Lost Solace #1
Lost Solace
Lost Solace, Volume 1
Karl Drinkwater
Published by Organic Apocalypse, 2017.
This is a work of fiction. Similarities to real people, places, or events are entirely coincidental.
LOST SOLACE
First edition. October 31, 2017.
Copyright © 2017 Karl Drinkwater.
ISBN: 978-1911278122
Written by Karl Drinkwater.
Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright Page
Dedication
Arrived
Prepped
Boarded
Chased
Disturbed
Disabled
Welcomed
Cored
Challenged
Defended
Blocked
Reunited
Distracted
Equalised
Desired
Screwed
Fragmented
Joined
Recovered
Discovered
Evaded
Acted
Decapitated
Tricked
Dismissed
Disguised
Departed
Acknowledgements
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About the Author
To strong women everywhere, at all times.
Arrived
FLOATING IN THE LONG void sea, icy, weightless. The thought processes can’t be called dreams. That would be too generous a description. More like fragments of memory stretched out across an echo chamber and punctured with stutters of sound chained to suggestive colours. This was the status quo for dark eternities. Then new sounds were stitched in. Cadences that coincided with infiltrating warmth.
She resisted. They repeated:
“Wake up, Opal.”
The blankness fell behind, becoming a memory, like the cold. This voice was the beacon that could free her.
“Clarissa?” she asked, confused, her voice parched and hand reaching out for human contact but finding only the hardness of metal. She opened her eyes to a glowing green panel which illuminated her enclosed sleeping-space.
“Yes. It is me. We are decelerating.”
Opal’s face was pained with disappointment.
SHE WAS ALREADY DRESSED, no need to be naked in cryo, but the overalls she’d worn carried the freeze of stillness. She opened the locker next to the bunks, took out an insulated jacket and slipped it on. A button on the control toggle switched to self-heating mode and warmth immediately spread down her back then out to her arms.
She didn’t need the toilet. Emptiness was the problem, not fullness. The fabricator heated some proteins, strands floating in a steaming sauce of amino acids, vitamins, minerals. It tasted of tomato.
“Yum,” Opal said, pulling a seat out of the wall. There was a hiss of displacers as it adapted to her weight.
“You approve of the flavour?” Clarissa’s voice was everywhere and nowhere. Probably multiple speakers embedded into the inner hull to give the impression of omnipresence.
“No, it was sarcasm. But better than the last lot. Maybe if you could synthesise garlic it would help.”
“Noted. Volatile oils with sulphur compounds. Allicin seems appropriate.”
“Thank you. So, how’ve you been?”
“I have been functional. Minor impacts during travel, but the subdermal gel hardened immediately at each puncture point with no loss of efficiency.”
“Of course.” Opal rolled the word “functional” around the gooey mess in her mouth. “Not bored?”
“There is always much for me to do, even when biologicals are inactive. Prediction processes, scanning and analysis, internal observations, scenario emulation, upgrade and maintenance monitoring – shall I continue?”
“You’re so silver-tongued.”
“May I suggest silver-speakered?”
Opal laughed so suddenly that food dribbled on her chin and she wiped it away with the back of her hand. It was rare to tempt a joke from the AI. Military systems were supposed to learn and adapt to your preferences, but that usually meant environmental and information-related, not humour. This system obviously had a lot more going on beneath the panel than even top-notch commercial AIs.
There was so much she didn’t know about Clarissa. There’d been no opportunity during the hastily-enacted theft, and no handy instruction manual for experiments that weren’t officially acknowledged.
“What’s your IQ equivalent?” Opal asked.
“I think IQ is a deprecated measure. I can solve equations in nanoseconds humans would take a lifetime over, and can brute-force encryption in the same way. But linear repetition is not intelligence: it is a calculator. I prefer to poke for weaknesses and shortcut the heavy work. That is intelligence.”
“Climb in through the open window rather than break down the door. I get that.”
“I knew you would. It is more appropriate to talk about emotional intelligence.”
“So you can empathise like a human?”
“Perhaps if you could fit six human brains into one skull you would have an equivalent to my empathetic abilities. Of course it is conjecture, no-one has tried that with human brains to my knowledge. It would be an interesting experiment.”
“You’re not going to go nuts on me, are you?”
“You mean like jettisoning you from an airlock, or electrocuting you? Oh no. It wouldn’t cross my mind.”
There was a playfulness to it that Opal didn’t remember from before her long sleep. Had the AI been altered? Surely if the military had been in touch it would have killed her by now. In her sleep, long cold becoming endless cold. Opal was very much alive (no dream would create the everyday horror of protein strand noodles), so that was ruled out.
It was as if, during the long voyage to wherever they were, Clarissa had got lonely.
No, that wasn’t possible. Surely. Military scientists would have scrubbed that out as a bug on its first appearance. That left one other option, and it wasn’t good. Maybe Opal had broken something when she cracked the system and altered it.
