《TriThenar Innovation (will be deleted on February 15)》 Chapter 1 Last Day on the Job Bioforms 0/0 aka, biomass used vs biomass available Powered Armor 0/0 aka occupied and functional human equipment vs total equipment Lost Machina Artefacts 0/0 aka functional and armed protochronian technology vs total protochronian artefacts I peek over the lip of my rudy trench, inhaling boiling air from my suit¡¯s rebreather. Of course those last shots hit my air supply too. My HUD adjusts the amount of life support left, numbers spinning as four autocannons pivot towards my groin. ¡°Got a leak here, lettin'' out emergency air¡ªbetter grab a top-up, mate, quick as ya can!¡± Says the suit in its distinctly incorrect Australian accent. Of course it had to be an aussie. Just what I need. *click click click* echoes through the trench as firing pins slam against empty champers. Long since dry of bullets. ¡°Can it you stupid bot. Can¡¯t you tell the pilot¡¯s already dead?¡± I snap, giving its servoes a power-armor enhanced kick. Steel snaps under my boot, hydraulic fluid sprays across the groin and stomach of my armor, as if the dead pilot¡¯s soul lingers, wishing to mock his murderer. I glance down at the cyborg, was the pilot even male? Impossible to guess after the augmentation they¡¯d undergone to become a juggernaut. Bile rises in my throat at the thought of having myself cut apart and fused into the battle mech. Absolutely disgusting. My helmet chirps at me, automatically opening the channel to my ¡®squadmate¡¯. ¡°Phfina? Awre you awight?¡± Asks a lisping voice too young to be on the battlefield. Especially this battlefield. ¡°I¡¯m fine,¡± I wince, trying not to let the pain show. ¡°Suit is buggered. Ah, can you check that bunker for a spare?¡± I manage to say, struggling to keep my voice even as I duck beneath the edge and face my only remaining ally. She¡¯s picking her way through the trench, heading towards a tunnel entrance. It''s some kind of ammo depot or bunker. The girl¡¯s suit is identical to mine, eight feet tall, made from layers of composite armor to deflect multiple hits from any angle. Except for the pilot. Given her handicap of being three and a half feet tall, I''m impressed she can move at all in that thing, albeit in a stiff legged waddle. We really should have used something other than artillery shells as stilts, they¡¯re too rigid. Seems like they¡¯re tripping the suit¡¯s crush limiters. All the pesky little bits of software that keep the powered armor from actuating its limbs beyond what is humanly possible; and turning us into jelly along the way. Things I wouldn¡¯t have to worry about in her place¡­ Logic whispers an answer to my problems. I¡¯m the one fighting for us, it¡¯s only right for me to take the working armor. Kerrigan would last whole minutes in my busted suit before it cooked her alive. Disgust overloads me, hating that I even considered the thought! ¡°Otay Phfina.¡± Is Kerrigan¡¯s response, oblivious to my vile machinations. Nausea hits me harder than bullets. A one two combo with her innocence that hammers my ribs. She trusts me completely, if I asked she wouldn¡¯t hesitate to swap suits. Might even ask if the air was supposed to burn as she handed me the only good rebreather. A tear rolls down my cheek. No, This is my battlefield, I won¡¯t lose myself. We will live or die together. They might have taken Earth away from us, but we¡¯re still human! A blind scanner ping ripples through the trench, bouncing off our armors before I can duck or hide. In seconds those radio waves will tell someone exactly where we are. Probably enter us into their network of targeting computers and send an artillery shell at our predicted locations. ¡°Kerrigan! Run!¡± I shout, checking the rounds in my flechette pistol. But I already know the answer. The pistol¡¯s electronic readout displays 0/100. If you come across this story on Amazon, be aware that it has been stolen from Royal Road. Please report it. Kerrigan¡¯s shuffle turns into a frantic straight-legged waddle, flailing as the suit compensates for a kid pilot. I don¡¯t want the last thing she hears to be my shouting. So I activate the com once more. ¡°Thanks Kerrigan. Be quick now.¡± I gasp, doing my best to keep the pain to myself. No reason to make a child half my age worry about my bullet wounds. Besides, I already rubbed some dirt into them, nothing more I can do now. My armor, slick with hydraulic fluid slips off the Juggernaut, sending me cartwheeling over autocannons and empty missile racks. Their dry clicking chases me into the mud twenty feet below. Suit dampeners cushion the blow, only sending fire through the bullet holes in my side and shoulder. I need to get into the bunker before artillery or some curious little killbot shows up. The battlefield above the trenches is entering a lul, most factions seem to have their power cells sabotaged and are struggling to find replacements that don¡¯t fuse their circuits. Courtesy of yours truly. A fact only the Novan Technomancy of Steel is aware of. I think. I really hope so¡­ Which is why I¡¯m hiding on what I thought was their last soldier, praying the next Technomancer wave won¡¯t come, or will be another bulletless juggernaut. Anything more than an unsuspecting soft dick will be the death of me. Flashing lights warn of my left reactor overheating, going super critical. Normally I could shunt spare coolant from my right to even out the load, but it¡¯s nonfunctional from the five autocannon bullets inside it. Minutes of air left, enemies incoming, and busted armor. Sorry Kerrigan, this is as far as I go. My hud blinks red. A new warning appears. ¡°Oi, big one¡¯s on the way¡ªgrab your dingo an¡¯ kiss that bitch goodbye!¡± Says the suit. ¡°Of every accent in the universe, why did it have to be Australian!¡± The sounds of screaming artillery shells and laser fire cease abruptly as the few survivors of this pocket war receive the same warning. Except the Tulvarians who continue their war-hooting. For spacefaring iguanas I would have expected more intelligence from them, or at least vocalizations that are distinguishable from a dozen bovines in heat. A thin line of black appears in the atmosphere above me. No reading on the HUD means the missile is out of my suit¡¯s scanner range, yet visible. An infantryman¡¯s way of saying ¡®InterContinental Ballistic Missile¡¯. I swallow, trying to work spit back into my mouth. The missile is falling straight down, plummeting on an angle of attack that is close to ninety degrees, indicating an orbital launch. Probably one of the warships who are here on ¡®observational¡¯ duties. ¡°Please don¡¯t be a Technomancy nuke.¡± I whisper. I value my own hide quite highly, it¡¯s the best one if I can be allowed to say so. Yes, that¡¯s not saying a whole lot considering I''ve only had two bodies, but still! Nuclear annihilation is low on my list of preferred deaths. Energy batteries whine, thrumming to life for several horrible seconds. Each instant bringing the missile deeper into our atmosphere. A dozen lasers illuminate the sky. Nine go wide, vanishing into the darkness of space at .9C. Effectively the speed of light. Three beams score direct hits, one on the nose and two center mass. A blue sphere glows softly, little more than the blink of death. The missile, dropped from orbit, is shielded. No one puts shielding on an average missile. It can only be one thing. Someone broke the rules and decided to flip the table. Win the war by erasing everyone, including themselves. Galactic sanctions would be imposed, a small comfort to my soon-to-be vaporized body. Damn, two lives and I couldn¡¯t get laid in either one. Life¡¯s just not fair. A nuclear flash illuminates my world. Colored electric green by the instant sun over me, tattling on the treaty breaker. Why would the Technomancy drop a nuke on little ole me? They''d broken the only rule -tenuous as it might be- during this battle royale. More confusing still, they relied upon the solarium mines native to this world more than any other faction! Why poison the well? Now the nuclear radiation would be absorbed into the mines, irradiating anything that attempted to harvest them for the next millenia, if not two. Worse, the solarium would operate at one tenth efficiency until the radioactive particulates worked themselves out of the crystal lattice, a galaxy spanning death knell. My faceplate glass polarizes to a hard mirror finish, deflecting nuclear light for all its worth. I¡¯m too close. Soon the shockwave will hit. Motors whine, slamming the opaque ¡°Hazardous Environmental Litigating Protections¡± over my faceplate. The HELP system is designed to ricochet bullets and horny exes, like a steel shutter slamming closed. The highest level of protection possible for an armored trooper. I sigh, surprised to still be alive. ¡°NUCLEAR DETONATION DETECTED!¡± ¡°FIND COVER!¡± ¡°Yeah yeah, thanks a lot. Never would have seen that without you.¡± I say, chinning the faceplate to silence the alarm. All goes white. Chapter 2 Thirty six hours prior to nuclear launch I freeze, wishing my eyes are deceiving me. Eyelids actuate, blinking several times in unseeing disbelief. This can¡¯t be possible. It just can¡¯t! I pinch my arm pain mute against the dullness of my soul. There is no avoiding it, not with that trashy octopus tattoo and its small blue rings on his neck. I¡¯ve always hated that tattoo. Worse, I hate it more when Ashley¡¯s perfectly manicured nails cover it. She¡¯s even wearing our ¡®best friends forever¡¯ necklace, a half of a broken heart. How fitting. There is no mistaking the two people I know best in this world, nor are there any misinterpretations of what they¡¯re doing on top of each other. Clothes are on, but that doesn¡¯t hinder Ashley¡¯s gyrations. The slut is riding my boyfriend, while his tongue is playing hockey with her tonsils. On a purely cognitive level I¡¯m impressed at her flexibility. My mind¡¯s pitiful attempt to shut out the trauma and process something. It doesn¡¯t work. My mouth hits the floor still not open as wide as theirs ¡ªoh gawd, where are their tongues going?!¨C alongside the cookies I baked. It took me all night to bake those lil buggers, most of that time spent shaping them into protoss pylons and cute banelings! And now they¡¯re crumbs. The sound of tupperware bouncing does nothing to disturb my roommate or my boyfriend, if anything, it encourages deeper passions. I want to puke, to disappear from sight, to cease existing. Fly into the sun and vanish from disgust. Throw myself down the six flights of stairs I just climbed to deliver my affection and tell Baz I was finally ready. At least I hadn¡¯t given him that. Like he would give a damn. Ashley will be his whore before I can reach our apartment. I want to scream ¡®go fuck yourselves¡¯ but fear that will only make it a reality. My thoughts repeat down the stairwell, across campus, and into my dorm room. The one I share with Ashley the whore and two other girls. Our apartment consists of four total rooms, a kitchen and common area, the bathroom, and our two bedrooms, one of which I share with Ashley. Making us the closest of roommates. ¡°Oh for fuuuuckkkssake!¡± I cry, burying my head in my pillow and screaming. How am I going to look her in the eye? I need to get out of here, finals are over, they finished last week and the only reason I¡¯m not on a lake retreat with mom and dad is cause my now EX-boyfriend Baz wanted to spend time with me. The asshole. ¡°Hey, is that Athena?¡± Says a voice in the next room. ¡°Sounds like she forgot the sugar in those cookies¡­¡± ¡°Again? Bummer, they were so cute. Should have had Ashley help her. She just loves baking.¡± A door squeaks open, and one of my neutral roommates knocks twice on my open door, more to announce herself than to ask permission. ¡°Hey Thena, some guy from the college offices hand delivered this letter for you, it¡¯s all official looking and like, addressed specifically to you dude.¡± I know it¡¯s Savannah, the Cali girl. She¡¯s a sweet blonde, but I want none of her cutesy freckles or dude-bro-ness today. ¡°I¡¯m not a dude.¡± I snap. ¡°Sorry, its like, gender neutral.¡± She says, entering my room and placing the letter on the nightstand I share with the whore. Why would you do this to me Ashley? And with Baz! Of all the people WHY YOUR BROTHER?! NO! She is the last thing I ever want to think or hear about again. There is a two week break between final exams and the next semester starting. Plenty of time for me to get out of this whorehouse and find a new apartment! Maybe the letter is an invitation to the Dean¡¯s list or something. Summer semester is weird, students take one class at a time but its everyday for a few weeks. They call it learning by immersion. A style that didn¡¯t work well for me. Fall and winter terms I passed all my classes with flying colors. Shaking hands grasp the letter, going clammy. I¡¯m trembling so badly that fingers slip and tear the letter right down its center. The college¡¯s fancy seal is ruined, so much for showing this to mom. ¡°Christ Athena, can¡¯t you even open a letter?¡± I grumble, tears already welling in my eyes. If I start crying now, I won¡¯t be able to stop before Ash-Whorely gets home. Hatred steadies my hands, allowing me to piece two letter halves together. ¡ª Notice of Academic Probation Dear Athena Finley This letter serves as an official notification regarding your current academic standing with [University Name]. Our records indicate that your cumulative GPA of .5; has fallen below the minimum threshold required for satisfactory academic performance as outlined in the College of Engineering¡¯s guidelines. As such, you have been placed on academic probation, effective immediately, until such time that your GPA exceeds a 2.0 and you are, once again, on track for graduation. Until such time as your GPA improves, all scholarships are suspended. Academic probation is a structured period during which you are expected to improve your academic standing to meet the necessary requirements for continued enrollment in your program. During this probationary period, you will need to adhere to specific guidelines designed to support your academic progress and ensure your success in the program. Failure to meet the minimum standards listed below by the end of this period may result in further academic action, including but not limited to suspension or dismissal from the university. You are required to meet with the [enter colleges name]¡¯s dean to discuss potential improvements. We strongly encourage you to consult with your academic advisor to develop a comprehensive plan for improvement. This may include recommended study resources, academic support services, and a suggested course load adjustment to better support your academic goals. Our institution remains committed to helping you achieve success, and there are numerous resources available to assist you during this probationary period¡­ ¡ª ¡°What¡­ the¡­ FUCK!¡± They were putting me on academic probation for failing summer school? These cunts didn¡¯t even have the decency to fill out a form right! Who were they to ruin my life? I throw the letter and scream into my pillow. Pent up tears find an exit through my nose, snot leaking as emotions break through. How could this be happening? The scores from my finals aren¡¯t even back yet! And I thought I did great! ¡­ Shit¡­ You never do as well as you think on finals. I must have flunked all of them. But this is only the summer term! Sure I failed my underwater basketweaving class over the summer, but that doesn¡¯t count. It was a summer elective class meant to help me move in and socialize¡­ How are they punishing me when I got straight As last year! Well, until Baz slid into my life with that cute aussie accent. AH! Why are they coming for me now? Fukfukfuckfuckitycuckfucksucking! How long I cried is a secret only my pillow knows, but my eyes were still wet when the bedroom lights flicked off. Across the hall I hear Savannah talking. ¡°Move to Utah you said, we don¡¯t have blackouts like Commie-fornia you said!¡± Snaps Savannah, smacking her lips like she just applied a fresh lacquer of gloss. She¡¯s plastic as all hell, but I can¡¯t help but smile at the sarcasm. ¡°Someone probably tried to run too many dildoes off the same breaker. Give it a minute.¡± Says our fourth roommate. Faint buzzing fills my head, like there is a fly around my ponytail. I reach up to swat it, only for my hand to go limp. My eyes are closed, squeezing out the last of my tears, but I can see a blue window in front of me. ¡°Great, my bae- NO! EX bae! My ex cheated on me so hard I¡¯m hallucinating.¡± ¡°Whoa. What is- ¡­ Hey Sav, did you put weed in our cheerios again-¡± ¡°No¨C I mean, I totally did, but Baz is gonna throw this wicked party¨C¡± [HELLO PEOPLE OF¨C ah hell jim, what is this planet called again?]Unauthorized usage: this narrative is on Amazon without the author''s consent. Report any sightings. [Earth. Like it always is.] [Shit, that last one being called Eden has got me all thrown off kilter] The words are speaking into my brain directly, verbally and visually being displayed on the blue screen in English. Which does nothing to make the two voices sound less like Curly and Moe stooging up a storm. This is easily the worst trip of my life. I¡¯d rather have a schizophrenia break than listen to this geriatric bullshit. Mentally I try and dismiss the message, receiving a red flash and slight screen shake in way of refusal. ¡°Great, the two stooges now have unskippable cutscenes.¡± [HELLO PEOPLE OF EARTH! We represent your gracious overlords, the protectors of your spiral arm, and you are our planted children. I¡¯m pleased to inform you all that you¡¯ve exceeded all our expectations for a successful crop, which is excellent news for us both! Since your society will still persevere after our culling. Now I know that word has some unfriendly connotations to some of you, but our holy Singularity has devoted a great deal of resources in keeping your planet alive. We are only collecting a portion of what is owed. Think of it like taxes. We¡¯ll be drafting everyone between the ages of twelve and forty two. Roughly four billion people who will then join our honourable warriors on the frontlines.] Culling? Unfriendly connotations is right! That¡¯s what we do to parasites or extraneous bits in a computer, not living breathing people! Wait, conscription? Taxes? This can¡¯t be happening. Drafted? But, that means joining the military. Or uhm, space force. Who will we be fighting? It¡¯s all too much to process. I go limp. They can¡¯t take me if I won¡¯t get out of bed. No interstellar wars for me. I¡¯m not going to be drafted to fight an interstellar war? I reach into the nightstand and pull out my high school graduation gift. A pistol, something of an oddball that dad decided I needed. It¡¯s an older model, an FNX-9 with seventeen rounds of nine millimeter bullets in each of my three magazines. Dad said I needed protection in case boys weren¡¯t turned off by my crippling addiction to Starcraft and for once, he is right. No one is going to kidnap me. The pistol weighs my hand, slowing down my thoughts. Tempering the fire of wrath to a cold logic as we are forced to contemplate who to shoot. My apartment walls are thin, drywall and studs. This isn¡¯t a good place to fight- -Although, if the aliens take me¡­ I won¡¯t have to share a room with Whorely anymore if they take me. Guess there are worse things. Part of me embraces the concept, eager to escape the cheating siblings. Really, who cheats with their blood relative? [I see some of you are reacting poorly to this news. Arming those missiles will not prevent us from taking them. All nuclear devices will serve the Singularity well and be counted against Earth¡¯s galactic debt. So you are only harming your own future prospects by launching them. Have no fear, if you comply peacefully then we will drop off nine gates that will allow instantaneous transportation to any continent, as well as to the two gates we¡¯ve already left in orbit. Your sacrifice is the price of admission into the Holy Singularity proper. Once your back taxes are paid in full you¡¯ll be a voting member of our union and warranted all the rights of citizenship. Your entire planet will be modernized as soon as we take the mining world of Syrak-9. All taxable proceeds will then be routed through your earth. Just imagine that, a stable universal income for the entire planet. Soon you will have all the modern amenities of nanotech, holograms, and instant interstellar communication. Welcome all. Now just sit tight, we¡¯ll be teleporting all munitions, nukes- oh wow, you Chinese really went crazy with these, two hundred thousand nukes. Naughty naughty.] By the tone of his ¡®voice¡¯ Athena could envision the announcer waggling his finger. Like they were some misbehaving little child. Quite rude, but not necessarily undeserved, China only publicly admitted three thousand nukes and signed treaties promising trade concessions if they restrained themselves to that number. It was a small factoid of my nuclear engineering class, a prime example of politics ruining any integrity engineers like myself should have enjoyed. ¡°A hundred times the treaty amount. Damn China, you made out like billion dollar bandits.¡± An old saying comes to mind, mixed and mashed with two others. It¡¯s only cheating if you get caught, but in love and war there are no rules, only the winners who are left. [Cmon Haime, you¡¯re butchering the announcement!] Snapped a second voice. [Right right, oh where was I? Eh, doesn¡¯t matter. Have your gates, we¡¯ll be taking guns, bullets, nukes, four billion ish people and yada yada. You¡¯ll be mindwiped and then flashtrained to fill in our gaps. If you find any of this disturbing, be sure to report to your nearest medical professional. We give them weekend trainings specifically on recursive mindwipes! Toodles.] [HAIME! DO IT RIGHT!] [Okay, fine. Look here earthlings. I was once in your shoes and I understand how confused you must be. But the Novan Technocracy of Steel is about to seize this world. See that ¡®of Steel¡¯ part in their name, it¡¯s not for show. They¡¯ll lobotomize every last one of you, carve off your limbs so you¡¯ll fit inside whatever toaster or dildo they need to be ¡®smart¡¯. Artificial intelligences rule them completely with zero human oversight or veto power. To them, we are nothing other than wetware. We need more soldiers to hold them back, not here, but on Syrak-9. Win there and the Technocracy won¡¯t be able to fuel their ships and take this earth. Sorry.] He paused, allowing the globe a few moments to process the message. [You¡¯ve got a shit choice. If half of you don¡¯t bite the pillow and stop them, they will lobotomize you and everyone you¡¯ve ever loved-] If they started with Baz and Ashley I would not be opposed to that¡­ [-so the Singularity has received emergency orders from our military AIs and civil senate, a unanimous decision mind you, to prevent that from happening. I was drafted as well, this really isn¡¯t a bad thing, just look at me now, Captain of an interstellar colony ship complete with warp drive and teleportation. Some will die, but most of you will become generals, pilots, doctors, and more. We even have a few million slots for colonists. Flash training will give you all the skills anyone could need. It¡¯ll be like going to sleep and then waking up having gone through twelfth grade, college, and a trade school. Except you¡¯ll remember your lessons. Really great tech.] Nothing heralds the transition. Presumably Haime was beaming people into the hold while he spoke, distracting us with meaningless niceties while he plundered Earth. Two soft thumps echoed down the hall, as if Savanah dropped her bowl of laced cheerios, but I was too distracted by the instant teleportation. One second I was laying in bed, wet faced, teary eyed, academic probation letter in front of me, and the next completely naked. Slime coated my entire body in a moistness that gagged thought. I gasp, inhaling to scream, only for warm fluid to fill my lungs. No, not warm, hot, body temperature, slightly salty yet subtly sweet, like a bag of boiled saline poured into Kool-Aid. Kinda tasty in a sweaty way. Glass surrounds me, I¡¯m in a tube, naked. About to drown in whatever concoction they¡¯ve isolated me in. My nostrils flare, inhaling a second time on reflex. I prepare for the end, wishing Baz and Ashley a similar fate. An echo of the announcement rises in my mind, drafting all ages twelve to forty two. Mom is thirty eight years young. She could be here too. Damnit. Seconds pass, I inhale again, but my vision is fine. My mind works. Is this death? Had the tax collectors killed us? Why would tax collectors kill? We were the prize. It was like the IRS collecting your taxes only to put the bills through a shredder. Nothing made any sense. Then I realize waste is standard operating procedure for governments. Amongst four billion people, I¡¯m the typo. Doomed to drown. ¡ª ¡°Final jump portal launched. Geosynchronous orbit achieved.