”

  Doris l
ooked a little embarrassed. “I’m sorry, Seth, but I can’t let you in. I have instructions to take you to the dean’s office.”

  “Why?” Seth wondered whether somehow not coming in yesterday and giving his team the day off had gotten him in trouble. This seemed pretty severe for something that he was pretty sure didn’t violate any department or school rules.

  “I don’t know, I really don’t, Seth. But I have to. I was told you aren’t allowed to go anywhere but the dean’s office.” Doris put her arm out in the direction they needed to walk and Seth followed her silent instruction.

  Three hours later, Seth was standing at the edge of the university’s property with a letter of dismissal in his hand. He was told that all of his personal property that the university didn’t have any rights to would be sent to his apartment within two weeks.

  The dean had told him that the school’s code of conduct clearly prohibited the use of illegal drugs. Due to the extremely hazardous nature of the street drug Track Star, along with the huge amounts of it found in Seth’s secure and private lab locker, the school had no choice but to dismiss him.

  Seth did have an appeals process but the dean warned him against using it. The dean told Seth that the school was grateful for his work and would give him his degree, along with not putting the drug infraction on his official record. After all, he was only a week away from graduation and they still recognized that he had earned the degree with all of his hard work. The dean didn’t want Seth to have the rest of his life tarnished and just wanted him to get the help he needed. But if Seth appealed, then the drug use would become official and on the record. So Seth left without so much as a word.

  Seth was still trying to figure things out when he found himself at the doors to AeroTech. The only thing he could do now was go talk to Jack. He wanted to make sure Jack heard the story from him first so he would know the truth. Seth would submit to any form of drug testing or lie-detecting tests to prove that he had no idea what had happened at the university.

  Seth put his security badge up against the reader and received the same red lights he got from his lab doors on campus. “Shit. You have got to be kidding me.”

  It seemed as though the universe was repeating itself as Seth watched two security guards approach him from inside the building. When they reached the door, one spoke through the intercom. “I’m sorry, sir, but you need to leave. Your building privileges have been revoked. You have the legal right to stand outside the building on public property, but we’d prefer if you didn’t. Thank you and have a nice day.”

  Seth couldn’t believe what was going on. This was all bullshit but he couldn’t figure out why. Then his phone beeped, for the first time in almost two days. When he read the text message, it was from his girlfriend. “Don’t ever contact me again.” Ex-girlfriend.

  If Seth had been firing on all cylinders today, he would’ve put it together sooner. The fighter crash. This was all a part of that. It had to be. The timing was too coincidental to be a chance event.

  Jack. Was he a part of this? Or was he being systematically destroyed just like Seth was? Jack hadn’t returned any of Seth’s communication attempts, but maybe he couldn’t. Seth was equal parts worried and angry; he didn’t have enough information to know which one he should totally be right now.

  Two weeks had gone by without contact from anyone Seth knew. Luckily for him, his parents had been on the other side of the Coalition, for an ambassador function of his father’s, and hadn’t planned to make it back for his graduation anyway. So there was at least one story he didn’t have to come up with for why there wasn’t a graduation for him.

  Seth had watched the graduation from a safe and non-trespassing location. When he got home, he found a small piece of a newspaper stuck in the crack of his front door. Two words were printed on one side: “I’m sorry.”

  He didn’t recognize the handwriting; in fact, he couldn’t remember the last time he had seen actual handwritten anything. That was smart of the sender; it would be harder to track handwriting than a computer-generated message. Probably from Jack, Seth thought.

  It was time to come up with a plan. Seth knew he couldn’t sit around in his apartment forever. He was starting to run out of rent money, for one thing. As far as he could tell, none of his newly acquired ill-repute extended beyond the university or AeroTech. It was time to find a job.

  A week later, Seth found himself in a Marine Corps officer-recruiting seminar. By the end of the presentation, Seth knew what he wanted to do. He didn’t think he’d ever be able to find out what had happened to the fighter crew or why, but maybe he could make a difference somewhere so it wouldn’t happen again.

  And who knows, he thought, maybe one day he would be able to walk up to Gunnery Sergeant Mike O’Connor’s widow and show her proof that her husband didn’t cause the fatal accident that day. Maybe he would someday be able to give her that simple peace of mind.