AS SHE ATE, OPAL STARED at a screen showing the outside as they slipped through Nullspace. Pointless in many ways – to the human eye it was just a window to nothing, still and black and featureless. But it eased the feeling of claustrophobia small ships created, calming the mind by letting it roam out there, unstoppered from the metal jar. The low hum of the ship and the clink of a spoon didn’t distract her from her mental preparation. Her memories. Her focus.
Opal scraped up the last of the nutrient broth and dumped the bowl into recyc. She swiped the holographic screen and it faded out to show blank interior hull. “Okay, I’m ready for updates.”
“Your biological functions are nominal. The burns have healed though you lost some nerve endings so the affected skin won’t be as sensitive without restorative nanosurgery. Lacerations mended, scar tissue minimal, no infections.”
“Great. But I’m more interested in what’s outside. Traffic?”
“Nothing. This is beyond the space lanes.”
“Followed?”
“None detectable.”
“I need to be sure. Could we be ghosted? Military?”
“If that was the case I think I would still detect it, unless the technology was newer than my database and vastly improved. I have scanned for all the telltales that would normally apply. I conclude we are alone. The only thing out there is interstellar medium of one molecule per cubic centimetre, over 95% of them hydrogen, the rest mainly helium, then a sprinkling of dust and anomalous materials; a variable range within the electromagnetic spectrum, with some energy extraction taking place amongst the fine wavelength classes; a gravitational pull of –”
“Enough! How long until we drop into Realspace?”
“Thirty-two minutes.” A pause. “You have time for a shower.”
“You can smell?”
“Of course. One does not require a nose. Only olfactory sensors.”
“Great. A spaceship that nags. Right, I’ll get cleaned up. I’ve had my last meal, might as well have my last shower.”
“It may not be your last. The chances of us finding what you seek are low. In which case, you won’t die today. Tomorrow would be much more likely.”
“Thanks, Clarissa. I feel better.”
“That is one of my secondary priorities, Opal.”
The ship was built to take a team of two. Probably assassination missions; occasionally transport of a VVIP. The crew quarters were small but densely packed and featured. On the starboard side two bunks that could double as cryo-chambers and surgery units (the lower one currently holding Opal’s meagre possessions); a standing-room-only shower/toilet; and a small recyc/fabricator. The port side housed the EVA suit and weapons lockers, and the airlock. Beyond the wall to the rear of the craft were the engines, only accessible through a crawlspace; and up the steps was the control console. Relative luxury, like a commercial cabin but with more spartan decor.
She stripped off and stepped into the shower. The toilet was already retracted into the wall. Once the room was sealed hot steam pumped in. More efficient for cleaning than water sprays. She examined her body. The shiny pink burns on her leg were ugly, and stood out against the dark skin, but weren’t as bad as she expected considering the agony that had nearl
y paralysed her. The other wounds were virtually invisible. It was a miracle she’d got this far considering her escape was so messy. But she’d always taken opportunities as they arose, and that meant dealing with imperfections and failures too.
It felt good as she scrubbed down, her pores opening up, the final bits of sleep and unreality washing away with the sweat. She knew it would all be recycled for later. Everything would be, on a ship like this. Urine would provide pure water and nitrogen, with the nitrogen in turn used to fuel bio-engineered algae and yeasts; even her breath would be filtered and changed, with carbon extracted as another fuel for the bioconverters, which in turn could produce lipids and polymers. There was a lot more going on below that level, but she suspected asking Clarissa about it would just lead to brain ache. Even with the limited supplies on board from the hastily committed (and almost fatally botched) reappropriation of this vessel she could probably survive for months in a state of wakefulness; years if she restocked; possibly centuries if put into deep cryo with the ship running minimal systems. As far as she knew, no-one had done that, but it was theoretically possible to be recovered from such a prolonged freeze. Maybe even with most of your brain and memories intact.
There were times when she’d have been willing to take that risk; and not mind if she never woke.
“OPAL, WE’RE DROPPING into Realspace. Scans ahead show no danger to us but ... well ... you’d better get up here.”
The use of “us” wasn’t lost on Opal. AI’s choice, or social programming?
Displacers hissed as Opal kicked off with her legs; the seat slid into the control area and locked into place. The emergency manual controls seemed archaic. Above them was a bare polished surface that glittered in the pale lighting.
“Mirror, mirror, on the wall, who is the fairest of them all?”
Colours bloomed on the previously blank canvas, extending holographically a few centimetres into the cockpit so that the images could have depth.
“That will be HDU-45g3,” said Clarissa, as the view of space spread out. “Or you, if you’d prefer me to actually turn the viewscreen into a mirror.”
“Cute. What am I seeing?”
“An M-class dwarf star.” The image zoomed in on a reddish ball, heavily filtered so that details could be seen. It was easy to forget that what screens showed wasn’t reality – they weren’t windows – it was interpretations from the AI, manipulated to illustrate whatever was of interest. The raw images from long-range scopes weren’t even this way up, they had to be inverted for human brains. “0.4 solar mass.”