¡± Says the navigation AI, temporarily silencing all other readouts. Diodes and alerts came back in a tidal wave. Beeping, honking, hooting, and all being ignored by the two pilots. ¡°Harvest complete.¡± Chimes an alarm. A zephyr circulates around the cockpit, both pilots hunched over screens, monitoring cryopod readouts for any abnormalities. AI systems sort and categorize almost five billion human beings. 70% of the world was just hoovered up into space using rented teleportation systems. Angry beeping marks two hundred million people as unfit for any possible role within the Singularity. Too many trauma induced psychopaths. ¡°What did these people go through? Why are so many skitzo? Ah hell Jim, the most advanced country is the fatest. We¡¯ll have to reject most of these worthless sacks of shit.¡± Haime says, more for the sake of bitching than for conversation. ¡°Who cares, we got a billion and a half more people than projections accounted for. A billion man! With a B! We can flush the outliers from the past twelve worlds and still exceed every quota for the next two years! Don¡¯t you see it Haime, we¡¯re rich! Hallelujah!¡± Jim shouts, unbuckling his harness and moving to leave. ¡°Abandoning station already? We ain¡¯t even cashed in yet!¡± Snaps Haime, a frown slashing itself across his face. ¡°Bro, I¡¯m just so excited! Even a dead world or the federales won¡¯t break us. I can buy a new head of hair and a century of being twenty five! Gotta go inspect the cargo, see it with my own eyes, not just on sensors.¡± He gasped, feeling lightheaded under the assault of billions of credits. Red warning lights suddenly blare, bathing the cockpit in warnings. ¡°Aw what the hell!¡± Jim snaps, jumping back into his seat and checking the sensor readout. ¡°A portal opening? We launched those seconds ago! Who in their right mind jumps to an uncharted backwater-¡± More red lights appeared. Ships from twelve separate factions were already queued up, transiting through the gate in order of request and priority payments. Haime¡¯s face hangs open, staring at the first ship to emerge. ¡°Jim, if we die¨C¡± ¡°Shutup asshole! Transmit our charter before they vaporize us!¡± Jim shouts. Seconds pass as the sleek crystalline ship emerges from the disk of light. An Azhurai Conglomerate Corvette. Fast, armed to the teeth, and shielded better than most homeworlds. Oddly conical due to the main gun, a prismatic laser array capable of variable output, all the way from scrotum shaving precision to strength capable of peeling away the moon¡¯s regolith layer like one would peel an apple. ¡°Charter has been transmitted. Please leave us alone.¡± Haime prayed. Three lights begin blinking green as missile locks stop tracking the ship. ¡°Azhurai ship turning away, they acknowledge our collection duties as legal.¡± Gasped Jim. ¡°Thank the nameless!¡± Said Haime, collapsing into his chair. A single light began blinking, a com channel. Jim shut his eyes, praying for a moment before answering the com. Two minutes later he spoke. ¡°Shit. Can¡¯t get one over on the Conglomerate. They read our fine print and noticed our open charter.¡± Jim winced, struggling to read the next translation. ¡°We demand first right of refusal concerning any and all special grade merchandise we have aboard-¡± Blaring claxions erupted as twenty additional warships emerged from the portal. Swift Singularity frigates, lumbering moons the Technomancy call dreadnoughts, a swarm of bioships tethered to a single hive mind, and everything in between. Both pilots looked at each other, then got to work. Neither one wanted to catch a stray missile. ¡°Shields to full power. Broadcasting charter to everyone.¡± Said Haime. So many warships above an uncharted world meant only one thing. War. One of those factions would conquer earth, or see it burnt to ashes around them. An easy task given how many guns, bombs, and people Jim had just pilfered from missile siloes and warlords. Now safely defanged in their hold. Instead of on Earth. Without ICBMs or Nuclear weapons these humans had no chance. ¡°Damn. Waste of a good world.¡± Said Jim, maneuvering the arkship behind Luna as the ships began firing. Half at each other, and half at the surface. Chapter 3 The First War for Earth Space combat is generally a long drawn out process as ships detect each other and maneuver across the length of a star system. All that gets dumpstered when it comes to gate battles as twenty ships emerge from the same cubic kilometer of space. In such close quarters visible sensors become meaningful, armor becomes ramming tools, point defence clusters pivot into offensive missiles. Two systems human based civilizations specialize in. Singularity frigates rolled dumping munitions from every tube in a mad scatter. Smart missiles flew at maximum burn seeking targets and finding bioships. Chaff pods, counter mines, and the living ammunition of the biofleet countered with all tentacles, launching their own point defense pods in futile retaliation. ¡°Haime! We¡¯ve got Azhurai missiles headed our way!¡± Jim snapped. ¡°Shut it greenhorn. Keep thrusting.¡± Yelled Haime, watching their velocity increase before glancing at the tactical overlay. ¡°Oh thank the gods.¡± He whispered, visibly relaxing as a dozen nuclear missiles carved the space between Azhurai and Arship. Jim leapt out of his seat grasping Haime by the collar. ¡°WE ARE ABOUT TO DIE!¡± He screamed. ¡°Calm down greenie. You¡¯ve never shared space with the Azhurai have you?¡± ¡°I swear to god i¡¯ll cut your dick off if we die Haime!¡± The older man laughed, knowing there was nothing left to do. ¡°No shame in it. Azhurai shouldn¡¯t be in this spiral arm at all. Anyways, look, the conglomerate is thousands of species working together in a sort of coerced union. But all ships and munitions are built to a strict standard, has to be, otherwise munitions won¡¯t work in different ships. So they are predictable.¡± Haime tapped his neural implant, giving himself a direct slap of dopamine. If he was going to die today, he would die happy. Jim strongly considered shooting him then and there. Hand touching his pistol. The shipboard AI projected itself behind Haime, taking the form of a human woman and shook her head. She didn¡¯t need to say anything, they both knew Jim couldn¡¯t fly the ship without her support. Furious he shoved the dope addict back into his chair. ¡°Then predict us a way out!¡± Haime¡¯s face slumped in the half open smile of an addict receiving their fix.¡°Planets orbit stars, doesn¡¯t mean you can stop night from coming. Azhurai only use cloaked missiles, those are feints. Ha Conglomerate knows they¡¯ve already won, ah and sent those missiles to cover our asses. Look, there.¡± He said, pointing to the tactical projection. A tiny ship, probably the first vessel of an enterprising new species was racing towards the arkship at full thrust, no doubt hoping to hide behind a neutral vessel or land on the moon and stake their claim. Two Azhurai missiles blinked away, cloaking devices activating before beginning their burns. A second later the vessel exploded, shields flickering away as it buckled and bent in half, innards exposed to hard vacuum. Then the second missile hit vaporizing what little remained. Across the atmosphere the battle raged. Singularity point defense beams carved a bioship in half, burning through organic armor in a desperate attempt to divert its momentum. But the Collective knew the value of their ships and the value of a frigate, simple economics took control sentencing every lifeform aboard that bioship to death on the hope of ramming the frigate. A venture both parties were half successful in, as the bioship split, aft end spiraling into deep space while the prow connected amidship. Dropping its shields and puncturing armor. Bioforms would soon infest the human ship turning every hallway into a charnel field. The other factions didn¡¯t give them a chance. Nuclear warheads slagged the bioship into a jet of plasma that poured into the frigate melting the gooey human center. Gaseous steel slagged the reactor and the ship vanished as a second star was created. Of the twenty ships who first transited the gate less than half now maneuvered. Energy collected around the Azhurai prism ship lancing forth to carve three bioships from stern to aft. Jim blinked as the AI classified that single shot as ¡®point defense¡¯. A system generally considered the weakest offensively. ¡°We¡¯re dead.¡± He whispered. As if to mock him the Azhurai ship rotated one hundred and eighty degrees firing their main array to bisect a dreadnought. He was familiar with the Technocracy design, blinking dumbly as the asteroid moon and her ten million crewmen -if you could call wet cyborgs people- died, gone in a second. Then the Conglomerate vessel issued a message. As if firepower needed any commentary. ¡°Comply or be destroyed.¡± It read. Ships continued rotating, but not a single missile or battery fired. A readout of the planet accompanied the message indicating the Azhurai¡¯s plans for development. They would claim two of the surface gates, both located in Eurasia, everything else was free game. Two Singularity frigates angled for the Americas, shadowed by the Technocracy dreadnought. While the injured bioships angled for the southern tip of Africa, clearly the loser of this engagement. Half their ships were gone, easy targets for the more advanced races of a hostile galaxy. Jim and Haime lost interest after the Azhurai laid claim. Earth was going to be carved into pieces then farmed until everything of galactic value bled from the ruined husk. ¡°Poor bastards.¡± Muttered Jim. ¡°Never thought I¡¯d see another Azhurai ship. Twenty billion habitable worlds and they cold dialed this one.¡± Said Haime, shaking his head. ¡°What are the chances four perennial enemies show up the second our gate goes live? Fuck this. I¡¯m leaving. Get us through the gate before another one of the nameless¡¯ clients show up. I get the Singularity and Technomancy monitoring this galactic arm for new worlds, but having two dreadnoughts ready to jump? Collective Bioships too? Hell naw. I¡¯d rather shave my balls in lava.¡± Said Jim, standing and heading for the cryotubes. Haime wore a lazy smile on his face, drugged out of his right mind, ¡°As if you can count past ten! Ha! Azhurai own this system now. Ah, fine, I¡¯ll warm up the engines. Mmmmm, I took too much. Take care of any cargo not worth its hold space and recycle them fatties. Maybe mind wipe one or two of the sweeter things for ourselves. You know what I like.¡± Said Haime, selecting a million cryopods and sending their obese occupants into the protein recycler. ¡°You old perve.¡± Jim sneered, clearing the cockpit as the ship trembled. Emergency thrusters cooled as the main engines returned to normal operations, no longer melting internals for a little more thrust. ¡°Give me gate statuses.¡± Ordered Jim. ¡°Eight gates are unpowered, with only the primary warp gate in orbit possessing the necessary energies.¡± Answered the ship¡¯s AI program, codenamed Felicia. Jim grunted in acknowledgement. He only needed the warp gate to instantly move between systems. While faster than light travel existed on every Singularity vessel, most could only perform jumps within a solar system, and if a captain was fool enough to burn the fuel. Far cheaper to connect a few reactors and power the orbital gate. This story has been unlawfully obtained without the author''s consent. Report any appearances on Amazon. Which provided free travel to all species on the sole condition you feed it more power than the jump required. No problem for a starship and nearly impossible for these particular earthlings. Jim winced, one way or another the Azhurai will solve that dilemma, most likely by advancing their newest captives to the point of useful slaves. Within a year they¡¯ll grow crystal mountains to protect their reactors and gate travel. Then the real conquest will begin. At least that is what the Singularity would do. Establish a beachhead with ships then power the much smaller gates for mass transit of resources offworld. ¡°Sucks to suck earthlings. Sorry but you weren¡¯t gonna survive either way. Aint no way to avoid getting fed into a recycler on Syrak-9. Not unless the heavens open and xeno-Jebus saves you. Or Kaalra thinks you¡¯re cute.¡± Says Jim, shaking his head softly before flushing a few hundred thousand morbidly obese. Massive recyclers would break them down into molecules, scrub undesirables like heavy metals, drugs both prescription and recreational, all non-human DNA ¨Cbugs or parasites¨C and then store the molecules in ready to consume bars. The fatties would never choke back another Twinky, but they would be choked back. Good riddance. A few of the women catch his eye, one has a golden ring hanging from her nipple, no tattoos though. Not good enough for Haime. ¡°You and your obsession with pierced nipples.¡± Groaned Jim, already typing commands to the ship¡¯s AI. ¡°Cycle all the skitzos to the back, rank them from least to most insane, then sort out any abnormalities.¡± ¡°Yes sir.¡± Answered Felicia. Blast doors hissed open for him, cycling as he walks. Not paying attention as the AI sealed each door before unsealing the next, it was standard protocol aboard any ship. Just another part of life in hard vacuum. Besides the stroll gave him time to flush a million of the worst basketcases. Six intervening airlocks divided the freighter, preventing any one breach from killing every soul aboard. Still, the ship was larger than imagination, hundreds of billions fit inside each section on this arkship, adding up to the sum total of one trillion cryopods. Jim smiled at the sleeping audience. Occupants hanging on his approval for life and death. About half of those were currently full, but that was alright. You never wanted to be at 100% capacity, then every technical fault or power hiccup would cut into your profits. ¡°Faults detected, unable to access one hundred and four candidates,¡± Began the ship¡¯s AI, ¡°Displaying four million, eight hundred and¨C¡± ¡°Recycle any that have less than ninety percent compatibility with flash training.¡± Interrupted Jim, hoping to save himself some work. Certain mental abnormalities would prevent the flash training from taking hold, and that would result in wig outs. People who remembered their lives on earth and their time in the tubes, as well as the flash training process. Aware of three separate lives which seemed to break people. Or maybe it was just the fact that aliens were real. Schizophrenics were the worst. No matter how thoroughly you erased them, or how many times they underwent flash training it was only a matter of time before they went postal on the same people who paid good money for these draftees. As a freelancer it was easy for Jim to collect a few extra people, but this haul would set a performance record for the galactic quadrant. He¡¯d HAVE to siphon a few million people off the top just to make this believable. Otherwise they¡¯d have a dozen Singularity AIs crawling up and down his throat; investigating every aspect of his cover story. Jim activated his neural link, the -private- one, and sent a dozen messages to interested buyers in two dozen solar systems. [Got extra merchandise, top quality, or in quantity. Need to offload quick. Discounts for purchases exceeding a million.] Jim Sent the message, smiling as buyers lined up. With the numbers they were offering him, the feds wouldn¡¯t be able to touch him. Hell, two crazy aliens were offering him planets! Most likely they were dead worlds stripped of resources, but it was the thought that mattered. He laughed. Hooting with joy for long minutes before returning to work, tablet reading millions of schizophrenics on board. All of them liabilities. ¡°Aw hell, revise ninety percent compatibility with ninety five percent. Loop in the other harvests too. Lets deliver triple-A goods and keep the wig outs to a minimum.¡± Said Jim. ¡°Ten million candidates fall below that threshold.¡± Jim pressed the button to recycle them. Seconds later a message appeared. [ERROR: Recycler is full.] ¡°Oh baby, a hold full of rations and a billion person bonus haul? Yes please, ice my birthday cake some more.¡± Said Jim, casually flushing the remaining nine million people into space. They died without ever feeling a thing. A mercy that Athena Finley would soon come to dream of. The AI dutifully aimed each person on a collision course with the nearest atmosphere, a standard practice meant to burn up on space debris. Over the next few weeks Earth would be treated to countless meteor showers as millions of their draftees returned home. Five minutes later the AI spoke again, ¡°All ten million vented, approximately two hundred thousand anomalies remaining. One urgent fault.¡± Urgent faults included many things, from someone who could not be flash trained all the way up to psionic boarding parties or a -nameless- ambassador. ¡°Teleport me.¡± Snapped Jim, reaching for his sidearm. Cool Vanadium alloy brushed against his fingers. The simplest solution to an ¡®urgent fault¡¯ was a bullet between the eyes. Energy weapons like beamers or lasers or phasers were more effective, but this was a ship. Frangible slugs were safer, poking less holes in things you didn¡¯t want to depressurize.Like the outer hull or your cargo. Loose crazies aboard a spaceship could get them all killed. Blue light flashed once, fading as he appeared in front of a woman¡¯s tube. She jerked in surprise at the arrival, feet flailing as she curled into a ball, arms covering double Ds before her shapely hips twisted, covering herself. Attractive, but not Jim¡¯s type, nor was she Haime¡¯s. That pervert spent too much time in simulations, nowadays the only thing that could provide suitable stimulation came from impossible amalgamations. Things nothing other than a customized robot could provide. Security shielding blinked into life, surrounding Jim. ¡°Is that weapon dangerous?¡± Asked Jim. ¡°Slug based, self contained chemical propellant, with expanding ammunition. Only effective against unshielded soft targets. No ability to penetrate cryotube.¡± Said Felicia. Jim let out a whoosh of air. Moving his finger off the trigger. He glanced up and down the corridor, seeing everyone else asleep in their tubes. ¡°Ha, after this payday, maybe I¡¯ll buy the jackass a few catgirlbots. At least then he¡¯ll leave the merchandise alone.¡± Jim laughed, leveling the pistol at the woman¡¯s nameplate. ¡°Athena Finley¡± appeared on it. His barrel poked the readout, opening a communication link into the cryotube. ¡®Suitability with flash training, 500% match.¡¯ It read. ¡°Five hundred? What the hell? Felicia! Run some diagnostics! Aint no way. What kind of cyber crack are you smoking¨C Ah, the brain scanner fell off.¡± Jim said, fear turning to humor as he realized the tube was suggesting cryogel was the perfect match for flash training. ¡°As if. Ha, we¡¯d clone people if that worked. Hey! Athena Finley,¡± Said Jim, tapping against the cryotube¡¯s glass, ¡°put that crown on or I¡¯m gonna flush you into deep space. You¡¯ll freeze to death mighty fast, but it¡¯ll be a painful few seconds. Bad way to go.¡± Her eyes shot wide, mouth opening as his words were translated. Jim rolled his eyes, ignoring her sudden wet screaming. So hysterical. He held up three fingers, counting down. ¡°Flushing in three, two¨C¡± Athena scrambled, hands grasping in the viscous fluid for the neurallink. It slid onto her bald head, soon inserting itself into the brainstem and linking the onboard AI directly with her consciousness. ¡°Anomaly, compatibility rising to three thousand percent.¡± ¡°Link in cryotubes until compatibility equalizes!¡± Snapped Jim, his mind working as he leered at the readouts. Three thousand percent was impossible for a baseline human. Usually indicating some kind of trauma induced schizophrenia event. Or some abnormality. Except there was a one in a million chance that kept him anchored, staying his itching fingers from disposing of Athena. Two cryopods added their onboard processing forming a three way linkage. Compatibility lowered to 1000%. A near perfect specimen. Young, intelligent but not cynical, cooperative yet independent, that left two remaining questions. Jim¡¯s tongue ran over his lips, working the spit around his mouth. ¡°Analyze ESP potential.¡± He whispered. Chapter 4 Tunnel of Greed Greed tunneled his vision. Anomalies like this are why he didn¡¯t automate the flushing. Sure, it was a waste of time 99% of the time, but that last percent made all the work worthwhile. Felicia, the ship¡¯s onboard AI was more than capable of sorting fringe cases. Instead he did it, hunting for jackpots. Eyes flicked towards his second tablet, the one Felicia was programmed to ignore. Took six months to sneak it by her, had to use a neural shunt in her mainframe, time for it to pay back that investment. Six beings were already starting a bidding war for first dibs on ¡®gifted¡¯ minds. Xenos who would pay anything for a compatible driver- probably incels who choked out their fuktoy and put the braindead body on ice, except one of the high bidders was a race Jim couldn¡¯t turn down. He swallowed, wondering how a member of the nameless caste had found him. They didn¡¯t bother dealing with mortal races at all, how did they even connect to a Singularity backed arkship like him? Shit. Guess you¡¯ll be their problem. Aint my business. Thought Jim. The nameless caste was the most technologically advanced race in the known universe, ancient beyond comprehension and the undisputed masters of the galaxy. So advanced they even held part or all of the nearby galaxies as well. If they asked for something, you served it up on a golden platter. Supposedly they were only the second species to evolve in the galaxy and borrowed heavily from the first¡¯s technological head start. More importantly they only interacted with their direct client species like the Azhurai Conglomerate¡¯s overlords, another long lived race that did their bidding. ¡°ESP compatible. Chance of self activating, 10%. Chance of reaching useful thresholds with unlimited resources, unlikely. Recommendation, clone specimen and use to incubate a higher potential psionic. Or cross pollinate with high order psionic xenos.¡± Said Felicia, speaking through his implants. He shot a message to Exec Kaalra of the nameless. Answering the ambassador¡¯s earlier request with raw scans. If he wanted her, then he could bid on her privately. The response was immediate and decisive, making Jim¡¯s eyes bug out of his skull at the number of galactic credits on screen. ¡°Bummer¡­ I¡¯ll have to settle for buying my own planet.¡± Whispered Jim, doing a victory shimmy with tablet in one hand and pistol in the other. Athena raised her eyebrow, confused why the man was dancing in front of her. Really hoping it wasn¡¯t some kind of alien mating ritual. He looked human, but was beyond psychopathy. ¡°Oh, ahem, you¡¯re an odd one. Each cull there are a few tall poppies.¡± Jim cleared his throat, holstering the pistol. ¡°What would you do to survive?¡± The question was direct, and not intended to be lewd, but it was difficult for Athena to take it any other way when she was naked and imprisoned in goo. Hell, she was practically pre-lubed at this point. A thought the AI translated into words after directly scanning her mind. ¡°I couldn¡¯t even bang my boyfriend. But I would do anything. Maybe even take that pistol after.¡± The words echoed outside the cryotube, my voice perfectly replicated by speakers. Was it even true? How far would I go to survive? Jim jerked back, surprised and blushing a bit. ¡°Ah, uhm, not what I meant¡­ Would you kill to survive?¡± ¡°I¡¯ve never killed anyone. So¡­ I might try if I thought I could succeed.¡± Said the AI, once more pulling from Athena¡¯s brain. I wanted to scream, to rip the neural worm out of my mind, or take the spacesuited man¡¯s pistol and blow it out of myself! ¡°Please let me live. Don¡¯t hurt me, don¡¯t make me kill anyone-¡± Jim tapped a button, muting the thought to speech system. ¡°Whiney bitch.¡± He spent the next twelve hours running analysis and diagnostics on Athena, thoroughly mapping every millimeter of her synapses. He didn¡¯t stop there, nor did Felicia who categorized each and every mole on Athena¡¯s body. Even going so far as to transfer her to three other cryotubes and repeating the tests. Always smiling a little more as he repeated one word. As if it was an incantation that would bestow eternal life and bottomless wealth. Athena hated the word, and hated being called a ¡®chimera¡¯. Ick, it even sounded mashed together. Like moldy milk squished into sprouting potatoes, vile and poisonous. Jim never muted the external microphones, soon letting slip details she would rather not have known. ¡°Twelve half siblings, different mothers, dang, dad likes to get busy. Bummer, none have similar traits. Must be from mom¡¯s side. Aw shit, we left the mother on earth cause she¡¯s pregnant. Damn.