  ~

  Somewhere Inside The Coalition Strategic Operations Command Center:

  As the intelligence officer was perusing his morning emails, his monitor lit up with an emergency flash traffic message. A keyword search had hit the monitoring station just over eight seconds ago.

  After checking the message, he verified its contents, and then opened the protocols database and matched the protocol on the keyword search with the one in the database. The protocols database match showed that the target of the keyword had a priority cancellation order. It also showed that this particular protocol couldn’t be enacted without verbal confirmation from the general.

  The captain contacted the general through a secure video link. “Good morning, sir. I hope you’re not busy.”

  The general was eating his breakfast. “Not at all, Joe. How are things in your section?”

  “Good, sir, thank you for asking.” The captain tapped a few keys on his console. “I’m sending you a flash comm I just received a few moments ago. The protocols database lists the subject for cancellation but it also requires a verbal confirmation from you, sir. In fact, it looks like you authored this specific protocol yourself.”

  The general pushed his breakfast aside so he could use both hands on the computer. “Indeed I did, Joe, indeed I did.” He read further down the message. “Well, that’s a very unexpected turn, but for the better, I’d say. It looks like Seth has dropped his quest for the truth in order to serve the greater good and join the Marine Corps.”

  “Yes, sir.” The captain had no idea what this was about and most likely never would. He would just do his part and that part was dependent on whatever the general told him to do next. “When he signed up for Officer Candidate School, his name hit the keyword database and was flagged as an ‘important event.’ I’m guessing it was because he signed up for the service. Had he laid low and got a job with your average tech company, I don’t think he would’ve been flagged.”

  “You’re probably right, Joe.” The general made a few entries on his console and Seth’s file disappeared from both his screen and the captain’s. “I’m having lunch next week near your office. My assistant will give you the details. It would be great to see you in person. Keep up the good work, son.” The general ended the call without waiting for a response.

  With the file vanishing from the keyword database, the captain had his answer: do nothing. The captain took a quick look at his schedule for the following week. It looked pretty clear; that would make things easier.

  Another flash traffic message came through to his desk. Not related to the first one, this one had a cancellation notice that didn’t require secondary confirmations. Who was next on the list? Ralph was up in the rotation; time to put him to work.

  The audio-only line went green, showing a connection. “Hey Ralph! Thanks for the theatre tickets. My wife and daughter loved the show. I hope you don’t have plans for the weekend. I have a job for you. Ready for the info?”

  Back to Previous

  The Warrior

  The world was swirling aro
und, maybe even the entire universe was—he couldn't tell. Pulling away from him, sucking him down a drain. The sensation was new—not only new, but a first. The first sensation in his universe.

  For the longest time, his perception of the universe was that he was only a concept, a possibility, a potential for existence not yet fully realized. He understood what it meant to be a physical being, to have a body, to have a presence among other sentient beings; that had all been taught to him so long ago in the beginning.

  The tube, his personal universe, had taught him those concepts along with so many others. He was aware that one day his masters might call upon him to serve the empire, and if that happened, he would transition from a possibility to a reality. Unless or until that day came, he was content to roam his universe and observe it as only a concept could.

  Content. Such an odd word to use given what he was. His physical, not yet used or realized, form was in a tube somewhere in the galaxy; so he could actually be defined as the kon-tent of the tube. At the same time, he had no desire to be more than he already was so he was kuhn-tent with his current place in the universe. Content. On more than one level, it fit him.

  But could he really be content with his current state? Was it possible for something such as him to even have that frame of mind either in this state of being or the next possible adaptation of his design? Could his genetic programming even allow him to be content, at ease, appeased, fulfilled, gratified, satisfied? If he thinks he's content and can ponder the question of contentness, then the logical conclusion is that yes, he can be content.

  The next logical question then is, should he be able to be content? He thinks probably not; something is wrong—not quite right, but not wrong enough that his personal universe senses the inconsistency and voids the tube, thereby ending his potential existence and coldly breaking his physical form to its base nutrients to share those nutrients with the other tubes around him. His brothers. His likeness. His self but not self.

 

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