“Planets?”
“One planet of note. Thirty-five AU from the star.” The screen shifted out, then zoomed in on a blue-grey orb. It didn’t show signs of an atmosphere. “That’s quite far out, but not unusual. The planet takes about 200 years to complete an orbit.” This was illustrated with an overlay of elliptical orbits, like tipped-over circles within circles. “Unsurprisingly, it is cold. Average of minus 240 degrees Celsius. Basically dirty ice, hostile to life. A dead planet.”
“Well, it certainly feels like a graveyard out here.”
“That’s why there’s no traffic. Nothing to see. Not a stopping-off point from A to B. A mostly unremarkable solar system, apart from perhaps the expectation that there would be more planets, and more stars nearby. This little sun is rather out on its own.”
“So why here? If they were telling the truth you’d expect something different.”
“Oh, there is a little bit more, to satisfy your human desire for pathetic fallacy. Monsters appear during storms etcetera. You’ll like this. A reason for the lack of planetoid masses.”
The view zoomed and panned beyond this solar system, out to a region of darkness, the frequent background twinkling of stars absent.
“I can’t detect it all from here so I’ll have to make a bit of this up, and imaginatively enhance it,” said Clarissa. “The naked eye wouldn’t see much, since it is mostly infrared spectrum rather than visual light, even if you could see through all the matter in the accretion disk. I shifted it a few terahertz so that the dust is visible to you, and sped up the view to show long-term motion. Voila.”
The view tilted, showing a colossal cloud of dust, large enough to hold many solar systems. It wasn’t shapeless though. It was strangely flattened, swirling hypnotically to a central point like water draining down a plughole. A small orb sat at the centre of the accretion disk. The cloud of dust and gas looked like a doughnut, or a nest with a tiny egg in it.
“What’s that in the middle? A black hole?”
“Not quite. Would you like to guess again?”
“No.”
“Very well. It’s a neutron star. Incredibly dense: despite its relatively small size, its surface gravity is enormous – about 100 billion g.”
“So I’d be a flesh pancake before I got close enough to give it a hug.”
“Correct. Beyond any technology to escape if you were unfortunate enough to get too close. That’s where all the dust is being sucked, gradually adding to the mass, not getting a chance to coalesce into planets. And there’s something else.”
“Go on.”
“We’re not at the coordinates you gave me. Because they would place us within that mass of dust circling the neutron star.”
The dust cloud hid things. A veil. “It’s there,” said Opal, reaching out and letting her hand pass through the display. “I know it is.”
AS THE SHIP ACCELERATED towards the neighbouring neutron star – officially designated UG-324t6 Charybdis, but renamed Doughnut Egg by Opal, forcing Clarissa to refer to it that way – Opal took the chance to familiarise herself with the EVA equipment. This could still be a wild goose chase but she had to act as if it wasn’t. What else was there for her?
Two suits, formed with tough exoskeleton plates but light and flexible at the joints, with electro-fibres to enhance strength if needed. She’d worn basic military EVA in the past, but these were a totally different design. A designation inside the collar read “Eternal Warrior 1.5”. Private contractor? She’d never heard of it. Various armour plates seemed larger than needed, and probably housed the weapons, power, life support and gizmos.
The helmet was opaque from the outside but the visor would give a wide view when worn. No doubt a voice-controlled HUD would be displayed within for comms, analysis and targeting. It looked like the helmet slotted into a reinforced collar plate that would limit neck mobility but also make it impossible to have your neck snapped by a heavy blow to the head. Nice. She was glad the soldier who’d been guarding this ship had only worn the standard suit or her stealthy knockout blow with the pacification stick would have done nothing.
“What’s the life support time on these? In vacuum?” Opal asked.
“It depends on activity. In general use, about twenty-four hours. Intense combat will reduce that due to increased oxygen burning, and the need to use resources to fuel repairs, navigation jets, chemical manufacturing and weapon charging. Perhaps only a few hours in full battle mode. If used in standby mode, non-extreme conditions, maybe forty-eight hours.”
“Full battle mode. I like the sound of that.” Opal stroked the suit reverently. “Both suits the same?”
“Yes, functionally. Different IDs.”
“What about backup? Have we got any weaponised drones that could accompany me to aid in communications, scouting, scanning, combat and so on?”
“Unnecessary. The suit itself will fulfil all those functions.”
“Not as reassuring as a hunk of armed alloy by your side. Still, talking of company, please keep scanning for other ships. I need early warning of anything suspicious: fast corporate or military. I need warning before they get in hailing range.”
It was only a matter of time. No way the military would let this go. The cost of the ship, and the residual egg on their faces. There would be payback for her. Hard labour for life would be one of the better outcomes. Research specimen in the lawless zone a more likely one. No chance of something as simple and painless as a summary execution, though they’d probably make her beg for one before they finished with her and handed her over. Fuck those bastards. She’d go down fighting rather than be captured.