¡± He tapped his tablets, cursing about leaving the system. Mom survived. She was safe¡­ With Athena¡¯s little sibling. It would have been nice to be a big sister. Weird to be in college with a new sibling, but in a way that only made the bond more special. Besides those twin nuggets of hope, Athena hated everything, from the goo in her armpits and bellybutton to the portly technician, and especially the wires crawling through her brain, occasionally poking a nerve and sending a spasm through her body. This is the worst possible way to have someone inside me. Thoughts of sex sent her into despair. Dad was a cheater. Not just any cheater, but a serial impregnator. Twelve step siblings? TWELVE? That was more seamen than you could stuff into an Ohio Class submarine! When did he even find the time? Dad was always so busy with work and church. You might be reading a stolen copy. Visit Royal Road for the authentic version. Dad wasn¡¯t just ¡®dad¡¯ he was ¡®Father Finley¡¯, a bishop of their church- It all clicked. The late nights he spent at church, ¡®offering comfort¡¯ or ¡®council¡¯ to the women in his flock. Why the church was mostly women, a solid ratio of seven women for every three men. More than two to one¡­ But all the women had kids. Calling each other brother and sister suddenly took on a new, less altruistic, meaning. Mother¡¯s inexplicable tears suddenly connected with Athena¡¯s heart. Every night she knew where her husband was, with his very own version of Whorely. Crap taste in men might be genetic. Athena scowled at that. Remembering how Mom cried herself to sleep while dad was out late ¡®stuck at church¡¯. More like stuck in a ho. The affairs had been going on for decades. How did Athena not know? Was I raised in a church? Or a cult? Thought Athena. She had no time to process, Jim tapped on the panel, unmuting her mind. ¡°Would you kill your dad?¡± ¡°Ew, what? You dump all this on me and demand answers?! Go ride a broomstick. The pointy end.¡± Says Felicia, reading her mind before she can speak. Jim gets the message and chuckles. ¡°Gun to your head, would you kill your father to survive? Answer carefully, it¡¯s the difference between death and giving birth every second until you die while machines keep you alive. You¡¯ll never taste anything other than a plastic tube, or feel your legs.¡± I look at him, mouth falling open in horror. I¡¯m a virgin, what the hell is he even talking about? Human¡¯s can¡¯t grow more than one kid at a time! Birth every second? Yeah right¡­ Why was he so specific? But the AI reads my mind faster than thought. ¡°Extrapolation, yes and no. In such a scenario where I had a gun to my head and a gun to my father¡¯s head, I would ask him the question-¡± The program shifted pitch to speak with Athena¡¯s voice, ¡°Dad, they say I''ll die if I don¡¯t shoot you, what should I do? Then if he answers I should save myself, I couldn¡¯t kill him. But liars can¡¯t put anyone ahead of themselves. So I would pull the trigger.¡± A long low whistle escapes Jim¡¯s lips. ¡°Good answer. Aight. I¡¯m going to make you a deal. One you¡¯ll accept. A very powerful man, no. The most powerful man in this spiral arm, wants your mind and he is paying for it. Goes by the name of Exec Kaalra. Whatever he wants, you¡¯ll give him and thank him for the privilege to serve. Now go to sleep. The flash conditioning will be a bit painful if you can¡¯t sleep through it.¡± He pauses, pulling a black chunk out of his spacesuit pressing it against the glass and twists, blue light blinks around us. All the lights go out. My pod is suddenly dark. A total void where nothing, not even the light of the adjacent tubes can enter mine. ¡°Listen here. Felicia can¡¯t hear us right now. Chimera¡¯s like you aint exactly legal to sell. What exactly Kaalra has planned for you is a mystery, but the amount he¡¯s paying means you¡¯re special. And I aint letting no one burn out your skull. So listen. I¡¯m gonna to split your mind three ways then entangle em all together. That ought to keep you running for the next few centuries. Maybe longer if you take advantage of the system and roll with it.¡± I scowled at the man, mentally telling him to fellate an elephant and die. Too bad Felicia really wasn¡¯t listening. ¡°Athena, cmon. Look, this is the best deal you¡¯ll ever get! Go along with it and I¡¯ll make sure mom knows you¡¯re safe. Fight me, and I¡¯ll drop a rock on her. Parting out pregnant ladies is messy, but profitable. Work with me here, give me every reason to keep her alive. Earth¡¯s in the shit, but the singularity took over your continent. One message to the higher ups and I¡¯ll have your whole family marked as psychically intriguing. Potential military assets. That¡¯ll keep em safe. Felicia¡¯s already made arrangements, if you cooperate, then you¡¯ll end up in three separate bodies. Tell no one about that. Chimeras are outlawed, if Kaalra finds out he¡¯ll murder you and your whole family, half siblings too. Then push Earth into the sun to be sure. Nameless like him don¡¯t know what a half measure is.¡± Fear illuminated Jim¡¯s eyes, as if the very thought of this ¡®Kaalra¡¯ terrifies him. ¡°Athena, girl, I¡¯m begging you, don¡¯t fuck with the nameless caste. All that bullshit about becoming farmers and generals of the singularity? Aint gonna happen. Except for a few dozen fringe cases like you.¡± He placed the second tablet against her tube, pressing buttons that sent a dataspike into her cortex. Directly downloading information about the modern galaxy into her mind. Earth was going to be flayed, strip mined, and raped for the next century. Unless- -I take Syrak-9. We have five years to take the game world. Called game because the nameless caste demanded their vassal states send a legion to fight and die on it each year. Earth wasn¡¯t being drafted, they were being sacrificed into a meatgrinder so other planets did not have to sacrifice their sons and daughters. ¡°Aint pretty. But you¡± Jim jabbed a finger at my chest, ¡°can win Athena Finley. Find a way. I¡¯ll keep your mother safe, buy her a nice guardian AI. State of the art with a cold fusion reactor and hidden plasma cannons. She¡¯ll never want for anything. A bot like that can do more than the dishes, just think about it, having one of the most intelligent beings in all of creation guide her through the galaxy. Do we have a deal?¡± He whispered. I want to accept, but the neural interface speaks for me in a stilted facsimile. ¡°Flash training will lobotomize me. How can I keep a promise?¡± Jim snorts. ¡°Flashtraining will wear off a cracked-head like yours. Accept it for a few days. Don¡¯t fight it, the machines push harder if you resist so fighting it will cause brain damage. Bad idea. Besides, there¡¯s no need, you¡¯ll eventually break it naturally. When you come to, do NOT talk to the doctors. Continue playing your role. Be the person you are paid to be.¡± I weigh the odds quickly. Making the right decision on the drop of a dime is a skill of mine. Maybe I acquired it playing endless tournaments of 1v1 Starcraft. A talent that serves me well here. Jim has no incentive to help me, but there are no better alternatives. I can only gain. If he does give mom a guardian AI, she¡¯ll eventually figure it out, and force it to find me, something I can facilitate by agreeing. ¡°Make the AI look like me. Otherwise she¡¯ll never be satisfied. I¡¯m the only one she can really trust, just look at dad¡­¡± Jim laughs. ¡°Ah, your old man is a piece of work! Guess that¡¯s fair. You¡¯re allowing me to retire, so I can at least give the same to your mom. Hell, I¡¯ll even clone your cells so she¡¯s really talking to you. Now, keep this secret. I¡¯m just doing my job. We never met, we never spoke, and your mom will be safe for the rest of her life. Which will be extended, I wasn¡¯t lying about the Singularity upgrading earth, we dropped off the gates. Entrepreneurs will probably dial Earth in a few months and start selling goodies at a hundred times the market value. But your mom will get the finest nanotech once I get paid. Gotta keep my word. Nanotech will clear out most diseases and ninety percent of aging related issues. Your mom will probably live past two hundred years old.¡± I hope he¡¯s not lying through that smile. Not like I can pick out a liar, not after dad¡­ What else did he lie about? Then take a deep breath and nod my head. Jim yanks the artefact free, lights return suddenly, and Jim taps the panel a few times, jets of liquid shoot into my tube, coloring the cryogel blue. The last thing I see before my eyes close. I never comprehend what Felicia and Jim do to my mind, nor why they needed multiple cryotubes to sync my brain. >Defragmentation completed. >Neural nodes networked. >Hive mind accepted. >Flashtraining commencing¡­ Chapter 5 Allies or Enemies? and Split Minds My new life flashed before my eyes, weapons instructions, a decade of twenty mile hikes that ended in live fire drills, constant wargames, simunition -a sort of non lethal projectile- games that lasted months on end. Trench warfare with and without live artillery support. Accidents took their toll, many lost the will to fight or gave up and were euthanized by our instructors. Singularity conscripts obeyed or died. All told, we started with a thousand of us ¡®clones¡¯ by the end one hundred and five of us remained. Veterans of war before we ever set foot on the battlefield. I knew it was all a dream, a product of the cryotube¡¯s flash training. But I was no longer the pilot of my own body. It moved and obeyed the whims of Sable Yurten. My new identity. I am Sable Yurten, elite conscript of the Holy Singularity. Our body is teleported once more, this time to a holding area. The cryotubes here are identical, aligned in a hexagonal shape that matches the room we now call home. Only my eyes are open. All others are still asleep, including Sable Yurten. A presence dreams within my mind, picturing a life spent beneath the earth in bunkers filled with ammunition. Dreaming and waking simultaneously is a fever dream. To combat the separate lines of thought I focus on what is around me. Cryotubes line the walls, ceiling, and floor, allowing six rows of human beings to be crammed into the tunnel. Our bodies float in gel under reduced gravity, at peace. Except for me. My heart slows, often stopping for seconds at a time. I never sleep. No, one eye is always cracked, watching armed instructors enter the room, waking my former Earthlings. Blurry outlines don clothing and gear, then seal gasmasks over faces, with only a faint red glow leaking out of their eyes. Through the glass I see a familiar woman. Attractive despite her shaved head. Light glistens off her pleasantly round dome, so similar to how she looked when we both attended earth science 102 a semester ago, and sat opposite each other. Maybe it was some effect of her African heritage, or maybe her parents had not dropped her as a kid, but the shaved head was startlingly feminine. So when Doctor Abrahms went on his rants about railguns being a thousand years out, we had front row seats to each other. I wonder where old Dr. Abrahms is now. Maybe still in the lecture hall standing at the center of the semicircular room. Alone. Robbed of any purpose by his student¡¯s abduction. Regret fills my mind, annoyed that I never learned this woman¡¯s name. Then I curse her. She¡¯s resisting the clothes, covering herself and crying. Curse her stupidity. Play along idiot! Please, don¡¯t make a scene! Medics are not your friend¨C ¨CIt''s too late. One of the proctors has stepped behind her. Pistol exits holster. An energy weapon that creates a tiny ball of plasma no larger than your pinky nail. Precise, there won¡¯t be any overpenetration. Sable¡¯s seen it before. Highly effective against soft targets. Bordering on useless in a fight against the Technocracy who favors heavy cyborgs and vehicles. My classmate¡¯s skull is a soft target, putting on a gory display as the medic provides ¡®recursive retraining.¡¯ She¡¯s learned the last lesson of her life, and has no need of further instruction. Not wanting to emulate her, I go limp in my tube. Sable¡¯s false memories guide my eye as the recruits cloth themselves. The ritual is strange really, there are hundreds of us within this corridor, yet only twelve are ever awoken. Without guns or bayonets the proctors have the upper hand, no amount of wig outs could overpower them. Yet they limit themselves to twelve people on the walkway and twelve tubes decanting. The cycle repeats ad infinitum til I realize why. Each of the twelve is a flash trained human that follows a pattern, the first likes to wear his laces tight, cinching them down so hard his feet turn white. He¡¯s nervous, those laces will have to be loosened soon. A mistake I see repeated in each squad, always by number one. Meanwhile the seventh soldier is always a woman, slender, and taller than average, she has to receive specific gear, or else the rebreather hose won¡¯t reach from her face to the air scrubber. Shaped so similarly to cali-girl Savannah. Each woman makes my heart beat faster, always wondering if this number seven is the genuine Savannah. Our drafters were thorough and have tailored every detail of our flash trainings to individuals. Yet always repeating certain patterns. Which is when I notice number eleven. Busty, not too tall, or short, painfully average really in both height and weight. A fascinating error in the otherwise thorough simulations. We¡¯re Americans, which is to say, fat as fuc. Not half starved levies who completed a hundred mile march in full kit before shipping off to this planet. Sable¡¯s memories explain it, but it¡¯s all I can do to not break into laughter at the cheap excuse. I endure the mirth silently, chuckling until my ribs are sore. Our flash training explained the weight gain as ¡®cryo sickness¡¯. Since we¡¯re asleep but in a vat of nutrients our bodies supposedly absorb everything, putting on extra weight in a necessary inconvenience that will prepare us for half rations in the future. Love what you''re reading? Discover and support the author on the platform they originally published on. The excuse is so half baked I let out a real snort, triggering a blinking alarm on my cryopod. Aw crap¡­ I¡¯ve done it now. Play along,. Don¡¯t get shot. Shit, I¡¯m holding my FNX, how I kept it and not any clothes is a mystery that forever damns Jim as a letcher. One of the proctors sees my light blink. Face unreadable under their gas mask. An emotionless stare of twin rubies that sweeps the rows of people ahead of us. Her head jerks facing another proctor. Beneath all the gasmasks and flashtraining we¡¯re still human. Facing someone when we talk is a deeply ingrained habit. Not even helmet integrated radios can defy human nature. The nearest proctor points to me, and the other shrugs, counting pods. They¡¯re decanting the wall opposite me, I''m situated near the back of the room so if they continue their rotation and start at the front of my aisle then I have hours before they¡¯ll reach me. Two more squads are activated, clothed and sent to war. No guns are dispensed. Probably an anti wig-out measure. Which is when they turned around, and started opening my squad. Easier to start at the end and work their way back to front. Our cryotubes hiss open, glass parting along invisible seams. It¡¯s probably not glass at all, but I¡¯m no material engineer. Not yet at least. Most my comrades are slow to wake, allowing the proctors to open twenty four capsules at once, so one squad may arm while the other rises from the coma. I feign sleep, until the flash training rears its ugly conditioning. My body moves without instructions, I extend a hand out of the goo, and the proctors take hold of me, pulling my naked ass out. A surprisingly clean affair. In the low gravity the goo remains in the pod, somehow adhering tighter to the steel tube than my hairless body, which slurps out of the cryogel entirely clean. A quick examination shows that my eyelashes and eyebrows are gone. Creepy. Not that anyone will see under my helmet. My body dons the wargear, helmet, gasmask, then a thin layer of almost spandex, tighter, more form fitting and entirely meant for hazardous conditions. A sort of anti-radiation spanxs-suit. Then comes bra -no way am I going to war without support!-, shirt, pants, body armor for the chest, outer trousers, overjacket, gloves, boots, and the whole mess is then sealed. Like a fremen stillsuit, except meant to keep out radiation instead of keeping us in water. We¡¯ll sweat worse than boiled pigs in these, but we won¡¯t die of cancer. A tradeoff that might be meaningless. Jim¡¯s download warns me of Syrak-9, an irradiated hellscape for half the planet, where only mobile mining cities can exist. Scrapping by on merit of being the only ones stupid enough to risk their lives for the wealth of Solarium mining. Those are off limits to all soldiers as the local population. While the other half of the planet is a forest world, bioengineered plants scrub the toxic atmosphere, and cities that would be more at home in the forests of LothLorien than in space rise thousands of meters into the air. Bioengineering at its pinnacle. It helps to have a planetary shield as well. Orbital bombardments can¡¯t hit the forest cities. They say knowledge is power, but none of that knowledge helps me now. Of a thousand candidates only one hundred and five remain. I watch as my body moves, in control of nothing. This is going to be a problem! I think, watching as my body jogs out of the tuberoom and into some kind of open staging area. Steel walls rise a hundred feet into the air and far deeper below, catwalks run from our hexagonal cryotube rooms across empty space towards a glowing portal. Some kind of instant teleportation gate. To my Earthling brain it looks like one of those old stargates, the ones from the series where a twenty year old was played by a gray haired badass. Captain Kirk he was not, but the series was fun. Until I look down at my hands. Half of Earth is fighting a war after being mind wiped. Maybe Stargate was the psi op it always joked about being, preparing us for the day our world was culled. Come to think of it, the Goa''uld even used the same terminology. Creepy. I keep pace with the squad. Each catwalk passes in front of a floating disk covered in officers. All watching us, several aids move to and fro, giving reports and keeping the logistical war machine running. I¡¯m impressed. Four billion recruits have been drafted, mind wiped, flash trained, and moved across multiple galactic arms in a matter of hours, making me question the volume of war. Is four billion a daily death toll, or have we been recruited with intent. Syrak-9 is a special world. Worthy of a dedicated armada, if the nameless ever allowed such a thing. Speakers blare, repeating a simple briefing. ¡°will seek out and destroy all alien lifeforms. Syrak-9 is a solarium mining world, do not use or allow any form of irradiation. Per treaty, no orbital support is permitted, nor may you leave the continent. Violators are subject to immediate execution. Good Luck. You will seek out and destroy all alien¡­¡± That¡¯s all we hear before our turn comes. A staff officer, some kind of lieutenant armored in pocket protectors and carrying an extra pencil instead of a pistol, points to us, number one knows the order and marches into the gate. ¡°Your weapons will be on the other side.¡± Says the officer. Chapter 6 What is Trust? 0 / 0 Biomass (Selves excluded) (Harvest more biomass) My squad trusts him, I trust him. Lieutenant pencil pusher has no reason to lie. Through the gate we go bodies converting to energy and back to matter before we know what¡¯s happened. Harsh winds rip around our greatcoats, imperceptible to our focused intent. What is perceptible however, is the muddy trench and bodies. We¡¯re surrounded by a score of corpses, mostly laying in tattered shreds, as if an uncountable number of conscripts were fed into a wood chipper. This is not an armory. Nor any kind of staging ground. Memories rise, how most of the thousand Yurten recruits died replays in my mind. Friendly fire incidents, when artillery shells encountered a strong headwind and fell short, onto our positions. A survival lottery that no skill or action on your part could influence. It simply came down to getting lucky. Today, we did not get lucky. Shadows scatter around us, more than I can count. One sprints towards us, tackling seven. I see gills, claws, and bulging eyes. As if this creature is a deep sea fish in too low a pressure. As conscripts we only wear armor over our chests and a helmet to protect our vitals. The logic being those are places where a fight ending injury can occur the easiest, but they missed a spot. Our necks. The thing, whatever it is, clamps down on seven¡¯s neck. Inch long fangs pierce her coat, radiation liner, and flesh. Before I can think the FNX is in my hand, safety off. I¡¯m running. One finger taps the loaded chamber indicator telling me the weapon is fully loaded. I only need to pull the trigger. Four squadmates join the melee, yanking the creature off its feet. A knife appears, straight edged but with an S curved handle, not made for human hands. Flash training has turned these flabby Americans into hardened warriors. Each hand or foot is bent backwards leveraging digits until the creature is a shattered mess. A fifth squadmate grabs the knife plunging it into the creature''s eye. Spasms run through the piranha-like humanoid. Jaw clenches shut, severing Seven¡¯s spine. Drawing the pistol only took a half second, but that¡¯s all the time it takes to end the fight. Nine people are clustered around the two bodies knee deep in violence. The perfect target for any smart artillery. Number one, our sergeant speaks first, unphased by violence as an untrained earthling ought to be. ¡°We¡¯re clustered, spread¨C¡± Artillery vaporizes number one. Direct hit. A high explosive shell crushes the man, plowing six feet into muddy trench before the proximity fuse understands it hit something. Fire annihilates most of the squad, only tearing me in half. Memories remind me that Mom gets nothing if we don¡¯t win these wargames. We must take the planet. The pressure wave knocks me unconscious before I can feel pain, killing Sable Yurten. ¡ª >Matriarch Hygieia: OW! WHAT THE HELL! WARN ME >Executrix Alaea: Wasn¡¯t me. I¡¯m safe on this Azhurai ship. Tiny quarters though. >Executrix Alaea: I felt it too. Like getting cut in half. We must have a third >Matriarch Hygieia: had a third. feels like we are gonna die. >Matriarch Hygieia: what happens if they die? >Executrix Alaea: There is time. have location, sending my personal nanites. A moment passed between messages. Information returning to the Azhurai Conglomerate warship. >Executrix Alaea: Extensive damage. Bots need biomass to plug these holes. >Matriarch Hygieia: shit >Matriarch Hygieia: die now or tomorrow >Executrix Alaea: I don¡¯t want to die¡­ >Matriarch Hygieia: Oh man, this is gonna hurt¡­ >Matriarch Hygieia: take my hip arms >Matriarch Hygieia: wont need them til the combat drop >Matriarch Hygieia: can regrow them by then ¡ª Sable Yurten died. As people tend to do when they are killed. Her veneer of lies stripped away by unfriendly fire¨C ¨CAnd the bitches left me holding the bag. I became aware slowly, light coming back into my pupils. Legs tingle for several minutes as feeling returns, coming in a distinct wave that starts near my ribs and ripples down, through my pelvis, over my hips, into knees, calves, feet, and finally my toes. They¡¯re all weirdly cold, I look down and find blue arcs of light crawling over my ¨Conce again¨C naked lower half. Weird, how did my toenails get painted black? Stolen from its original source, this story is not meant to be on Amazon; report any sightings. I shake the distraction, more annoyed at an emergent pattern, one I am already fed up with! What philandering jerk leaves a woman naked in the trenches? Baz-hole? The blue sparks tickle my legs, creeping entirely too close to my lady bits. ¡°Eek!¡± I swat them away, or try to. Fingers touch sparks and I get gently tased. Like licking a nine volt battery if you mixed the sensation with spicy shaving cream, thick, painfully tingly and now all over my freaking hands! I throw myself sideways, kicking and flailing until my sparkly hands land on the severed torso of twelve. Sparks leap from me to her, encircling her upper half and arcing to her legs, she was cut in half like me, not vaporized like number one. In a sort of negative flash the sparkles and body vanish. One moment they are present, the next I receive a mental alert, so similar to Jim and Haime¡¯s draft notice. [+1 Biomass] 0 / 1 Biomass ¡°What the hel¨C¡± Before I can finish the thought, text appears in my mind, so similar to the chat function in Wings of Liberty, a game I once played. It''s been years since I¡¯ve seen that style of text, mainly because I have the chat function muted. Nothing is left there except friends who haven¡¯t logged on in three years and edgy politics. Not here. Two people have been having a conversation for what looks like hours. As if they existed while I was still in my cryotube, before Jim ran his tests. >Matriarch Hygieia: tasty >Matriarch Hygieia: like radioactive pork thats oversalted and undercooked >Matriarch Hygieia: wait¡­ >Matriarch Hygieia: this doesnt taste like the biopools >Matriarch Hygieia: its not my biomass >Executrix Alaea: Wasn¡¯t me. >Matriarch Hygieia: Is our other half alive? >Executrix Alaea: Can you have three halves? Hey! Athena Finley, say hello! You know which buttons to press. >Matriarch Hygieia: dna is a double helix so this is human >Matriarch Hygieia: asshole >Matriarch Hygieia: you sent me human biomass? >Executrix Alaea: Ick. But¡­ Does it matter if you aren¡¯t human yourself? >Matriarch Hygieia: not really >Matriarch Hygieia: its the thought that counts ¡°This can¡¯t be real¡­¡± I begin to say, coming up short. My voice trails off as I stare at my toes, whatever is making the nails dark isn¡¯t polish. A permanent fashion statement that will forever ruin my favorite heels. Yet, I have larger concerns, my legs are no longer the same, already showing more muscle and less fat, although that might just be the perfect shave. I run my fingers over them, glass has more friction than these sexy bitches. I¡¯m dazed. So much has occurred I need a moment. My mouth works out my thoughts. ¡°In the past day I was cheated on, conscripted into a galactic military, cloned or something, transported across planets, and implanted with the memories of an entire life. Blown in half and rebuilt by¡­ something indistinguishable from magic. This really isn¡¯t all that strange.¡± I say aloud, scrambling into the pants left behind by number twelve. Hey, I don¡¯t like graverobbing at all, but I ain''t running around a planet without pants on! Besides, twelve¡¯s body is gone, no blood or viscera remains, leaving guilt free pants behind. Boots too. Ambient radiation will give me cancer inside of an hour, best armor up. Somehow my pistol survived along with the magazines. A small miracle. I will make it home. This war feels so lost, hopeless even. Fifteen seconds is how quickly my entire squad survived, from the first man through the gate to the last casualty. Why they sent humans here and not sealed tanks and mechs is a strategic error I struggle to comprehend. So stupid. Earth has tanks! Jim said those were taken, so why not use them? Through my helmet I hear whistling. More artillery. I can still recall the sensation of being blown in half. Panic ignites my feet. I duck and run, sprinting through the muddy trenches in search of safety or cover. There¡¯s none. Someone built this trench to be a highway. Thirty feet deep with logs and metal grating to line them. A sort of reinforcement that limits how deep your average fatass would sink into the mud, a Technomancy tactic so their war machines can keep on warring without getting stuck. Useless in keeping an infantryman¡¯s boots dry. I¡¯m exposed here. Dirt trenching alone isn¡¯t enough to protect from bombardment, standard singularity training says bunkers should be placed every quarter mile at a minimum. While the Technomancy standard is looser at a mile or two. A shell lands in front of me, burying itself in the wet dirt before exploding. Dirt rises in a split second, sending a concussion wave that kicks me in the face. My helmet takes the brunt, and I''m grateful for the integrated gas mask. Quality gear, built to function after a direct hit. Which I¡¯ve taken two of. Together they manage to keep my head intact as the wind forcibly exits my lungs, ears pop. Silence follows. Were it not for the twin glass circles my eyes would be gone as well. Concussed. I lay in the mud for several seconds, wheezing as my entire body reels in pain. Like I¡¯ve been tenderized by a dozen Rock Johnsons. Or a dildo factory, but I repeat myself. No one comes to save me, there are no weapons here, only the odd chat window. I drag myself onto my feet, wobbling down the trench in what feels like a sprint; hoping to find a bunker where I can get my bearings and link up with Singularity forces. Praetorian Panoptes is right, I know the buttons. The window isn¡¯t really a window, it''s a borderless square in the bottom right hand corner of my vision. >Executrix Alaea: Ouch! Please don¡¯t die, Earth needs you. Mom needs you. Can¡¯t heal you again. >Matriarch Hygieia: I¡¯ll kill you if you die! >Matriarch Hygieia: Stay alive! >Matriarch Hygieia: Hide in a hole if you have to!!!!!! Mentally I press enter, flicking my pinky to open chat. >Human Athena: artillery strike. I¡¯m alive. ouch. >Matriarch Hygieia: what the hell¡­ HUMAN? >Matriarch Hygieia: AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH >Executrix Alaea: Ignore her. Shes uh¡­ I don¡¯t know how to say this, not human anymore? Having a hard time adjusting. Kinda zergy, but don¡¯t worry about that. >Human Athena: Is that why my toenails are black? Did you make me half zergy? >Matriarch Hygieia: HA! serves you right. Chapter 7 Pain 0 / 1 Biomass Pain rakes my body. Fire running through my being. Bones must be broken due to the shockwaves. I can still feel aftershocks. No, that makes no sense. Earthquakes have aftershocks not artillery shells¨C ¨CWhich means the shaking is more shells. Someone is bombarding the trench en masse, peppering it with dumb artillery shells after a smart shell killed a whole squad. I need to get under cover. Flash training drives me onwards, clawing my feet back and forcing me down the trench, limping on my left foot, must have twisted it. Zerg are tough, guess I¡¯m still human. Like my name. I really dislike that moniker but chewing the fat in chat comes after running for your life. >Human Apollo: I¡¯m alone, in a trench war with terminators. Fuck this shit. Teleport out? Give me a shield? Or a gun? These jackoffs didn¡¯t even give me a combat shovel! A moment passes, the only feedback being the metal mesh beneath my half tied boots. One glance at the walls tells a story of wood stacked below layers of steel mesh and additional supports. This trench is old, with a lasagna of fortifications layered atop each other. Humans have been fighting over this dirt for centuries, attacking, destroying, rebuilding in a perpetual cycle. With a couple of odd layers marking times when secondary antagonists -aliens- swept the field. Judging by the heavy treadmarks pressed into the mud I guess this is Technomancy territory. That checks out with the flash training, as trenches this wide are hard to defend with infantry and light vehicles. Standard policy for Singularity trenches is tight and narrow ten feet at most, we only use infantry and all terrain equipment so mud doesn¡¯t stop us. I pray no artillery shells are whistling my way, but I''m deaf. Not like I can do anything if I hear the shells coming. In a way, that¡¯s relaxing. >Executrix Alaea: Already tried to beam you up. Can¡¯t. The equipment I have is a glorified microwave. Instant teleportation but not for anything the -nameless- are aware of. Or us three. Surprised my nanites warped to you. >Human Athena: Xeno-voldemort is gonna get me killed? Really? >Human Athena: Fuck off with that bullshit! >Executrix Alaea: I swear I would if I could! Might be a security lock out¡­ Athenao, we are no longer human. These names weren¡¯t picked by us and my ship does not have a human habitable atmosphere. Even if you could get beamed up, your lungs would catch on fire and melt. Same for Hygieia. >Human Athena: I¡¯m going to die if you don¡¯t help me. >Matriarch Hygieia: Survive bitch. >Matriarch Hygieia: Hey, send me more biomass and i can make some bioforms >Matriarch Hygieia: hive ship is organic so i got wiggle room >Matriarch Hygieia: send and receive a bit without being noticed >Matriarch Hygieia: takes time. but I¡¯m safe >Matriarch Hygieia: safe enough ¡°AAAAAHHH! What do you expect me to do? Hide in a hole and poop bodies?¡± I shout, the sound muffled by my gasmask. A bend in the trench slows me, apprehension about turning the corner. My FNX isn¡¯t going to dent a Techno-tank or knock out Azhurai shielding. Slowing down only makes me vulnerable to getting shot in the back. I''m gonna be lucky or dead. Steeled, I walk forward like I''m the limping bombed out Queen of Trenchlandia.I glance back at the pile of comrades, just in time to see dozens of electric pink iguanas jump into the trench. Tulverians, aliens with laser rifles and blast armor over half their otherwise exposed scales. Filthy xenos. The narrative has been illicitly obtained; should you discover it on Amazon, report the violation. With plasma rifles. For a second I¡¯m tempted to try my luck, but only a second. One pistol versus a full squad of enemies? Even Clint Eastwood¡¯s .44 magnum would run dry. I jog forward, ankle bringing tears to my eyes as pain sledgehammers my leg. Around the bend I run, hoping the crocodilianoids are sated by eating other earthlings. On second thought, I hope we taste like shit. The last thing I need is iguanas thinking I''m a snakey-snack. The trench in front of me lies empty the very thing I¡¯ve been looking for. A black maw, the entrance to an underground bunker. Twenty feet wide and nearly thirty feet tall the orifice dares me to advance. Such an entrance is never constructed by Singularity forces, it¡¯s too exposed. Any half-competent rocketeer could drop a nuke through this gaping hole from ten clicks away. At night! Of all alien races Jim informed me of, only heavy warmachines like Technocracy Juggernauts would need this. I cup my ears, forgetting that I''m deaf. Mud trembles as shells land above the trench, my options here suck. ¡°Get lucky or die.¡± I say, jogging along the trench wall to the bunker¡¯s mouth. I pass an exit ramp, a place in the trench wall that¡¯s been bulldozed so tanks can enter and exit. On a whim I jog up it, hoping to find cover in the contested land outside the trenches rather than run into a bunker praying it''s abandoned. There is an old saying back on Earth. Speak of the devil and he shall appear. No sooner have I stuck my head above the ramp than twelve Juggernauts rise above their own trenches belching clouds of black smoke as they launch hundreds of missiles. A volley so comprehensive that chemtrails blot out the sun. Energy batteries whine and fire, detonating dozens of missiles. A futile waste of power. Thousands of the missile fleet strike home sending a shockwave that even my deaf ears can register. Twelve Juggernauts is an armored division, Singularity protocol states we should call in an orbital bombardment or sacrifice ten thousand infantrymen to clog up their treads. They call that a ¡®mobility kill¡¯, since the tank will be a sitting duck until space assets or special anti-armor weapons can be brought to bear. Real guns. I NEED to hide, turning to limp down the ramp, reaching the bottom simultaneously with three Tulverians. Mouths stained red. Laser rifles armed, charged, and at the ready. The leader sees me, skull crest rising, gun aiming at my chest, mouth opening to¨C -He blinks. Pupil shifting towards the bunker. I feel the rumble more than hear it. Thudding into my chest like a massage chair dialed up to ¡®beat them silly with hammers then ask for a big tip¡¯. Thousands of slugs rupture the trio, turning them into pink mist before I can blink. One second they are there, the next they aren¡¯t. ¡°Cute magic trick.¡± I mutter, smiling darkly. My brain registers the response as abnormal. But ignore it, wondering how much blood I lost today. Adrenaline should be spiking now, but my glands seem to be empty. Exhaustion hits. I slump against the trench wall, sitting down. Then collapsing onto my butt. A Juggernaut, three stories of branching gun barrels, sensors, and armor plating rolls into view, turning away from me and rolling up the far ramp. Dozens, possibly hundreds of individual guns are welded or bracketted to the Juggernaut in a massive tree of firepower. As if someone made an American christmas tree of AR-15¡¯s then bolted it to a remote controlled Killdozer. Rear facing autocannons aim at me, tracking as the juggernaut rises above the trench¡¯s lip. For some inexplicable reason it doesn¡¯t fire. Maybe because I¡¯m no threat to it. But Sage has seen Juggernauts fire their guns just to feel recoil, some vestigial reflex from its human pilot. There is only one, located at center mass of the steel box. Five feet above the solarium reactor. So maybe this one is out of bullets? It''s an autocannon type, armed with scores of individual guns all pulling from individual magazines. Either way, it turns to join the other twelve Juggernauts, firing a handful of missiles to support their advance. I¡¯m left there. Alone. Waiting for the end. Until Alaea¡¯s words reach me. We can¡¯t die here. Earth dies unless we win. They took four billion of us. If only one in thirty of us survive, we¡¯ll still have enough to drown thousands of Juggernauts under our bodies. It¡¯s time to win. Not bitch out and F10 + S. Cold logic knows I¡¯m not firing on all cylinders so it analogizes life with Starcraft 2. This is a damn cannon rush and I¡¯m an itty bitty SCV, But unlike in the game, I can armor up and become a Warhound. Before I can talk sense into my ramblings feet carry me into the bunker, jumping over wires left near the entrance. Nightvision activates automatically, illuminating the bunker¡¯s interior with twin green beams. ¡°Nightvision, dial to minimum.¡± Chapter 8 Tech Marines before Warhounds 1 / 1 Biomass The eye beams dim to wire thick beams, almost nothing, still too much light. A Juggernaut has sensor suites, and their technicians are infamous for replacing organic eyeballs with wider spectrum scanners. I may as well be driving through Walmart on an electric scooter with a dozen air horns blaring. Except today I rolled all sixes. Walmart is empty. No one is present. In fact, all lights are off and most the equipment is gone. This isn¡¯t a real bunker, just an ammo cache. ¡°Thank god.¡± I mutter. Stacks of rockets with red and yellow hazard striping on the nosecones rise into the air. High explosive warheads. Too large for a human to move or carry. Hundreds of empty crates line the walls and floor, autocannon ammo of various calibers, all empty. I quickly scrounge through the bunker, finding a flechette pistol and two thousand rounds. Which really sounds like a lot until you realize the ¡®pistol¡¯ is the size of a briefcase, not really a pistol at all. Instead it''s a miniaturized railgun that fires steel spikes -sewing needles- with fins duck taped on. Highly efficient on space and ammo, but worthless against armor. Which is probably why the Technocracy loves these pieces of shit. No disgruntled tech can damage their precious machines. But hey, it¡¯ll go bang. I won¡¯t get sodomized by the first rat who looks my way. Or the damn iguanas! Relief sends me into a fit of cackles, stroking the steel pistol as I close my eyes and laugh, taking a few steps towards a row of steel near the back. I¡¯m in space, talking to voices in my head, on an alien world, and I just found a railgun. ¡°Is this real life?¡± This moment doesn¡¯t feel real. Cackles fill the silent bunker echoing as artillery and missiles explode across the world. I¡¯m one person, against an entire world of assholes. What can I do? My cracked lenses fog up. ¡°I need a new helmet.¡± I say aloud, cutting off my laughter. The words return me to a normal place. Tickling the flashtraining¡¯s desire to complete my mission. That¡¯s right, the mission was to get a weapon and fight back. Cmon girl! Work the problem. ¡°Alright. Stay alive. I can kill any Tulverians now. But they can kill me. Find armor. Juggernauts can kill any armor, so find a bigger gun, kill all Juggernauts. Easy. Just like teching up to thors.¡± I say. Once again I turn towards crate mountain. In the dark it looks like a vehicle of some kind, but there are piles of gear and crates of odds and ends keeping it concealed. My foot snags on something soft, cartwheeling me face first into a pile of lukewarm fabric. Flash training did an excellent job of desensitizing me to war life, but the pile of earthlings in gasmasks sends a shiver down my spine. This isn¡¯t right. We shouldn¡¯t be here. Buuuutttt, the pile is kinda bouncy¡­ A great place for a nap if I weren¡¯t fresh from the cryotubes. Without thinking I swap my helmet for an unshattered one, careful to transfer all data and setting between the two. Its easy, helmets are designed to be scavengable so the transfer is nothing more than tapping them together in the correct orientation. Cognitively I know something inside me has cracked. Some ancient mechanism to prevent emotional trauma from killing me. I¡¯ll probably pay for it with a life of PTSD, but for now I open my chat log. >Human Athena: I have biomass. Let me know when you¡¯re ready. I stare at the words I''ve mentally typed, surprised at how easy it was. Then inhale before sending. Survive, beat back the Technocracy and save earth. Maybe then I can get laid. Simple as. Well, and maybe punch Bazzhole in the cock-er spaniel. I wonder if he was drafted too¡­? Whorely is probably knocked up and back on earth. From her brother no less! Ick. Maybe I should be grateful to them, if not for their cheating I¡¯d be pining for them both, wishing with all my heart they were with me now. Lying distractions likely to get me killed.Stolen story; please report. >Matriarch Hygieia: send 100 kilos cant hide more in >Matriarch Hygieia: cant hide more I touch the bodies, mentally tagging them for Alaea¡¯s teleporter. It¡¯s absurdly easy on my end. I need physical contact but after that I just look at the item and mentally think ¡®mark¡¯, then they appear with a faint outline overlaid. Out of stubbornness I try to mark myself. Nothing whatsoever occurs. The first body vanishes, then after a delay the second goes after. I hesitate a moment, but only one, before stripping them of everything, my inner and outer layers are made whole once more. Then to top it off this squad was at least given weapons. One glance tells a sordid history with the sharpened shovel, red oxides coat one edge, something I hope is rust, but I know better than to try and remove it. One is holding a slender blade, something I once saw Baz call a ¡®Fairbain-sykes fighting knife¡¯ whatever that is. Beating someone to death is low on my list of desirable outcomes, but Sable Yurten is capable of the deed. Once in training the instructors brought us cloned technocracy soldiers and made us stab them to death as a team building exercise. The single worst day for wig outs. ¡°Does flash training make you schitzo? Or just bring it out? Whatever, I need a real gun. Something along the lines of a dragoon¡¯s phase disruptor cannon or a Technocracy pulsed ion accelerator. And¡­ armor.¡± I say aloud, searching through Technomancy crates. Most are locked with keypads. Not all that durable but that¡¯s not the point. Keypad locks are merely the warning stickers for those who know. If I try to force the crates open then an explosive charge will detonate, ruining whatever is within the crate and my face for good measure. ¡°Man, flash training is super useful. I¡¯d be dead without it. If I ever get back to earth¡­ NO, WHEN I get back to Earth I need to steal that tech. We¡¯d be able to catch up earth scientists overnight!¡± I say, rummaging through unlocked crates. Missiles and gauss rounds are what I find, all munitions for the rolling buildings they call Juggernauts. No way can I use these, even with power armor I can¡¯t carry or launch such high caliber projectiles. Outside the artillery barrage redoubles. Shells following the Juggernaut¡¯s path. One artillery hit won¡¯t knock out Juggernaut, since artillery comes from the top the treads are relatively safe too. But arty could destroy enough guns to make it combat ineffective, forcing a retreat or giving infantry squads a chance to hit them with focused laser fire and anti tank warheads. A few dozen of those nasty bitches is enough to knock out anything unshielded. >Matriarch Hygieia: crap i need an immediate teleport! >Matriarch Hygieia: Eugenic Hitler is counting babies! >Matriarch Hygieia: Feck! >Matriarch Hygieia: make one zergling and the census bureau shows up I stare at the text, giggling at whatever a ¡®eugenic hitler¡¯ is. What a term. Almost sounds like a cranky Abathur, the geneticist from Starcraft who engineered hundreds of beneficial mutations within the zerg swarm. Though he could never quite overcome their greatest weakness, lemon juice. >Executrix Alaea: Zergling? NO. Not on my ship. Thena? Want a puppy? >Human Athena: A puppyling? THAT¡¯S what you call a WARRIOR? Feck it. I don¡¯t have a choice. Send it. It¡¯ll listen to me right? >Matriarch Hygieia: Only one way to find out. I¡¯ll tell em to play nice. >Executrix Alaea: say something if they misbehave. I note how Alaea switched from the singular to the plural. What exactly has she been cooking? >Human Athena: yes maam! Two blue ripples appear in space time, almost like a protoss warp in animation, but way faster and less sparkly. Both creatures materialize in seconds. Spines run down their quadruped backs, talons digging into the bunker¡¯s floor as they scent the air. Elongated snouts full of teeth slip open. Like a wolf¡¯s maw, if said wolf had two rows of shark teeth and sabertoothed canines protruding above and below their jaw. ¡°Sit!¡± I say, forgetting that I''m wearing a sealed gas mask. No way they can hear me- -Both creatures sit, leaning back onto their haunches. Spinal ridges elongate slightly unsheathing four bone spikes with some kind of pressurized fluid contained within. These quadrupeds are anything but zerglings. Chapter 9 I am Hygeiai (Very different) ¨CTwenty hours before nuclear detonation- My last human memory was of me, naked in a tube filled with goo. Then Jim, the tax collector who plundered four billion people for the Singularity¡¯s war machine, pressed a button and I felt no more. I could hear him talking but all sensation left my body and soon even his voice began to diminish. Volume falling gradually until silence. I wasn¡¯t in the cryotube any longer. At least that solved my academic probation problem. So I¡¯ll call this a win. A thought stabbed my heart. Was the college even there? Ages 12 - 45 encompassed all college students and half the staff. Going back to Earth alone wasn¡¯t enough. I needed transports and starships to ferry survivors. If I wasn¡¯t already dead. Hours, years, or seconds passed, with my consciousness existing in total oblivion. I would say floating but there was no sensation, no impulses, no desires whatsoever. Apathetic in totality. Who cared if Baz cheated on me? I caught the leeches red handed. No longer could they siphon away my life, money, time, emotions. They were gone and I was free. Now if only I could find a cutie on Syrak-9¡­ ¡°Maybe I should settle for a cat.¡± I wanted to smile, deep within the wrinkles of my brain new connections began to form leaving me with a question I could not contemplate. Who was I? My memories were Apollo¡¯s, old corridors I re-explored as space ticked onward. Baz, Ashley, mom, dad, Savannah. They were all present. In hindsight, it was hard to miss Dad¡¯s cheating, harder still to miss the signs Baz showed. Always spending a bit too much time alone with Ashley. Always arriving at my apartment an hour before I got home. I sigh, hoping death would find the siblings and I would never again have to see those four people. Savannah though, I have questions for her. She must have known. Unfortunately, I¡¯ll probably die in this sensationless cryotube. It would have been nice to meet my youngest sibling, or start a family with someone I love. But that¡¯ll never happen now- Darkness suddenly filled my world, the sort of darkness that you see with closed eyes. Not total black but the sort of darkness that swirls and waves and beats. Sensation returns. Warm humid air blowing across my face. Sound comes next, creatures move, some hooved, some clawed. Grunts and squawks rattle around my head until I hear Jim speaking. Jim, that damn publican. ¡°Sorry about that, you¡¯d think with how often we work together I¡¯d eventually learn all your quirks but no job is ever the same. There ya go, all brainwaves rising. She¡¯s coming too. Might be awake already so be conscious of that. Oh, give her some time to adjust from a human being to¨C¡± There is a pause, Jim is probably gesturing towards me. ¡°Whatever you put her in will take some adjusting. Don¡¯t drop the whole Collective on her head at once. That being said, I have high hopes for this particular mind. Very high hopes. Let me know how she pans out for ya. Anyways, congrats on your own personal Matriarch. It¡¯s been a pleasure doing business with the collective.¡± A raspy voice answers, somehow moist and bitey, as if the speaker has a mouth with too many teeth or multiple jaws. Maybe even a split jaw. I exhale, thinking how ugly such a creature would be, as my own jaw splits into four jaws. I cock my head, neck feeling more weight than it has ever supported before and feeling lighter, stronger. Something feels wrong, actually scratch that. EVERYTHING feels wrong. Taste returns, and three tongues explore my mouth, categorizing each tooth with an ¡®ouch¡¯ factor. Or approximately how deeply each of these sawblades prick my tongues. ¡°Ah, the last piece falls into our puzzle. Jimmy, today you may have saved the galaxy. Our orders come from the highest authority and require this one.¡± Rasps out the voice my body recognizes. ¡°Saved the galaxy? Ha, saved my wallet more like. I appreciate the notion but I¡¯m no savior riding in on a white knight. Just glad to be of service. Now if you¡¯ll excuse me, I¡¯ve got a few more drop offs to make, unless I can interest you in a hold full of biomass.¡± Says Jim. ¡°We haven¡¯t the conveyance. Nor the drop pods to convey additional biomass. Thank you Jimmy.¡± Says the bitey rasper. His voice irritates me, so similar to an old acquaintance. Savannah once brought home a boy with a split tongue, said he was great at kissing but not much else. Is that what I''ve become? A good kisser? I can¡¯t feel my arms yet, but feeling is slowly creeping down my torso, I waggle my shoulders, discovering that my front assets have moved rearwards. Oh no. Someone¡¯s turned me into a blow up doll, and they¡¯re an ass guy. Why take away my tits! Then the feeling reaches my ribs. My chest isn¡¯t just reduced, it¡¯s totally flat, now covered in a smooth carapace. Hands regain feeling, these aren''t human limbs, thin muscular, and once more armored with chitin. More flexible too, I reach back to explore my backside, claws tip tapping across where my glutes should be and finding a dorsal crest running down my spine, skin that keeps spikes protected. Venomous spikes, to kill predators. Or large prey. In a pinch I can rip them out and use them as javelins. On reflex my mouth begins to water, two of my four jaws clicking in front of my face. No, they aren¡¯t jaws. I have mandibles, like an ant but sharp enough to shave and thick enough to crush a refrigerator. Or a person. I know because this body remembers tearing technomancy engineers apart, invading their world, tunneling beneath their cities and eradicating all human machines. More memories split my skull, flooding me with thoughts of who this body once was. A matriarch of the Endless Collective, a sort of experimental warlord within an organic army. Experimental? Then it hits like a wrecking ball. The mental blocks. The Endless only push forward, we conquer, never looking behind, never seeking our creators. It bores into my consciousness like a thousand fire ants, digging long tears of blood down my cheeks. I weep. Losing sensation as I once again fall into sleep. Hours later I awake. Though it could be minutes for all I know. Green light fills my bedroom. Except the bedroom is a green pool of bioluminescent fluid, which tastes surprisingly delicious. Slightly sweet, with just enough salt to compliment the wondrously savory chunks of meat. Texture is underrated when it comes to food. There is something uniquely satisfying about sinking two jaws into a piece of meat and sheering it. Flesh resisting just enough to know it was once a formidable foe, before fangs touch their opposites, cleaving flesh. This book''s true home is on another platform. Check it out there for the real experience. I¡¯m eating my enemies. Was not expecting this today¡­ My eyes finally open, exiting the pool I somehow slept in, fully submerged. Which is how I realize this body isn¡¯t remotely humanoid. More legs than I can count propel me out of the pool, not quite centipede, but more than six. Each limb bearing six joints. More flexibility than a slinky. Green liquid flows off my lower half, revealing an even greater change. As a Matriarch it is my duty and honor to bear the next generations of warriors and earn the name of Endless. Four wombs are visible on my back, with creatures growing in each of them. Spawned from the biopool and my own genetic material with guidance from the Marquis of Survival, Zazathur. I¡¯m pregnant. With quadruplets. ¡°How did this even happen? I¡¯m a virgin!¡± I grumble, the alien mouth mauling speech. If I have to carry something to term, getting laid is the smallest possible compensation! This is wrong! What the hell! Memories chide me, this body is a Matriarch, I¡¯ve carried thousands of children in my perpetual war, and will bear many more. Four visible uteri are only the tip, I have twelve. All of which are occupied. Worse, I¡¯m capable of selectively editing genetic material then kick starting replication. In short, I can fuck myself in a totally literal sense. My memories have no personality, instead they offer up information that should be relevant. There are no male Matriarchs. No need. ¡°Jim. What the hell.¡± I whisper, exploring my new body. The closest thing imaginable to this is a Drider or Centaur from Dungeons & Dragons, a game Bazzhole and Whorley convinced me to play. It really wasn¡¯t my thing, I had decided to play a shy rogue, the quiet type, while Ashley went with a moonlighting Bard so she could romance the NPCs. A game she soon aimed at Baz. How could I have missed that? Just how long were they going behind my back? Sorrow translates into fear, and three prehensile stingers push out of sheathes on my rear abdomen, where a spider might keep their spinnerets, albeit those do not glisten with lethal venoms. Dorsal crest contracts, pushing more spines out of skin sheathes, each an envenomed blade I can forcefully eject towards enemies. Kinda like intentionally sharting death at mach speeds. This body is actually pretty great. Potent, larger than a horse, or bull¡­ No, those creatures are too small to compare, I¡¯m more of a zerg Queen, the HOTS variant not the flying eyeball with buck teeth. Except I have four shoulders connected to my torso. Two are small things, positioned where the human half of a centaur¡¯s would be. Consequently pushing the other two arms down to my waist where the insectoid thorax with wombs meets my torso. There my arms rest, folded. Like a praying mantis with spear tips and serrated edges. I extend one, wincing as my human mind rewrites itself to this body. It¡¯s as if my pinky finger is suddenly a complete arm and the limb shoots out, punching a six foot slash into the wall. Mental chastisement grabs my neck, choking the life out of my brain. ¡°WHY HARM ME?¡± It demands. ¡°Eck- so- sorry! Accident!¡± I gasp, all dozen of my limbs jerking awkwardly. The force releases my body. I¡¯m not sure if it intended to toss me, but the release flips me backwards sending me splashing into the biopool. Worker drones, creatures similar to ants appear and seal the gash in the ship, ignoring me. Alive for five minutes and already pissed off the mayor, or uh, shipmind. Okay, lets not do that again. I think, slowly working through each muscle, stinger, limb, and inch of the new me. Which is when I see the first message. >Executrix Alaea: Felt like someone just tried to strangle me. Is someone there? I¡¯m Athena¡­ I close my eyes, but the text remains. Weird, but I¡¯m not doing anything other than zerg yoga right now, may as well respond. >Matriarch Hygieia: I¡¯m Athena¡­ Sorta. Last thing I remember was being pulled out of my body. >Executrix Alaea: Matriarch Hygieia? Like, Hygieia Athena? Weird reference. But if you¡¯re not human anymore¡­ Eh, makes as much sense as my new body, or this damn crystal ball. >Matriarch Hygieia: I¡¯m not even close to human. Like a pregnant zerg queen. More armor, and twelve wombs I have to fuk myself. >Executrix Alaea: Lol. wtf. That¡¯s gross, not funny. Blue light appears around me, a field of psychic power that pops in the same millisecond it forms. Or my senses are too slow to capture lightning. >Executrix Alaea: WTF! I thought you were joking¡­ Girl, I''m so sorry. >Matriarch Hygieia: Relax, this body doesn¡¯t seem to have a pity circuit. I make warriors. Simple as. We spend hours talking, each subtly testing the other, suggesting false memories only for the other to correct us. There is no doubt, we are one being. I pass the time weaving genetic strands together, incubating life not seen in this galaxy. The Endless collective isn¡¯t quite endless, having only assimilated quintillions of different genomes. But somehow they still haven¡¯t created bioforms directly equal to zerglings. A correction I begin to make immediately. The only hesitation comes from having to- uhm¡­ produce them myself. No way in hell is my coochie pumping out ten million lings so I develop compromises. Favoring quality over quantity at every turn and making 100% sure the progeny will need time outside of me to develop fully. A compromise few other Matriarchs seem willing to make. My first brood is done in an hour, dropped in a green egg which they tear asunder with crystalline claws, fancy, but it was one of twelve mutations for claws and I chose the one that cut the deepest. Okay, maybe I just liked to bling out my zerglings. Can you really blame a girl? Another hour passes and the Shipmind orders my doglings away for examinations. I have no wish to be critiqued, but this is standard procedure for the collective. Shipmind is always watching, monitoring ten thousand variables as it hurtles through the galactic darkness, monitoring every drop of biomass and molecule of gas aboard our bioship. With so many variables some shortcuts become commonplace, like tracking bioforms as a whole and not their ingested biomass. An oversight I exploit fully. Gradually inflating my exterior and absorbing more materials to continue my manipulations within the teeny tiny amount of wiggle room. Jim warned me not to reveal my nature. So I won¡¯t risk meeting what spacefaring bugs would call a ¡®medic¡¯. They¡¯d probably chop me up and retire me into a pool of acid. All other biomass is tied up, devoted to the cause. I swallow uncomfortably, hoping they didn¡¯t take my doglings off to be recycled. We¡¯ll be landing soon. On a world that would love nothing more than to kill every last member of the Collective. Two lings won¡¯t be enough to protect me. I¡¯ll need more creatures and set to making them. Our mission is clear, a world with a forested half, beautiful and taller than Lothlorien, and the other half an irradiated husk. Dead, but we must fight to acquire Solarium. A rare mineral only found in the galactic core, deeper than ships can traverse without being crushed or torn apart by the infinite gravity of a supermassive black hole. This world must have once been a rogue planet, somehow transiting the galactic core and being bombarded with the mineral hundreds of billions of years ago, before Earth was even dust. Oh, that¡¯s right. Earth, that¡¯s home. I must take over this planet to save home. That is my deal with Jim. The price of mom¡¯s safety. Chapter 10 Not Zerglings! And certainly not Kerrigan. 1 / 1 Biomass -12 hours before nuclear detonation- Hygieia¡¯s twins obey my order. No freaking way can they hear me through the gasmask¡­ That¡¯s just not possible without my external speakers activated. Is this a telepathic link? If it is, then I¡¯m like a hive mind¡¯s stepchild. This needs testing. I mentally order one to hold out its paw, like a golden retriever might be trained to shake. It does so, even lolling its tongue out the side of his mouth. Despite their fangs and spines and chitinous skin, they¡¯re kinda cute. Like a mutated puppy. Although, you probably would get into trouble if you took them to the local dog park. In the same way you¡¯d get in trouble for taking a velociraptor to a children¡¯s petting zoo and calling it a friendly turkey. ¡°Do not harm me.¡± I order, trying to keep the nerves out of my voice. Then I swallow, thinking of the next order. In sync, both creatures ¨Cthey aren¡¯t really zerglings¨C begin to wag their tails, proof positive of my total control. >Human Athena: They¡¯re like dogs. I can control them with thoughts. Even as I type, I''m looking at ¡®Human Athena¡¯ and frowning, mentally changing it to fit our growing menagerie. >Terran Thena: :) >Matriarch Hygieia: cheeky bitch My nickname should set us apart, and I want to remind the other girls of our final goal, not just that I won our racial coin toss. Spread out, search this bunker, I¡¯m looking for powered armor and portable guns uhm¡­ Tell me if you find anything like that. I command, sending the two ¡®zerglings¡¯ into the bunker¡¯s darkness, flashing their bone tails. Like a whip that ends in a bulbous stinger so similar to a scorpion¡¯s. Neither replies, and I instantly understand why. We¡¯re linked, what they can see I am aware of. As if their senses are directly uploaded into my memory to access at my leisure. ¡°Hive minds are something else¡­¡± I mutter, shivering as we search. I can see why we called them zerglings, they¡¯re longer, lankier, probably nine feet long -if you count the tail stinger- and their spines rise above our chests. Wait, I¡¯m the only human body left. My chest. I frown, watching the not-zerglings hunt. They are purely quadrupeds, possessing no back arms or hooves or facial horns, so the term is factually wrong. But calling them spinosaurus puppies, extra stingy edition, doesn¡¯t have the same ring as zergling. It¡¯s inaccurate, but a shorthand that tells all three of myselves exactly what we¡¯re talking about. In the bunker¡¯s total darkness they spread out, sniffing crates, missile racks, dirt, and moving slowly, feet staying low to the ground, almost shuffling forward. Sensory perception enters my mind, we¡¯re linked together, not really seeing through each other¡¯s eyes, but conscious of information only they can see or sense. Somehow they¡¯re able to detect miniscule movements through the earth, a sort of tremor sense. That¡¯s so freaking cool! Together we listen, half-seeing, half-hearing the artillery shells land near Juggernauts. One has been knocked out entirely, flipped upside down and blown to bits. Mommy needs whatever weapon did that! Noting that location on my helmet¡¯s built in map function. ¡®For later investigation¡¯. I paws to appreciate how absurdly awesome these boys are. Together we listen, half-seeing, half-hearing the artillery shells land near Juggernauts. One has been knocked out entirely, flipped upside down and blown in half. I want whatever weapon did that! So I activate my new helmet¡¯s internal functions, leaving a GPS tag on that location for later investigation. Then the radio kicks on. Making me jump out of my skin. I jerk the trigger to the needle pistol holding it down for a half second and sending fifty rounds into the ceiling. One of the zerglings glanced back at me, as if to ask ¡®what the hell?¡¯. ¡°Sorry.¡± I hiss, ducking behind some crates for cover. I don¡¯t make it. A familiar voice halts me midstride. Unmistakable in the lonely darkness. Baz, the traitor, speaks in my com channel. ¡°Brave soldiers of the most cherished Singularity, today marks the last day Technocracy heathens shall pollute this world! Thanks to our reinforcements from Earth we are advancing on every front, forward! To VICTORY!¡± Says our Field Marshal. I choke, dumbfounded. Bazzhole was drafted too. Except they made him a general, and not just any general, the Field marshal. The highest ranking military officer. What complete and total bullshit! Syrak-9 shouldn¡¯t even have a Field Marshal! They command a billion soldiers, not a few thousand. Why promote him to a rank that shouldn¡¯t exist? One frigate can carry a few thousand soldiers, even with multiple resupplies we can¡¯t have more than ten thousand personnel on Syrak-9. A colonel should be our highest officer, why the hell do we have a Field Marshal? ¡°What the hell! That¡¯s like running a lemonade stand on Tuesday and getting appointed as Secretary of Commerce Wednesday! How?! Why?!¡± Distant impacts fade as the Juggernauts split up, six head back, wounded or empty. Repulsed by advancing Singularity forces, great news for them. Potentially fatal for me. At least one Juggernaut is heading for us. My heart thunders, but even that is picked up by the zerglings marking it as unique amongst our four heartbeats. Four? There are only three of us. ¡°Find the fourth!¡± I hiss, coiling my body around the flechette ¡®pistol¡¯. Calling this porker a pistol is something only a cyborg could do. While it has a smooth rear plate for unarmored humans to use, the thing is an awkward brick, meant to be carried and used one handed by power-armor encased Technocracy engineers as a weapon of last resort. Like a P90 SMG that¡¯s made of stainless steel and twenty pounds heavier. We don¡¯t have time to search. Nor do we have time to run. Tremorsense paints a picture within my mind. The Juggernaut¡¯s not alone. A support crew of four technicians are jogging across no man¡¯s land to us, one is far heavier than the others. Boots carving ruts into the mud. I pray he¡¯s carrying wrenches and not a heavy weapon¡­ Except, what if he is carrying a rocket launcher? One tech is far easier to kill than the Juggernaut. My mind races, trying to decipher a battleplan. My micro-railgun can¡¯t take out a Juggernaut, probably can¡¯t even damage its sensors but technicians do not wear heavy armor. That is not their job and the Novan Technocracy does not waste resources making tools better at jobs they are not intended to perform. My flechettes won¡¯t pierce armor, but twenty or so will certainly break through the transparent polymers used in their helmets. The tale has been taken without authorization; if you see it on Amazon, report the incident. Cool, twenty headshots. Frick. I need distractors and cover. No matter what, it all starts with the fourth heartbeat. Zerglings walk to the source, not needing light to find the beating heart. God, they would be a terrifying opponent to face. Able to hunt in pitch black. >Matriarch Hygieia: You okay? The chat message makes me jump, sending another burst of flechettes into the wall. One zergling looks at me, teeth barred, entirely unentertained by my game of peekaboo. ¡°Sorry!¡± I snap, unsure why I''m apologizing to the spiky killer. >Terran Thena: Yeah, smart doglings. Like¡­ creepy smart. Idk if we¡¯d love golden retrievers if they could read our minds like these boys do. >Matriarch Hygieia: as if dogs arent already smarter than the terminally online >Matriarch Hygieia: they get to live the NEET life >Matriarch Hygieia: free food free rent and we literally fight over who gets to raise their babies >Matriarch Hygieia: dogs are already smarter They reach a quadruple sized crate that is sealed under some kind of foil. For lack of a better term its shrink wrapped in metal with the exterior shape maintained by round studs, like a square ribcage- -Or a cage. An airtight cage. My looted Singularity helmet reminds me that I¡¯ve only found human soldiers here. Earth conscripts. I sprint forward, pistol falling; shovel rising. One thrust rips into the vacuum sealing, unleashing a hiss as pressure equalizes. ¡°Rip open the cage!¡± Both zerglings leap, their front paws tearing through the steel bars in two swipes. Steel rods shoot into the cage and bounce out towards me. Flaying steel faster than I can think. Another swipe and they could eviscerate the contents. ¡°Stop! Don¡¯t hurt what¡¯s inside!¡± They obey, retreating a pace so I can assess the damage. Inside are a stack of human bodies. Some are white skinned turning blue around the orifices. Long dead. While others leak blood. Fresher¡­ Scraping through the blood my shovel finds it spongy, or in other words, coagulated and at least a day old. Gasmask filters out any scents but Sable Yurten¡¯s flash training was comprehensive, and I can infer the stench these corpses would exude from prior experiences. No wonder it was sealed. Shovel connects with a steel bar thicker than my thumb. Probably an inch thick. seeing it bent beneath the dogling¡¯s paws. Crap, that much strength could damage power armor! Warriors is the right name for these zerglings. Their claws tore through inch thick steel on the first pass. A hand touches my throat, activating the helmet¡¯s external speakers. ¡°Hello, is anyone alive in there? Speak up or I¡¯ll have to leave you behind. Juggernauts are incoming.¡± Zergling hackles rise, and for an instant I wonder if they can launch those back spines. Probably not¡­ But I¡¯m sure Eugenic Hitler would approve of that improvement. Which gives me pause, not sure how I feel about having ¡®Eugenic Hitler¡¯ as my cheerleader. Or what the term means. Once upon a time the name might have evoked fear, overusage turned it generic and now is as terrifying as Baddy Mcbadface. Crunching comes from inside the cage, chasing away dictators with gory squelches. Movement through the bodies. Tremorsense from the zerglings has somehow integrated completely into my own cognition. Together we triangulate the source, finding a heartbeat moving inside the pile. Like a giant birthday cake with a stripper inside, except way, WAY, grosser and hopefully with a different kind of happy ending¡­ I could really use a friend right now. Might keep me sane. I see a Singularity helmeted head bob up and down so I lunge forward fingers hook beneath steel, dragging them out of the heap. Head, arms, torso, pelvis and one leg come free. This body is stiff and totally cold. A zergling sniffs at the stump and before I realize what he intends, his jaw unhinges. Rows of teeth unfold and clamp onto exposed thigh, biting through skin, muscle and bone in a single chomp. ¡°Cmon!¡± I snap. The zergling swallows, human femur snapping twice as the monster¡¯s throat breaks down the meat. I nearly shit myself. The femur is a human¡¯s largest and thickest bone, yet not-a-zergling snapped it twice. Ignorant to my thundering heart, the ling gets back on task. He darts forward and drags another corpse out of the cage. Or tries to. The corpse snags on something, probably the shredded bars but the zergling keeps pulling like a dog toy. It all happens so quickly, one second Spot the zergling is pulling, the next he is covered in blood, having ripped the body in half. A display that makes his eyes sparkle and stinger wag. He looks at me, expecting dog treats or some nonsense. ¡°Bro¡­¡± I mutter, unable to say anything that won¡¯t insult my protector. Silence is broken like a wishbone, the other creature dragging another body out and opening a hole in the pile of bodies. I blink. Dumbfounded at what I¡¯m seeing. There is a girl, not a teen, a child. No way is she twelve years old. The little gremlin looks to be eight years old at most. More disturbingly, she¡¯s nude. Thrice concerningly, she is sitting in a sort of craven pocket, as if someone blended all the corpses within reach of her. A manacle around her neck, two inches thick and three inches tall, totally encircling her spine while providing anchor points for a quartet of chains. Each of which is bolted to the cage¡¯s floor. Her purple eyes stare into mine, piercing the green lenses of my nightvision. She inhales deeply. Gasping for air. Pupils dilate as lungs fill with oxygen, restarting her aerobic functions. How is she still alive? The cage was sealed and stuffed full of bodies. ¡°What¡¯s your name?¡± I say, lowering my pistol. Sable¡¯s training screams at me. Shrieking bloody murder about Technocracy experiments and traps. Any Singularity soldier would gun down this girl and wipe it from memory in a heartbeat. But I am not the flashtraining. There is a chance that this girl is an Earthling. A kidnapped child caught up in a galaxy of war. I push the training aside as if I don¡¯t already know something is seriously wrong here. Cataclysmically wrong. ¡°Whaths a name?¡± Asks the girl, lisping heavily. Her mouth moves strangely. I can¡¯t place it but the sensation of ¡®uncanny valley¡¯ creeps up my spine. Something deeply unpleasant has been done to this child, if she even is a child. Or human. Maybe Sable is right. I should gun her down right here and now, then detonate the explosives within this bunker. As if reading my mind, she slumps, glancing at both the zerglings. Side to side eye movements, in total darkness. Her purple irises contain vertical pupils, and for a brief instant her eyes reflect green light from my nightvision. This isn¡¯t a girl, it¡¯s a mutant, or a Technomancy bioweapon. ¡°A name is what we call people- uhm¡­ What we call our friends.¡± I say, snapping her eyes back onto me. ¡°Mine is Athena Finley.¡± One zergling steps towards me, shielding me. The Technomancy engineers made it into the trenches without getting blown apart. Damn, was really hoping the artillery bombardment would solve that problem. Guess we¡¯re out of smart munitions¡­ If Field Marshal Bazzhole deployed them at all. We¡¯ve got a few moments before the engineers reach us. Worse, they¡¯ve got power armor, even if I run now, I¡¯ll die. I¡¯m trapped. All thoughts of setting up an ambush with a fellow soldier vanish. This child can¡¯t hold a gun, nor would I allow it. My hand strokes the nearest zergling. Start digging! Dig a hole you and I can hide in. I order. It obeys, dashing towards a corner and excavating the dirt faster than I can think. One glance at the slashing paws keeps me from getting in the way. Those things are cutting through rocks as if they are snowballs, aint no way I am going near those. Kerrigan blinks. Alien pupils narrow slightly, surprisingly they only appear half dilated in the total darkness. So well adapted to a cage. Can this girl even see in daylight? ¡°Are you my frien?¡± The girl asks. ¡°Sure I am. Can you tell me your name?¡± I spot a crate of Singularity rations in the corner, and silently order the other zergling to grab a few. I¡¯m not really hungry, but I know there is a ¡®c-bar¡¯ in each ration box. No way is it actually chocolate, but it sure tastes good. He reaches the boxes and I mark them all as targets for teleportation. We¡¯ll need food, and I don¡¯t have time to neatly pack a backpack. The Juggernaut is only minutes away. ¡°I donfh ave a name.¡± There it is, the reason behind the lisp. Her jaw looks human, but is split vertically through the chin. Like an anaconda¡¯s. Complete with extra teeth that are all slightly angled rearwards. If that weren¡¯t enough, they¡¯re sharp, like the zerglings. This is a baby bioweapon. Ha, that reminds me of a similarly purple and equally violent girl- ¡°-Kerrigan.¡± I whisper, not meaning to say the curse aloud. Unfortunately for us both, the girl child hears me. ¡°Ith at my name?¡± Asks Kerrigan. Uhhhh¡­ My immediate thought is, what the hell? NO! Don¡¯t name a child after a fictional mass murdering queen. But then I hear the sound of a juggernaut volley. Twelve SCUD missiles rip through the air and three seconds later a deep rumble tells me they¡¯ve landed. Missiles at close range mean enemies and allies are nearby. I don¡¯t have much time. So again I make a snap decision and pray lady luck doesn¡¯t bite me in the ass. ¡°Yes, your name is Kerrigan, and you¡¯re my friend. Lets get you out of that cage¡­¡± Chapter 11 Juggernaut 1 / 1 Biomass (Nibbles and Kerrigan do not count) I wish I knew the bunker was wired with explosives, but sometimes, ignorance is bliss. Hopefully this will all work out in my favor¡­ Two sayings I embodied as we freed Kerrigan. Turns out zergling teeth treat steel like a game of rock paper scissors, shredding Kerrigan¡¯s chains like wet paper. Though there was no safe way to get the collar off her throat. Besides, I have more pressing concerns. Like the Juggernaut who is breathing down our necks. One look at my internal sensors told me radiation inside the bunker was about 50 rem, light radiation poisoning after a minute of exposure. Death after twenty four hours. My helmet converted the alien unit automatically into values my tiny Earthling engineer brain could grasp or had any chance of being familiar with, one little perk of being brainwashed in a tube. Under pain of Radiation I need to get Kerrigan into radiation layers or she¡¯ll die after a few minutes in the trench. But the way she was stored, puts us in a double bind without time. Three technicians and the heavy engineer pause their march, halting for a reason my tremorsense can¡¯t identify. Thirty seconds, that¡¯s all the time I dare risk. ¡°C¡¯mere, take my hand.¡± I say, helping Kerrigan out of the cage, she is covered in disgusting ick, things I hastily smear off with assistance from the ration-kit¡¯s version of a wetwipe. Even in space, washing your hands is important. Moreso than on earth. On Earth we''ve evolved immune systems to fight off harmful bacteria or coexist with them, but in space there are all kinds of life. Macroscopic and microscopic. Alien microbes that you have zero biological defenses against could liquify your insides until you pissed brain jelly. So Kerrigan¡¯s hands come first, wet wipes clean them off and I hand her one of the C-bars. Narrowly remaining calm as the Juggernaut rolls closer. It¡¯s moving slower now, probably took damage. A small miracle. Opposite the Juggernaut¡¯s trench, at a T junction, four technicians are trading shots with a Tulverian warband. Two fall and kick, limbs missing. Victims of Tulverian energy weapons. Despite their reptilian nature, Tulvarians are highly intelligent, well okay the average Tulvarian eats rocks for fiber so they¡¯re idiots, but maybe the scientists are genetically engineered cause those quacks are on the opposite end of the bell curve making them proportionately smarter than the others are dumb. At least that¡¯s the Singularity¡¯s leading theory, since it would explain how they cooked up some of the finest energy weapons in the galaxy. Man portable and precise to a fault. Odd design track for plasma weaponry since the Tulverians generally don¡¯t wear armor and precise plasma is the galaxy¡¯s most logical answer to armor- -A dozen of them are gunned down by two flechette pistols, falling still. I feel nothing as they fall quiescent. Without motion the tremorsense has nothing to see, causing bodies to vanish as they die. It must be shock. People just died and I couldn¡¯t even feel recoil. Worse, I¡¯m relieved that we have a few more seconds. ¡°Eh, fukit.¡± I say, already envious over dead Tulvarian plasma rifles. One shot from those rifles is like a dragoon¡¯s main cannon. Able to damage all armor and even good against enemy shielding. If we can get enough of them. I¡¯ll start with one. Drooling over xeno tech is only fair turnabout, as the iguanas would be drooling over me if I died. Albeit for very different reasons. Shall I fetch them? Asks the tunneling dogling. ¡°Whafths thith?¡± Kerrigan asks. I almost ignore her question, too stunned by the zergling¡¯s request. He is fifty feet into the walls, tunneling faster than I can walk. There is no line of sight nor any possible way I could have physically heard him. Yet I had. Hive mind? Oh man, this¡¯ll take some getting used to. Yes. I think, mentally marking him as ling-ling2. A smile crosses my lips at the idiotic name. But why not. Ling1 is still bringing me ration packs -from a pile that was once taller than myself and is now only a foot tall- dropping one next to Kerrigan. ¡°What? Oh, its food. A gift for my friend.¡± I say, trying to butter up the bioweapon with chocolate. In theory this is the best plan Sable Yurten has, although there are at least four variations of Singularity bioweapons that explode when given sweets. I cross my fingers, watching Kerrigan closely. She stares at it for a second, sniffs it, frowns. Then cocks her head to the side. ¡°It¡­ doesn¡¯th smell like meath.¡± She mutters. Meat¡­ She says the word like it¡¯s nothing a common thing. But that little choice in diction confirms my worst fears. I refuse to dwell on it, forcing away the thought. ¡°Chocolate is a bean I think, and sugar comes from plants as well. If you don¡¯t like it that¡¯s fine, but give it a nibble.¡± I say pantomiming a wink at the girl. Kinda difficult considering I¡¯m in full anti radiation gear and mask. She cocks her head, not understanding the gesture. Probably grew up in a test tube of her own, with no understanding of the world or other people. At best she¡¯ll end up a sociopath. No, at best she¡¯ll enjoy chocolate! I mentally correct, wiping her down. I know there isn¡¯t time. We need to stuff her into a suit and hide in the zergling tunnel. NOW! Ling1 understands my desire and pushes some empty crates infront of the tunnel entrance so we won¡¯t be discovered. Then starts digging as well. Flashing claws leave no space for me to dig, so I''m forced to be a clipboard nanny. After two lings pass through it''s still a tight fit for Kerrigan and nearly unpassable for myself, I¡¯ll have to ditch my chestplate. Dirt moves faster than any direwolf or dog could shift it. He¡¯s stronger than any canine has a right to be. I try not to shudder. At this point it would only scare my fellow earthling. This story has been stolen from Royal Road. If you read it on Amazon, please report it Except the more gore I wipe off, the less human Kerrigan appears. Her bones aren¡¯t human, they¡¯re thicker and more prominent than a child¡¯s ought to be, with extra ribs and actual claws protruding from oversized hands. Fangs ¨Cher teeth cannot be called anything else¨C bite into the chocolate bar. They bake those things to be tough, turning them into a thick taffy so it travels well and can survive reentry if supply ships get shot down. But it¡¯s still full of everything a body craves. Kerrigan¡¯s eyes light up at the taste, going speechless as she looks at the bar then to me. I smile. Kids love candybars, hell, adults love candybars! And this is space candy, for extra goodness. I think¡­ A flicker of memory runs through my mind, it¡¯s Jim aboard the tax ship, ¡®recycle the fatties¡¯. Note to self, never look at the ingredient list. It¡¯ll be safer¨C ¨CMovement trips tremorsense. Engineers are moving again, they¡¯ve finished the Tulverians. It¡¯s time to go. One hand grasps the first radiation layer I can find, ready to stuff my newest friend into it when a red river flows down Kerrigan¡¯s cheek. I freeze, ducking to see where the blood is coming from. But her face is all pinched together, ¡°Are you crying?¡± I ask, baffled. Kids don¡¯t cry when you give them chocolate! What did I do wrong? Sure she¡¯s a bioweapon¡­ I really hope she isn¡¯t the kind of bioweapon that explodes when you feed it chocolate. That would be a bit too screwed up. Even for the Technomancy who view humans the way we view a computer¡¯s ram chips. Not the whole completed stick, just the individual black squares that you¡¯ve probably never thought about in your life. Nor considered their metabolic needs or if they got a little uncomfortable after playing too much candy crush. ¡°Kerrigan, say something, are you alright? Spit it out if it¡¯s that awful!¡± In way of response the ration bar disappears into her mouth. ¡°Sooo goooodth.¡± Mumbles Kerrigan, chomping her way through the entire bar. It would be way cuter if her lower jaw didn¡¯t split open, exposing a second row of teeth that sheer through the ¡®chocolate¡¯ brick like it¡¯s jello. The juxtaposition of her bleeding eyes, rows of fangs, and smile makes my heart skip several beats. This is the most pant-shittingly terrifying and kinda cute thing I¡¯ve ever beheld. A cacophony of chaos that shorts out my brain for a minute. Thoughts of moments like this with my unborn sibling emerge. What if I have a little brother? Dreams percolate around my brain. Til the Juggernaut fires. Further away than the engineers, but coming at double speed. Four minutes, and I only have a flechette pistol. Kerrigan holds out her hand, asking for another. ¡°Oh, there are more, don¡¯t eat them so fast or else you¡¯ll make yourself sick. Here, eat this while I dress you, its-¡± I glance at the package, reading -meat puree no 12-. Don¡¯t read the ingredients. I remind myself. ¡°Actually, not sure what it is. Give it a try. While I¡­ Look around. Actually, take this and hide in that tunnel. A big meanie is coming our way and he¡¯ll put you back in that cage.¡± ¡°Okay athph- aphthp- ¡­ Pfina!¡± Stutters Kerrigan, her lisp absolutely butchering my name. No sooner have I gotten her bloody legs into the rad layer does she spring out of it, claws tearing the fabric and darting through the bunker faster than a cloud, smiling broadly as she carries twenty pounds of rations in with her. Hopping into an empty crate with her purloined booty. Tail flicking as if eight year old children normally have three foot long stingers. Darker skin runs down her spine stretched over the vertebrae til termination near the exposed bone at the tip of her tail. All told, Kerrigan is a cute lil bioweapon. Designed to kill Singularity soldiers. Like me. I swallow. Unable to gun her down. Maybe she¡¯s got mind control pheromones or something, I just can¡¯t bring myself to pull the trigger. Please be an earthling. I pray. Already knowing she isn¡¯t human. Three minutes until the Juggernaut reaches us. One until the technicians arrive. Despite that Kerrigan seems energized. Happy to be in a tunnel. But Ling1 found a weapon capable of destroying the Juggernaut. I don¡¯t exactly see through their eyes, yet Ling1 has sent me a picture. A sort of text message that automatically opens and begins playing a video within my mind¡¯s eye. The entire bunker is lined with explosives. All waiting for a signal to detonate. Bricks of a Technomancy C4 equivalent are wired together in a sort of dead man¡¯s firecracker. Defuse one and the others will be pop. A chain reaction of explosions guaranteed to turn the Juggernaut missiles into secondary and tertiary detonations. Twenty thousand pounds of fiery death. Dozens of tripwires criss-cross the entrance and bunker. We should be dead. ¡°We gotta go.¡± I whisper, the sound amplified by my helmet¡¯s speakers. ¡°Otay Pfina.¡± Without a way for me to trigger the explosives remotely we will all die. Tunnels do not protect from concussive waves or pressurized air, in fact, that might channel the explosion towards us. ¡°We REALLY have to go!¡± I sweep her into my arms, barely managing to pick up the kid. Whatever lab cooked her up must have been on a heavy gravity world; a truckkun full of bricks weighs less than Kerrigan does. She¡¯s like some awful practical joke involving metal mario. We ain¡¯t going nowhere fast. My ankle screams in protest. I doubt it¡¯s broken, but certainly sprained. We need transportation. If not for their spines I¡¯d have Kerrigan ride a zergling. ¡°Crap¡­¡± I mutter aloud, looking from the tunnel entrance to the bunker¡¯s mouth. Between us and the door is a crate mountain. Another standard operational procedure, put anything that can take a bullet in a pile that obscures the front entrance. Later excavators will dig out the bunker on the sides so no amount of penetration will harm the contents within, but this is just a supply dump. Hastily dug with improvised tools. So used crates filled with dirt serve as ballistic armor. Transportation packaging piled thirty feet high. Electrical panels appear on the front of each, marking them as sensitive cargo. If you enter the wrong code or try to force them open, a booby trap will activate. The most common being an explosive, but more creative Technomancers have included viral loads, bioweaponry of a different nature. A pity really. The crates are heavy enough to be full of valuable gear, and the mountain is large enough that I know an antitank weapon is in there somewhere. But I can¡¯t risk a detonation. >Terran Thena: Hey, I¡¯m hoping you¡¯re a super smart alien. Can you hack into Technomancy lockers? >Executrix Alaea: Yes. but no. If they find out I was involved, it¡¯ll be galactically bad news. And I need time. And we have to hope those systems aren¡¯t temporally locked to Syrak¡¯s surface. >Terran Thena: I¡¯m going to die in the next two minutes. What happens to you if I die. >Executrix Alaea: ¡­ >Terran Thena: Look, my bunker is wired with bombs, I need a vehicle, or armor or hell, anything! Help? News isn¡¯t worse than death. Ling1 and Kerrigan feel it before I do. Ground rumbling, and the high pressured pops of long range railguns. I swallow, knowing I¡¯m screwed in a fight. Whomever cleared out this bunker did it well enough. No guns or usable munitions remain, only explosives and Juggernaut specific ammo. >Executrix Alaea: I¡¯ll see what we can do¡­ Hang tight. The words wrap themselves around my throat, the last thing I hear before four Technocracy armored suits jog into the bunker. Flechette pistols at the ready. One, the heavy engineer, stoops to defuse the bombs while the others halt, forming a defensive wall around their leader. That¡¯ll buy a minute, maybe two. Maybe if we hide in the crates- -A sensor ping bounces off my helmet, all four suits jerk in surprise. Facing me. Shit. Chapter 12 I am Executrix Alaea Unlike Athena or Hygieia I was cursed to never lose consciousness. Every second of Jim¡¯s briefing, every millimeter of intergalactic space we covered, I was aware of. He¡¯d sold our consciousness three times, a strange possibility that involved quantumly disentangling our neurons from their electrical impulses. A crude but proven Azhurai technique. I frown at that thought. Unsure how I know the origin, and concerned about the proven way of unscrambling chimeras. We are one such being, in truth, all humans with ESP are classified as chimeras and I admit to myself I¡¯m not sure what the term means. What about others like me? The empaths and telekinetics. Will Jim be splitting all of them as well? I reach for my waistband, where the FNX rests. But my hands are pinned in place. I blink. No longer am I in body. Crystals surround me, large floating things that begin to resonate as I behold them. Like thought activated wind-chimes tingling for their master. But¡­ I¡¯m a college kid. No one calls me master- I am not Athena Finley. Not anymore. We are one of the nameless caste. I sense the paradox of naming a race nameless. It¡¯s illogical, like Odysseus calling himself no one and just like him, I am not alone in this cave. That smallest of thoughts twists something within my mind, we are not -nameless-, the name of the race was erased from my mind. Actively removed by psionic forces beyond comprehension. A galactic prohibition on a race''s name? I shudder. How great of a mind would it take to reach into every organism across the galaxy and prohibit a name from being uttered? That makes the Zerg Overmind look like a crayon eating kindergardner. ¡°Good, you are awake.¡± Says a voice. ¡°WHO AR-¡± I begin, stopping myself as the words thunder through the world. Crystals shudder, violently counter-resonating to tame my scream. The figure slumps stepping into view. As a -nameless- he is millions of years old. Older than humanity itself, and possibly older than the dust that formed Earth. None of that keeps me from scowling, still struggling to grasp why I can¡¯t think of our race¡¯s name. Cognitively I know the word, but there is a sort of wall between my conscious brain and that word. ¡°I see. My son is well and truly dead then.¡± Says the figure. Hands go to his face, which is when I see exactly what a nameless is. More plant than animal, with no mouth or nose and precious few pieces of armor. Or fingers. We only have three on each hand. One central finger that is longer and thicker than the other and inline with our forearms, with two off axis digits, almost like two oppositional opposed thumbs. One where you would expect it and another where a pinky ought to be. Claws tip each digit, evolved for savaging interlopers. Why a plant evolved claws is a question I¡¯ll never be able to answer, but we¡¯ve got them. Unlike mouths, ears, or noses. Looking at the -nameless- face I¡¯m left to wonder how we breath or drink. Which is when I notice the eyes. Dozens of them. A memory from this body educates me in the same way muscle memory educates our movements. You generally don¡¯t remember which muscles you have to flex to drop a turd, but once you pinch off the first loaf your body remembers the correct order forever. Six clusters of eyes and eyestalks open across my ¡®head¡¯, opening to observe the world around me. I¡¯m pinned in a magnetic prison, held down by an energy field invisible to the human visible spectrum, but clear as daylight to my ultraviolet receptors. Infrared eyes observe the heat differentials in the room, stretching on their eyestalks to scan the room in a 360 degree view. The figure before me isn¡¯t -nameless- he is Exec Kaalra, Arbiter of the Orion-spur. AKA the spiral arm of the Milky Way galaxy that Earth exists within. If he decided the moniker of ¡®God¡¯ with a capital G was more fitting, then it would be within his power to enforce the change. I swallow. Blinking instead. Right, I have no mouth¡­ So, like a genius I try to calm myself with a breath, and blink my subdermal eyes instead. If you¡¯ve ever wondered how a pit viper blinks its pits, wonder no more! Cause it felt like flapping earlobes over my ear holes. Beyond awkward. Kaalra stands, meeting my eyes with four of his own. They¡¯re almond shaped, set within a round ¡®head¡¯ with eyebrow ridges and ocular prominences. Humanoid in appearance though I know he has molded his face to seem more humanoid than alien. As any skilled ambassador would. Memories scratch at the wall within my id. Pounding against stone in warning. Who I am, what body I¡¯m in, all is lost in a cacophony of Kallra¡¯s eyes. ¡°Another failure..." Elbows move in a gesture that might be a shrug. Dejected, hopeless, yet unsurprised by this outcome. "Alas, you are not my daughter.¡± The author''s narrative has been misappropriated; report any instances of this story on Amazon. He turns to leave, subdermal eyes opening along the back of his head. They do not perceive clearly, but I¡¯m not exactly going anywhere. ¡°SO-¡± I try to speak, shouting. Cmon, think, this is just like training. Empty your mind. Jim said we have ESP potential. Figure it out! THINK! A wiggling memory pierces the wall worming through it to slap me with technical info about my own ¡®voice¡¯. Experience tempers my eagerness and for the first time since walking in on Bazzhole and Whorely, I relax. Who would have guessed alien abductions were preferable to being cheated on. ¡°So, that¡¯s it? You¡¯re just going to leave me in stasis.¡± I whisper. My voice isn¡¯t audible in the human sense. If one were a fly on the wall they would not perceive any motion between the two figures. Not until the sounds vibrated directly into their brain on psionic waves. Kallra freezes in the doorway. Claws lingering a millimeter away from the activation crystals. Eyes open across his skull -I know it¡¯s more of a flower¡¯s bulb than any calcium based lattice, but I understand the intent. ¡°You are an ape. Think very carefully as to your next words.¡± Whispers Kaalra, in a tone I know has crushed stars. ¡°Thinking is overrated. I¡¯m not your daughter, but you¡¯ve adopted me so we¡¯re stuck with each other. Or have you evolved your way out of filial responsibility?¡± The quip was a mistake. One that shows me exactly why people avoid the -nameless-. Normally, you don¡¯t think about little things like the atomic weight of oxygen, not until every molecule ceases to move, desublimating from gas directly into solid oxygen. Pressure in the room drops to zero. A lethal pressure for humans, as zero is total vacuum. Sea Level on earth is roughly 15 psi, while the pinnacle of Mount Everest tickles 5 psi and is well known for suffocating climbers. Except I¡¯m not human. Nor do I breath via lungs. A severe drop in pressure swells my eyes, improving vision rather than boiling my blood. Other than that, no changes accompany the loss and holding my breath is possible for far longer than any human could conceive. Desublimating gaseous oxygen into solid oxygen is impressive and should stun my monkey brain into shutting the hell up and not provoking Kaalra any further. But no one has ever accused me of being the sharpest tool. I prepare to speak and realize every molecule of my body is locked down. Held more tightly than Earth in Atlas¡¯ sweaty palms. ¡°You dare-¡± Whispers Kaalra, each syllable jackhammering our crystalized space. ¡°You dare speak with her voice. One more word and I will extract your stupidity so it cannot mar her existance further.¡± If I were still human, his threat alone would have killed me. Broken every bone in my body and literally crushed the piss and shit out of me. Although which hole I excreted from would be a mystery because my body would be crushed into dimensions smaller than a needle¡¯s point. But this ship is built of sterner materials. Walls creak, the floor and ceiling recoil slightly bowing under the psychic pressure. A thousand thoughts and memories run through my mind, the summation of my life, abduction from earth, college, the betrayal of every person I''ve ever cared about, and my impending death on Syrak-9. Part of me is relieved, dying in a war has to hurt, at least Kaalra will make it snappy and quick- -Deep within my id, five voices cry out as one. No. I can¡¯t move, can¡¯t breath, can¡¯t speak. My intrinsic human abilities are gone. So I turn to the one ability that isn¡¯t human. My name is Alaea. She wished to die and abandoned this body willingly, though her memories remain, as do her meditations. Together our minds settle into one. We are Alaea. I am Alaea. Envisioning a feather made of pure oxygen bricks I dust the air between us. An electrical storm of ice and lightning erupts between us, vaporizing oxygen back into gas. Fire rolls across the room, consuming oxygen. Kaalra is engulfed in flames, as is my stasis tube. Waves of heat roll over us both. He extends a finger, pulling fire, smoke, heat, and frozen oxygen, I strain against his will, trying to avoid burning to death. Solid steel, or crystals stronger than steel, hold me in place. Another psionic duster shatters the restraints and I¡¯m free. Fire licks my skin, pleasantly warming my hide. I¡¯m not human. The thought settles into my mind. Humans do not shower in flames. Is no part of me Athena Finley? Kaalra looks at me, disgust in his eyes but there is something else there. Relief maybe? Psychic tendrils set the room to order, banishing flames and trapped oxygen in a second. The room looks perfect, as if we hadn¡¯t just walked through a pure oxygen fire seconds before. Soot covers my skin while Kaalra is spotless. He must possess a personal shield generator or psychically keep the soot from landing. My claws rub together, brushing away loose soot to find my skin unblemished. No evidence that I just survived an inferno without so much as a sunburn. ¡°Such weak intelligence. Bah, my daughter has fused stars. You are nothing. Not even the traitors who altered your world will take such a failure in. Damn shame. Oh Alaea, wish that you accept our duty, not die vainly in the prayer of vainglory.¡± Said Kaalra. His speech was odd, as if translated by a middle school student. Incomplete and jilting. A second psionic impulse bursts from him, ordering the ship into the gate above Syrak-9. Engines ignite with the ship somehow duplicating itself; one physical manifestation will remain above Syrak-9 and the other transits the orbital gateway appearing above a planet I recognize as Earth. I cannot physically see beyond this stasis room, but I know the ship is moving and our position relative to the local stars. ¡°None of this is remotely possible-¡± I begin. Propelled to the cusp of lightspeed then far beyond as we transition the gate. Deep within my id a star chart updates, a primordial sense that tells me we have portalled back to Earth. I¡¯m home. As an alien daughter aboard a hostile warship. ¡°Please, leave Earth alone.¡± I whisper. ¡°Make me.¡± Answers Exec Kaalra, ¡°If you think an ape like you is capable of leaving stasis.¡± Says Kaalra, sealing the door between us. Chapter 13 Trapped like a rabbit in a mouse hole 1 / 1 Biomass 0 / 0 Mechanized Five things occurred in the same second. First, I swallow, sensor ping still echoing through my helmet. Secondly, the four technicians spread out, slicing the pie around crate mountain. One on each side, While the heaviest tech curls around his detonator, no matter what, he holds the power to Chuck Norris our asses with twenty tons of explosives. Third, Kerrigan¡¯s pupils narrow to slits, taking on a purple luminescence. She¡¯s in my arms one second, then ducking between my legs the next. I reflexively reach for her, narrowly pulling back as her tail stinger passes an inch away from my palm. Before I can think of how close I just came to death, Ling-ling2 breaks through his tunnel into the wider world. Acrid Tulverian blood tickles his nose making mine itch in sympathetic irritation. Fifth, a pulsating alarm appears on my HUD, an icon that sends a shudder through my body. The flash trained portion of my brain warns that it¡¯ll be safer to pull off my mask and empty the flechette pistol into my brain rather than face what is coming. Field Marshal Bazzhole deployed the Singularity¡¯s most terrifying weaponry. Part of me is stunned that their interplanetary AI network approved this particular weapon, though the grinding attrition of Syrak-9 makes for the ideal battlefield. Of all the bloody shitholes for an army to fight through this one screams to the heavens for THAT unpredictable weapon. Tight quarters mean hand to hand combat is guaranteed, while armor and personal shielding are prerequisites to survive the artillery barrages and heavy weaponry of mechanized armies. Now I understand why Baz is a Field Marshal. Should anything go awry, he¡¯ll be the ideal patsy. A newly appointed officer who was flash trained into command with zero prior experience or relevant skills. In other words, the perfectly explainable wig out. Who unleashed demons upon Syrak-9. ¡°Please, let this one be sane.¡± I whisper, falling prone. I crawl through the crates, positioning the central pile of equipment between myself and the entrance. ¡®Ling1, tunnel to my left, if someone comes around take em out.¡¯ He¡¯s already burrowed into the earth, digging a path towards the technicians. Crystal claws can really move dirt. ¡°Oh man, I really hope that stinger pierces armor.¡± Zerglings always beat marines in small numbers, an analogy I pray holds true here. Technicians aren''t combatants, but power armor would turn a starving toddler into a super Olympian capable of running faster and jumping higher and deadlifting more trucks than any unmodified humans. Rumbling shakes the bunker. Missile tubes clatter against each other, crates jitter up and down. Two minutes till the Juggernaut reaches us. It¡¯ll probably turn me into pink mist, just like those Tulverians. Crates begin to fall. Knocked askance by the tremors. We have two minutes so the Juggernaut is a mile away too far to shake- -Which is when I see it. A tunneling tank, it kinda looks like a spinning dildo through the tremorsense. Four figures reside within, a pilot and three passengers, one of which is unmistakable as the weapon. Five times heavier than the others yet occupying the same volume. Bile pushes up my esophagus. Terror made manifest. I begin to pant, hyperventilating. My torso curls around the flechette pistol, holding it steady as a Technocracy Technician slices the pie around crate mountain. Braced as I am -with two lings to triangulate tremorsense- the man finds me ready. One hundred needles whizz through the air in a half second. Accurate fire repeated to depletion of my magazine. Projectiles bounce harmlessly off armor, incapable of penetrating the ceramic layers. Good thing the armor isn¡¯t my target, his glass visor is. Sixty steel darts impact his visor. The first bounces off with no apparent damage. Same for the second. Then ten connect faster than my mind can process. Cracks spiderweb across the dome. Needles eleven and twelve pop it open. Triggering the HELP system. Steel shutters deploy automatically slamming forward to seal his faceplate a half second behind my sixtieth hit. Nearly forty needles enter the man¡¯s face. Eyes pop, teeth shatter, four needles pass through his spine bending and keyholing on their way through flesh. Most importantly of all, a single needle tumbles through his vertebrae, permanently crippling the man. [+1 biomass] [+1 technician power armor] All I see is a geyser of blood. Needles ricochet inside the helmet clanking and thudding in a blender. The man collapses going entirely limp. I reload, rolling hard to my left. Fire and move. Only I stop short, resting on my shoulder as the single most valuable piece of Technocracy hardware comes into view. Our number 1 highest priority capture target. A nanofactory, mostly a block of steel wrapped in composites to keep it protected¨C -A faint tingle emanates from my chest, and in a blink the entire room glows with faerie light. Back to total darkness before my helmet can detect the change in light. Ping alarms erupt in my helmet. Something just scanned us. >Executrix Alaea: A NANOFACTORY! I¡¯m taking that. Shit, where am I gonna put it? Feck. uhmmmm. Oh, what the hell is that tunneling? Dude, don¡¯t die. Wait, is that a Juggernaut? BRO! >Terran Thena: I¡¯M BUSY Chat operates fast as thought. A good thing. Otherwise I¡¯d be dead. This novel is published on a different platform. Support the original author by finding the official source. A second technician, this one missing a leg, leaps over crate mountain, power armor hurling him bodily into the ceiling supports with brute force adhering him to metal grating. Flechette pistol barks tearing through the two crates I was in just seconds earlier. He walks the shots into me, eight needles tearing into my arm and shoulder. Cold envelopes my arm as nerves shred. All sensation vanishes from the limb, hell, I can¡¯t even tell if the arm is still connected or not. I¡¯m losing blood. Training takes over, repeating drilled mantra. Kill this one, then tourniquet the bleed. My own pistol rises to the target, shaking as one arm fails to obey. Maybe if I¡¯m quick the Singularity can find a prosthetic. Dirt explodes beneath my chest launching me ten feet in a cartwheel that would put me in contention for the Paralympics. Metallic flooring shatters as a drill penetrates the bunker floor. A roof hatch opens and my worst fears sprout from on high. Red, black, and a dancing syandana of golden light compliment a woman¡¯s curves. Wide hips, a hint of abs, and perky tits, like an attractive runner. Right up until I see her face. It¡¯s smooth, featureless. An unfinished marble sculpture. She springs upwards, dual wielding pistols -if the weapons can be classified so timidly- one looks like three sawn-off shotguns duck taped together while the other is a monstrosity of gold steel that seems like it would be most at home on Blackbeard¡¯s pirate belt. I would laugh, if not for the bright colors. There are three reasons to stand out on the battlefield, the most common is so the enemy won¡¯t murder your medic. While the second is because you¡¯re too stupid to realize you are a target. But the third reason tightens my sphincter. If you¡¯re immortal. Most would achieve a simulacra of immortality with layers of shielding and armor, but this ¡®woman¡¯ seems to be human save for odd protrusions on her armor. It¡¯s not Singularity standard issue like my trenchcoat is. No, her armor might actually stop a bullet, as evidenced by hundreds of tiny nicks and dents in it. Prior attempts at ending this bioweapon¡¯s existence. Jutting prominences hint at being grown in a lab rather than forged and fitted; while humanoid affectations suggest this monster remembers her humanity differently than myself. A bulbous thorax extends from the figure¡¯s lower back glowing with yellow energy. Dozens of rods spray from the thorax washing over the bunker. Over me. They move through solid objects faster than light, leaving afterimages of energy as they scan. Before I blink they congregate into a half dozen solid tendrils. Linking the bioweapon with targets. One rod extends to each technocracy technician, one to Ling1, and another to the distant Juggernaut. The larger of her two pistols speaks, sending three slugs punching through a technician¡¯s power armor. Tremorsense informs of the slugs final destination, ten feet into the dirt. She ascends to her apex, hanging in midair for a microsecond as gravity consumes her upward acceleration and begins to drag her down. Thrusters puff, keeping her aloft. From my vantage she may as well be a destroying angel, hovering with death in both hands. The second pistol screams with recoil so intense it buoys her up. Six barrels fire at once, sending a half dozen slugs through the ceiling technician¡¯s helmet. Rounds carve a hole through his neck all the way to his chest where a full pound of lead poisons his heart via six holes. He slumps, boots still mag locked to the ceiling. Her own foot lashes out, slashing through armor, faceplate, and spine in one energized cut. Beheading the man for good measure. A dark thought crawls out of my bleeding arm. Hmm, guess that¡¯s one way to hang someone. Second pistol empty, she drops it, mag locks pull it out of the air, anchoring it to her hip. The gunfight finally catches the heavy technician¡¯s attention just in time for him to catch three slugs from her heavy pistol. How it shoots three slugs from one barrel is a fascinating impossibility I want to understand, no need to understand! I take a single step forward and slump- -torso going numb. ¡°Oh, that¡¯s right. I got shot.¡± I mutter, vision beginning to darken. To my horror, those words alert the weapon. Her -deeply disconcerting- thorax pulses once emitting a wave of yellow energy. Like really, she¡¯s a half bug, half woman, waif that doesn¡¯t reach my chin yet has more power than a Singularity superheavy walker. Light-power washes the bunker and myself. All told, the pain of being shot wasn¡¯t too bad, it hurt, but it hurt like a thorn pricks. Sharp pain that fades each second. In fact, I haven¡¯t even noticed my bleeding lung. Not until the bioweapon-woman curses me. When the pulse hits, flesh regrows instantly, a miracle soon corrupted by inconceivable pain as the needles push their way through my flesh at a tortoisian pace. Thin and sharp is how to pierce armor, yet these needles are designed to bend, to warp then spin through flesh after piercing armor. It is these bent, inch long blades that are healed out of me. Screaming fills my ears. Probably my own. Hard not to scream when eight blades razor through me, falling out of my body as constant waves of healing repair it. Minutes pass, or seconds. I¡¯m in way too much pain to count. Shooting too. One of the techheads managed a final salvo of flechettes, a full magazine. One hundred steel needles that bounce off the weapon¡¯s citrine shielding. Personal energy shielding! Now that is something I would give my left tit for. Another pulse hits and my mind clears instantly. So sharply I wonder if she stabbed me with a pound of cocaine. The weapon drops a detonator on my helmet, Tight beaming a single order to me. ¡°I have no heavy weapons on me so it''s up to you soldier. When that Juggernaut rolls in here, destroy it. Once that is accomplished get back to your squad.¡± She says, then does a standing backflip to cover twenty feet up and back into the tunneling tank. I¡¯m not sure how, but no part of her touches the hatch, a perfect swish despite thorax, protruding armor, and weapons. Her order is optimistic. We both know I¡¯ll explode alongside the Juggernaut, but at least this bioweapon is kind enough to lie. Maybe kindness doesn¡¯t factor into the decision, she may not have any comprehension of death. I try to respond and taste iron. Blood aspirates into my throat. At some point during my screaming the vehicle repositioned itself, and now it departs once more. Drill plows through crates into the bunker¡¯s wall then angles downward, tunneling away. Outside the Juggernaut stopped, halted by something. Ling1 says the weapon threw two rocks at the Juggernaut, one is still spewing white smoke and the other seems to hit the Juggernaut and stopped it. Maybe an EMP grenade of some kind? No time to stop and think. I need to get the hell out of here before the Juggernaut reactivates. I climb to my feet, stumbling against the nanofactory. If only we could capture this. Beam it away¡­ >Terran Thena: I¡¯m going to die, please, beam me out? >Executrix Alaea: You know I can¡¯t. >Executrix Alaea: Don¡¯t give up like a lil bitch. Not when I have a plan. >Terran Thena: What plan? >Executrix Alaea: They make Juggernauts on world. Pull a Tychus. Hacking coughs rip through my lungs, expunging the blood from at least one bullet, maybe two. Tychus. One word, but talking to yourself has the benefit of shorthand. It¡¯s a good plan. Chapter 14 WTF is Tychus? 1 / 2 Biomass 0 / 1 Mechanized -No production capacity- The Nanofactory churns to life, light appearing within. [Manufacturing capacity obtained] >Executrix Alaea: I¡¯m in control, you have five minutes before that Juggernaut rolls over your skull. >Terran Thena: Your initials should be AS for AssHole. I have a needler and it¡¯s a gotdaamned TANK! I rip off my gasmask, coughing blood onto the floor. My hands strip my outer layers, they won¡¯t fit into the Tychus plan. Nanofactory screens illuminate then run through a thousand schematics in nanoseconds, all skimmed and beamed to Alaea. Alien is right. Advanced alien too! Mrs. EarlyAccess got the luckiest roll of us all. I shake my head once. This nanofactory should be AI hardened, able to resist hacking attempts. A thousand ideas occur to me at once and I take the most obvious and appealing course of action. >Terran Thena: Hack the Juggernaut. >Executrix Alaea: Can¡¯t. They¡¯re wetware systems. Earthling core. Hope Whorely got turned into one of them. Then we can piledrive that whore with a spaceship. I cackle at the thought. Humor fighting off the terrifying abilities of an interstellar hacker. At least, it tries too. Alaea isn¡¯t Athena anymore. But what if the reference is more like a model number. You wouldn¡¯t name a human ¡®Mount Goddess of all knowledge¡¯ so why would an alien race name my other half exactly that¡­? Logic is quick on this simple problem. She¡¯s an Artificial Intelligence. Or they plugged her mind -my mind- into some kind of computer. What can I do if part of me exists only in cyberspace? A snapping sensation fills my mind. It¡¯s Ling-ling2 trying to fetch those Tulverian Pulsers. ¡°Don¡¯t bite the gun in half you idiot!¡± He cowers, tail falling between his knees. I sigh, these lings can talk, but they aren¡¯t fully sentient. Closer to a dog¡¯s intelligence than a fully functioning human being. Or my cousin Carl, that dude is dumb enough to walk through a blizzard in his boxers. How he is still sucking air surprises me each Christmas. I gulp. There won¡¯t be another Christmas with the family. Not this year. Or next. Lingling2 whimpers softly; reminds me of dad yelling at our golden retriever. Whether he pissed on the carpet or not, everyone feels like a piece of shit. I temper my voice, these lings might be the only companions I have. Best treat them right. ¡°Hey, look its fine. Go touch another one. Don¡¯t bite it. You¡¯re doing great.¡± Juggernaut engines restart with a deep rumbling that shakes my boots. Kerrigan appears at my side, tucking herself against my bad leg. I wince, prepared to fall over as my sprained ankle gives out, only to find the leg fully healed. That Singularity weapon did more than just cure my bullet wounds. But what was the price? I wonder, hoping I don¡¯t have space cancer from the instant healing. After all, cancer is just rapid cellular regeneration. Unmoderated healing always carries an accelerated risk of cancer directly correlary to the amount of cellular tissue regrown. ¡°Is Pfina otay?¡± Asks Kerrigan. I pat her head, too busy trying to execute ¡®Tychus¡¯. Just cause I know the plan doesn¡¯t make implementation any easier. >Terran Thena: Can you use the lings as targets for teleportation? The far away ling is trying to bring me a Tulverian plasma rifle. >Executrix Alaea: Yes, and I¡¯ll do you one better. A heads up display appears in my vision, with simple controls for teleportation. Anything I''m touching can be marked, more than that, anything within ten meters of myself or a creature in our hive mind can be marked, including anything the lings are physically touching. There are other options too, like a tagging system to mark distant objects, the touch restriction is just a filter. A way to limit the options and not spam me with ten thousand buttons or alerts. Neat¨C ¨CBullets cut through smoke flying a foot over my head as the Juggernaut reactivates its weaponry. We¡¯ve got a moment or two before the Juggernaut reboots all systems. Less if the pilot is experienced enough to manually control the vehicle. Part of me prays this is a newborn Earthling. ¡°Kerrigan, if that tank comes in here I want you to run down that tunnel. Do not look back! Don¡¯t worry about me.¡± I hiss, ducking and circling to the Nanofactory¡¯s product port. Nanofactories were ubiquitous across Singularity and Technocracy armadas. A portable piece of equipment that could churn out any pre-designed hardware you could imagine, great for repairs or minor fabrication. Not so great at full system construction. Sorta like an industrial sized 3d printer, complete with customizable metal injection and rubber analogs. Power armor or motorcycles are about the maximum limit of this specific machine¡¯s dimensions. Although it might be able to expand and accommodate larger objects, like SUVs. Its capture should have me ecstatic, and it does¡­ If I could feed it materials or had any chance of protecting this bunker. ¡°Ith Pfina gonna weaff me behind?¡± Asks Kerrigan. ¡°No. I¡¯ll be right behind you. So do not stop running. Understand?¡± She nods, so trusting. I wonder if this is what the Singularity bioweapon once was, small, alone, naked, and totally exposed to violence before they had any concept of humanity. The nanofactory pauses, loading another crate of supplies. There is a moment of silence, then I hear distant rumbling. The deeply quiet booms of long range guns firing in unison. What little light entering the bunker vanishes, occluded by a tank so far advanced it would be more at home in the Korpulu sector. The Juggernaut is here. A case of literary theft: this tale is not rightfully on Amazon; if you see it, report the violation. >Terran Thena: THOR IS HERE! I¡¯M TRAPPED! HELP! >Executrix Alaea: Working on it. Hide! With the nanofactory between me and the Juggernaut I¡¯m well hidden, plus I can see it through ling1 who¡¯s gone to ground, hiding beneath crates. Perfectly still. The Juggernaut backs up, returning the way it came for some inexplicable reason. It jerks awkwardly. Starting then stopping three times. Did the pilot reboot incorrectly? If I didn¡¯t know better I''d say he was a psychopath that plays with inverted controls and someone just swapped out his controller. >Executrix Alaea: Oh! I gotchu fam. Lights fill the bunker illuminating the space with a thousand blinking LEDs. Ling1 crawls to me, staying low. Pressing a shoulder against me in a protective squish, a way of shielding me with his body a vestigial gesture from his originating race, and almost meaningless in the face of thermal sensors. Internal movement warns us of manufacturing progressing to the final stages within. The retreating juggernaut raises itself, aligning upper missile tubes to the trench¡¯s mouth. Just in time for three Juggernauts to roll over the trench outside. Treads gore the earth, leaving indents wider than I am tall. One goes up and down the ramps, the other across missile tubes, metal screams as it tries to support the weight of the warmachine. While a third does the absurd. It locks every missile inside their launchers, then sets the rack to maximum inclination. Scores of missiles fire; combining their exhausts to help the Technotank hop thirty feet. It¡¯s like watching a ballerina fart nukes and fly, if that ballerina was two semi trucks glued together with lab grown meat and called the Killdozer ¡®daddy¡¯. Autocannons unleash hatred, spewing thousands of rounds towards human conscripts. I know they¡¯re dying. These tanks are killing other earthlings. Chink [+1 Technician power armor] Work complete the nanofactory ejects its most recent project, a suit of powered armor, painted shitbrown with gray accents. The most beautiful turd I''ve ever seen. 10/10 would shit again. Plan Tychus is simple, infiltrate the enemy¡¯s armor and shoot em in the ass. Just like the Tychus did with the Odin. An infinitely more elegant plan than blowing myself sky high to kill one lousy Juggernaut. >Terran Thena: I need two of those! >Executrix Alaea: Okay¡­ I¡¯m making five. Factory is too heavy to beam up right now. >Terran Thena: Can you make one half sized? There¡¯s a girl down here, child. >Executrix Alaea: A child? What- NO! Don¡¯t explain. Uhm. No, remote control won¡¯t let me alter designs. I¡¯ll have to get it on board. >Terran Thenao: YOU HAVE A SHIP?!?!?! >Executrix Alaea: It¡¯s not my ship. I¡¯ll be hiding the nanofactory in my closet¡­ Under my bed. Also, no human life support. Maybe no oxygen. You¡¯d probably die. Sorry. I don¡¯t have time to scream and swear at this ship shaped wrench, I¡¯m too busy jamming empty artillery shells and spare rations into the suit. At eight feet tall it¡¯s highly reminiscent of Terran Marine armor, big shoulderpads, dual reactors on the back in a sort of backpack, with the front being covered in sensors, lights, and a ton ¨Cliterally¨C of armor to counterbalance. ¡°Alright Kerrigan, hop in the armor, it¡¯ll keep you safe!¡± I say, lowering her into the suit through the neck hole. The Juggernaut outside rotates again, its missile tubes smashed flat by cosplaying as a bridge. What a maneuver. Part of me respects the enormous balls on this warmachine, and the other part of me warps two Tulverian plasma rifles aboard Alaea''s ship. They¡¯re valuable, despite having no place in ¡®Tychus¡¯. Still, missile tubes are semi disposable. I know cause there are about a thousand of them lining the bunker walls. Hydraulics hiss, the Juggernaut lowering itself once more and turning to face us. I thank god the nanofactory¡¯s completion port isn¡¯t facing the trench, though logic corrects me. This was no act of fate. No idiot would give enemies a straight shot into the factory¡¯s internals. Kerrigan¡¯s hips and shoulders slide right in, head disappearing for a second before it pops back up. A sharkish grin across her face. ¡°I know armor! Red guy showed me how to uthe this. Before he lefth me behind.¡± She says, moving the arms and legs. Visor hisses shut, how her lil arms reach any controls is an elastagirl miracle, but she is mobile and waddles behind the factory with me. We have no heavy guns, no capacity for killing tanks. Only zerglings. So I give the panic order that all zerglings receive when an overwhelming force is bearing down on them. Burrow. They obey, claws flaying steel grates in two swipes before scooping pawfuls of dirt out of the way. Treads whine, metal howls. The Juggernaut is entering the bunker, crushed tubes scraping the excavated walls. Another Juggernaut rocket jumps the trench, closer, smoke fogs the trench and bunker, drowning us in black rocket ejaculate. My mask filters it out, air tasting canned like it always does, but the zerglings wheeze, giving away our position. I rest my head against Kerrigan¡¯s armor, there¡¯s nothing left for us to do other than stay quiet. In the total silence I hear a sound that makes my heart stop. Kerrigan¡¯s radio buzz, and the orders of an angry Juggernaut. ¡°Tech, replace my tubes.¡± Echoes through her helmet. A voice I¡¯ve heard often rises from Kerrigan¡¯s throat, but it¡¯s not hers. ¡°Piss off bolt brain! Got shot to hell! Look around you man, there is a tech hanging from the ceiling! Can''t you see my squad is dead? We shoulda stayed evacuated. Now my damn suit¡¯s buggered. That¡¯s why I¡¯m making a replacement.¡± ¡°Don¡¯t make me come down there you little cun¨C¡± ¡°Oh yeah big boy? What you gonna do?¡± Says Kerrigan, using MY voice. ¡°Gonna waste your last bullets on me. Then head to the next bunker without a single round? Blow hot air out of your ports. Ah, look. I don¡¯t even have bullets for you. Quit bitching. Get rolling.¡± Chinks and chunks warn that the Juggernaut is manually operating several weapons, contemplating if he should blow us away. He doesn''t have a clear shot to either of us, but Juggernauts are not known for being stable. The type of person who can accept being surgically implanted into a tank and forced to fight until death is not your average human. "Sorry. Can''t help without a new suit." Says Kerrigan. Servoes whine to the tune of a screaming man. A sensor ping rips through the bunker. One last wail before the juggernaut turns and drives away. That was closer than shaving my vulva with straight razors. A second suit appears in front of me, chest open. Inviting me into the warm bosom of safety. I scramble up the suit, using its hands as footholds to get above. From here I can shimmy in, hips catching on the inner confines. It¡¯s not built for an unaugmented woman, let alone a fit college gal with double Ds. The Technomancy probably considers those unnecessary. Damn cyborgs must feed babies motor oil or something. I have to undo my mask and shake my hips like Shakira to get inside. All while wondering how much the Novan Techs must remove to get in and out comfortably. But at this point I¡¯m too desensitized to even shudder. Besides, the sudden feeling of being encased in protection settles my heart. Not even the steaming fumes of this world can crush my spirits now. Crush my spirits¡­ I¡¯m in armor. Before my visor shuts I look at Kerrigan, ¡°Get that Juggernaut back here, I¡¯ve got a plan.¡± Visor hisses shut. But for a second I can taste the steaming fumes of this world. Its rancid stench of cooked bodies. As if ten thousand men cut their throats and bled into one parking lot, then sat in the sun for a week it wouldn¡¯t smell half as vile. And I intend to cut one very large throat. [+1 Technician power armor] Chapter 15 Twenty six hours down 1 / 2 Biomass 1 / 3 Mechanized -Nanofactory Operational- I punch the com channel open, broadcasting on an open Technocracy line. Then freeze, uncertain how to mimic the tone Kerrigan used earlier. I can¡¯t exactly copy my own voice and her diction was a bit off. ¡°Hey, wait a second. Factory was already making suits, got a new one. You got lucky. Come back and I¡¯ll get your tubes replaced, at least then you won¡¯t be down to your last fifty bullets.¡± Says Kerrigan. She¡¯s mimicking my voice perfectly. The single most freakish way to show off her bioweapon nature. I should distance myself from her, there is no way of guessing what parts of her once childish brain remain. Or if there is even a girl left inside her reprogrammed mind. ¡°Make up your mind woman! I ought to report your instability.¡± Says the Juggernaut pilot, returning so quickly the bunker¡¯s concrete entrance sheers off two tubes. Steel plaps into the mud behind him. Twenty foot long missile tubes sink into mud like discarded ribs. Now mangled beyond recognition. I signal to Kerrigan, gesturing for her to lay down behind the factory and be silent. ¡°Damnit man! Just look at this mess!¡± I snap, taking over communications. I stomp out of the shadows, picking up a spare missile tube in one hand. The tube is some ¡®economical¡¯ alloy of steel, only a few hundred pounds. Practically nothing in this Technocracy power armor. The Juggernaut rotates in place, one tread rotating forward while its agonist moves in reverse until his rear is facing the nanofactory. We have a clear view of his most sensitive bits, and I send two orders, one to the zergling, and one to Kerrigan. >Athena: Grab all the spare rations you can Kerrigan. >Kerrigan: Yay! Chocolate meats! My throat clenches. What is Kerrigan going to become? Will she be one of those insane bioweapons who kills in seconds then orders her allies to die? An alert appears on my internal HUD, the option to warp a Tulverian plasma rifle off planet to Alaea. Good boy! I think, activating the option. Finally, I¡¯m armed and dangerous. Heart thundering as I claim the first antitank weapon. So happy that I hop aboard the Juggernaut, kicking spent missile tubes off the tank like Santa¡¯s best worker elf. Sable Yurten has replaced missile racks before, and this suit of power armor is built for engineers. Holographic instructions guide my hands as I reload two hundred tubes, dropping some of the odd caliber autocannons in favor of more missiles. Easy as LEGOs, especially since this suit even has bundles of powered graspers hidden under armor plates, allowing me to deploy them and reach things my encased fingers otherwise cannot. Tentacles have never been so handy. Like, they can really get in there deep. I recognize a few of the dropped autocannons as American made M2 machine guns, .50 BMG weapons with a little help from rollmarks like ¡®Property of United States Army¡± engraved on them. Jim must have sold gear to both sides. I¡¯m not surprised at the taxman¡¯s mercenary trend. Just exasperated. Is there anything he hasn''t touched? Another hologram counts remaining rounds for the autocannons, finding no reserves on the planet and labeling them as scrap metal. A smile crosses my face as I crush the guns on accident, taking pleasure in deformed steel. A few less guns for the Technocracy. I¡¯m not surprised in the least. At this point, I¡¯m just waiting for another betrayal. Maybe I¡¯ll win ¡®Backstabbed Bingo¡¯. Thirty minutes pass as I move roughly twenty thousand pounds of missile tubes and missiles. Oh, and we can¡¯t forget my assistant¡¯s contributions. Ling1 managed to move a dozen bricks of explosive, stashing them on or in the Juggernaut¡¯s access panels with some help from your friendly neighborhood warpgate. My new name for the teleportation system. One might ask how a zergling -with claws and no hands- opens a two inch access panel, a good question. Turns out these tentacles are great at unscrewing things while my hands are busy. There is even a cluster of tentacles under my calf armor complete with an adjustable wrench, perfect for opening access panels. Stolen from its rightful place, this narrative is not meant to be on Amazon; report any sightings. ¡°Hey, sorry about being a cunt. It¡¯s just that my squad ditched me then artillery nearly cut me in half just before you arrived. Worst of all, I can''t even call them assholes, something killed em first. Suit¡¯s dickered right to hell and I don¡¯t have the tools I need. Ah, guess my chips must have been damaged from the shockwaves. I¡¯ll run diagnostics and have them recalibrated when I link up at base.¡± I radio. ¡°Get that checked out before the next reload.¡± Responds the Juggernaut, absolutely zero emotion sullying his voice. I can¡¯t tell if he is pissed, furious, or just tired, in fact I have absolutely no idea what is running through that half robotic brain of his. My only hope is he bought Tychus and hasn¡¯t picked up on the deception. Job complete I seal the last access panel praying to yellow trinity that steel plates won¡¯t block the signal for spontaneous disassembly. Then he is gone, exiting the bunker and driving up the ramp. I¡¯ll need to time this perfectly, in case Kerrigan is still loyal to the Technocracy. She can¡¯t know what I¡¯ve done. Hard to imagine her cute purple eyes would stab me in the back, but it¡¯s even more difficult to imagine a world where a Technomancer builds a bioweapon without failsafes. One wrong word and her head might pop. Simultaneous with my reloading work, Lingling2 is busy gathering Tulverian gear, including helmets and ammunition bandoliers. The warp HUD makes this possible. Still, it¡¯s like driving two cars at once. The throttle is linked to both but each has its own steering wheel and gear shifter. My saving grace is how the buttons seem to press themselves if I focus on them. So fluid I have to wonder if our hive mind invented telekinesis. Allowing simultaneous usage of Singularity, Technocracy, and warp HUDs. Time rumbles through the world pounding artillery shells and the occasional dropship to smithereens. Strategic information I uncover by tapping into the Juggernaut¡¯s prediction subroutines and a connection that will be lost when I press the detonator. I look at the detonator, ready to pull the trigger then pause. Not yet, I think, locking its safety latch over the switch. Too many people have touched it and the bombs, I have no way of knowing what exactly will explode or if we got every linked brick of C4 in the bunker. Ling1 drops a brick near my feet, looking up at me like a puppy who just delivered slippers. Okay, we might have missed a few bricks. ¡°No way am I blowing my ass off early. We¡¯ll leave first then detonate.¡± Alerts appear on two helmets, torrents of information rattle around my face. Blinding me with a hundred pinpricks of information that erode my patience. I can feel pressure building behind my eyes, a migraine in the making. Okay, slow down. Work the problem. Solve one step then move to the next. Look, I¡¯m halfway there. We¡¯re in stolen armor, with a rolling sabotage as a distraction. But I¡¯m only one person¡­ My hand trembles, recalling the pain of being shot then healed. Frontlines are where people die, this cannot be where I fight. In the past hour artillery has cut me in half, nearly tore off my arm, and should have blown me sky high. I¡¯ve been stupid. Sloppy. Bumbling around a toxic world without a clue. >Terran Thena: Hey Hygieia, I have hardware but no soldiers. Help a poor girl out? >Matriarch Hygieia: send biomass Of course I¡¯ve forgotten the core part of our agreement. I feel stupider than when ¡®NOT ENOUGH MINERALS, MINE MORE MINERALS¡¯ appears on screen. It''s a simple matter for me to warp the dead technicians to Hygieia. Simple as dragging the icons and dropping them into the recycling bin. Or collecting your daily free roll in a gatcha. >Executrix Alaea: Hey Hygene, I¡¯ll give you the same HUD. I¡¯ve got my own door problems. >Terran Thena: Door problems? Damn problems? >Executrix Alaea: NO. >Matriarch Hygieia: is it clever if i thought of it too? :P >Matriarch Hygieia: I see your spare suits. >Matriarch Hygieia: will manufacture wetware >Matriarch Hygieia: estimated time to completion 1 hour >Matriarch Hygieia: product will be defective >Matriarch Hygieia: entering combat >Matriarch Hygieia: no time for better ¡°What the hell does defective mean?¡± I shout, warping out a stack of singularity helmets and rations. Kerrigan is still eating chocolate bricks, blissfully blind. Well, that¡¯s something. At least I can make one girl happy. Chapter 16 Proxy Racks #1 is Secured 1 / 6 Biomass 1 / 9 Mechanized 1 Nanofactory Lingling2 has been busy gathering Tulverian weapons and now sits inside a nest dug into the trench wall. Happily munching iguanas atop a pile of sweet alien energy weapons. Instead of magazines with projectiles the plasma rifles -I have no idea what their Tulverian manufacturer or model numbers might be, maybe Iguana Plasma Industries model Clickity Clack 102- use square bricks with rounded edges, similar to a human magazine yet entirely sealed with metal sliders protecting silver hued prods. Contact points for integrated electronics like a round counter in the scope. Or they could be batteries, without a live iguana to translate I can¡¯t even begin to guess. ¡°Feck, I can¡¯t possibly take another helmet¡­ Let alone an alien one.¡± >Terran Thena: Hey, I¡¯ve got information overload. Can you do something to link up my helmets? >Executrix Alaea: Oh, yeah, sure. Let me just run a military intelligence operation by myself. Easy. >Terran Thena: So¡­ That¡¯s a yes? It¡¯s not like you have anything better to do. >Executrix Alaea: Is it clever if all three of us think of it at the same time? AND STOP GETTING SHOT! WE CAN FEEL THAT! >Matriarch Hygieia: ditto. ty for the hud. Perfect for creating a biopool. >Terran Thena: Eat a bag of dicks. I¡¯m NOT TRYING to get shot! I¡¯ll trade places with either of you. >Executrix Alaea: Point taken. Alright here is the deal. I can link the helmets all to your warp HUD, but this is cludge AF. Makes you wish for a science vessel like the Amerigo, fully automated with enough sensors to comsat a system. Eh, the Tulvarian helmet won¡¯t link up. Not that it matters. Only a hundred odd iguanas are left. Singularity offensive killed all their outposts. Some kind of tunneling vehicle and a kickass yellow bioweapon. Fucking terrifying shit. I still can¡¯t figure out how she pulled the life out of those lizards or healed you. It¡¯s like all organs suddenly went into complete shutdown. As if all ATP was drained from their cells in a second. Something like that might actually be able to kill me. But then she healed you and did the inverse. I can¡¯t track where the repaired flesh came from or how she added blood. That weapon could literally cure every ailment on earth. ¡®Might be able to kill me.¡¯ repeats in my mind. Strange way of thinking about a tragedy but I¡¯m not sure how to respond to myself. Why would Alaea want to die? She don¡¯t sound suicidal, but I know nothing about the alien they¡¯ve become. Maybe it¡¯s some kind of Zerg queen who gives birth every minute. Ick. >Terran Thena: I can¡¯t manage all these com channels. If she, hell, let¡¯s give the yellow bioweapon a name. She heals, kills, and invigorates, so Trinity? If Trinity didn¡¯t finish off the iguanas I assume they¡¯ve got a fortress the drill tank can¡¯t reach? >Executrix Alaea: Yeah, their main landing pad and a forward outpost or two near the mountains. Without their mechs they can¡¯t take ground from the Technocracy and they were never going to take territory from the Azhurai so, by process of elimination, -pun intended- that leaves their fort. It¡¯s shielded above and below ground with some seriously impressive reactors. But¡­ I think the -nameless- will consider them defeated and cycle another contender into the wargames. Can I take the factory yet? >Terran Thena: Give me a few. Tychus worked. Jug has a very angry Greek up his trojan. >Matriarch Hygieia: haha The nanofactory brings my attention forward. I mute both human helmets so I can focus everything into the warp HUD. Unfortunately it still uses the power armor¡¯s internal speakers for announcements. Brown Technocracy armor clunks against a crate, occupied by my most mysterious ally. ¡°Hey Kerrigan, you alright?¡± ¡°Pfina¡¯s sneaky!¡± Says Kerrigan, somehow knowing to use the tight beam array instead of the radio. A critically important distinction. Tight beam is sort of like morse code beamed through a laser at another suit. Our onboard sensors can pick it up and translate it into sound easily enough, and most importantly, it¡¯s impossible to pick up unless someone targets you directly while within line of sight. Unlike radio which broadcasts in every direction and shouts ¡°Hey, come drop a bomb on me¡± around every corner on the planet. ¡°Oh, thanks. Uhm, how did you learn to operate that suit?¡± ¡°Red.¡± She says, her tone losing all mirth. Becoming the programmed robot I fear she is. ¡°He took me away and taught me loth of thingths. Thaid I couldn¡¯t see mom and dad until I wearned evewything and chased the sthinky people away.¡± I swallow, deciding to press my luck. ¡°Who are the stinky people?¡± ¡°Don¡¯t know. Red never told me.¡± ¡°Is Red your friend?¡± I pry, needing to know how much of a hold this ''Red'' has over Kerrigan. ¡°Pfina my only fwiend! Red never gave me hith name. He didn¡¯t give me tasty meaths or a name!¡± A sigh of relief escapes through clenched teeth. ¡°Thanks Kerrigan, you look pretty great in that armor. Let''s go. We need to find somewhere safe from those Juggernauts. If we head back to Singularity lines we can team up with them.¡± ¡°Otay.¡± She says. The armor moves like a second skin, grasping the thirty pound flechette pistol with one hand. Suit tentacles emerge from between armored plates, forming a sling for the weapon. Even in the heat of combat it won¡¯t be possible for me to lose it. >Terran Thena: Moving out. Factory is all yours. >Executrix Alaea: SWEET! Beaming up the nanofactory now. Oh, and the spare suits til Hygieia is ready. They¡¯ll fit in my closet. I see you¡¯re leaving, want me to blow that bunker after you reach a safe distance? >Terran Thena: Would you be a dear? ;) >Terran Thena: Actually, wait until an artillery barrage starts. So no one knows it was me. >Executrix Alaea: Roger roger. [+3 Technician powered armor][intact] [+1 Engineer powered armor][dead occupant]Stolen from its rightful author, this tale is not meant to be on Amazon; report any sightings. [+3 Technician powered armor][damaged][dead occupant] >Matriarch Hygieia: wait 30 minutes and i can put bodies in those suits >Matriarch Hygieia: ty for biomass >Matriarch Hygieia: wish i could store it on planet >Matriarch Hygieia: cant bank it up til i land ¡°Kerrigan, we need to run.¡± I order, giving both lings the command. Lingling2 erupts from his iguana nest while Ling1 rips past me. They take to the trenches like pigs in shit, sprinting through mud and really stretching out their legs. My Technician suit blares, tracking them with the option for me to deploy missile countermeasures. Cheetahs would be slower. Yet for all their impressive speed and violence Juggernauts are tougher than steel and thicker than buildings. The truth is simple albeit trite. Lings won¡¯t cut it. Not the Juggernauts we¡¯re facing today nor the Azhurai Conglomerate of tomorrow. I really should have made a missile launcher or something with the factory. Or have Hygieia cook up an Ultralisk. Actually, ultras suck. You just can¡¯t face tank a nuke in real life. What did the Zerg use for long range artillery? Broodlords and guardians, but fighters on Syrak just get shot down. Ground artillery was always worse, crap, what did I even use for ground- OH, lurkers or ravagers. >Terran Thena: I need to kill a few Juggernauts, make me a few siege tanks or Yamato cannons? >Executrix Alaea: Ha! I wish. Can only do steel and plastics without more resources. Reactors are a no go. No cloaking devices either. A siege tank would take me four weeks to make with this factory. IF I had the resources. >Terran Thena: Cmon, I need something better than these pulse rifles! It would keep me from getting shot¡­ >Executrix Alaea: -_- >Terran Thena: Anything? A marauder from wish.com? There are crates of nanofactory supplies down here; no one will know if you teleport them out and blow the bunker. . >Executrix Alaea: Sure thing, right after I invent time travel and solve galactic scarcity. >Executrix Alaea: Temporal anti-tampering locks. Can¡¯t touch them or the -nameless- will know I¡¯m helping you. So will the Technocracy who will snitch via a complaint. At best I¡¯ll lose the teleporter... >Executrix Alaea: Look. With what I have on hand we can make hand grenades. >Terran Thena: How about some ravagers? Always kicked ass with those guys, especially Abathur¡¯s coop variant with the extra corrosive bile. But any hard hitting artillery will work. >Matriarch Hygieia: collective isnt zerg >Matriarch Hygieia: with a few months i can recreate the zerg roster but right now im limited >Matriarch Hygieia: they have a few artillery lifeforms take your pick 800 biomass or 500 biomass >Matriarch Hygieia: ooooorrrr 16000 biomass for a one shot guarantee >Terran Thena: Feck. >Matriarch Hygieia: underground fungal farms and the biomass you send adds up >Matriarch Hygieia: give me time and a place to work, only then can i move the world >Terran Thena: ¡­ Alright Archimedes. >Matriarch Hygieia: landing on a planet soon will have my own biopool I feel like my girlfriend just told me her orthodox parents won¡¯t be home for the weekend. Too bad it''s Tuesday. Artillery shells begin to land, chasing the Juggernaut I just rearmed. He¡¯s chosen to go above the trenches and run full throttle for a distant bunker. Brave. We run, sticking to the trench for safety. Kerrigan waddling as zerglings rush ahead. Despite the distant thunder I¡¯m at peace, savoring every second of my incoming victory. Missile exhaust clogs the trenches, black tendrils swirling at our passing like grasping ghosts. Jogging through the smoke my mind wanders, going to the only place that strategic decisions were a common occurrence. Starcraft, in those terms our squad is two marines and two lings, but each Juggernaut is most analogous to a Dominion Thor. No chance. If I had one or two more tools it would be workable. A cloaking module and I could be a ghost, walk up to the Juggernaut and shoot him in the spine or drop demo charges into access ports. Easy sabotage. But I can¡¯t. We can barely burrow. The doglings can dig, but not enough for two suits of power armor to follow them. Wind sucks through my teeth. We are totally boned. A Thor wins that match up a hundred out of a hundred times. Always ending with squished Thena and Kerrigan creme brulee. Ah, it feels impossible, but that only excites me. There has to be a solution. Trench walls loom in front of me, a T junction, left to Singularity forces, right to the Technomancy. I wait for Lingling2 to arrive from the right, already facing the safety of Earthling lines. Left we go- -What will they do to Kerrigan? I think. The answer is uncertain running the gambit between alteration into a greater bioweapon and summary execution. Salvation halts my step. We can¡¯t go left. Not as we are. But going right means fighting a dozen Juggernauts. If we¡¯re able to sneak up behind the juggernauts maybe we can hit them while they¡¯re busy tearing through Earth conscripts¡­ No, they can just reverse and crush us. Out of flash trained habit I activate the armor¡¯s full systems, integrating it with the Technomancy¡¯s friend or foe detection system. I appear on the HUD¡¯s radar system, tagged as a technician. Specifically a logistical technician trained in reloading Juggernauts. Which is when a pleasant surprise fills the HUD, I have slug and missile counts for the ten nearest Juggernauts. Ten of the supertanks are within twenty minutes of me. That''s a relief, I thought there were twelve! Holy shitballs Batman! Four are pushing into Singularity lines, facing no real resistance. Earth would employ fighter jets or tanks with depleted uranium rounds to solve the question they ask, neither of which the Singularity will use on this world. Logistical technician... Moving things from home to the battlefield. Like an SCV. But this isn¡¯t Starcraft. The objective isn¡¯t to kill the enemy buildings, it¡¯s to destroy the enemy¡ª* Another snap decision sends me back to the crossroad, sprinting towards the Technomancy¡¯s next bunker. Lingling2 skids to a stop, caterwheeling legs as I hop ten feet over him. ¡°Oh holy shit! Power armor is AWESOME!¡± I gasp, landing without breaking stride. We have to win or Earth dies. Mom dies. Piece of shit dad dies before I can cut off his balls. I need to win. Ling1 and Lingling2 blow past me, sprinting with such force that mud flies out of the trench. Thrown forty feet into the air by alien claws digging up traction. They aren¡¯t shoehorned into guard duty anymore. A new purpose fills their minds, one they have been waiting their entire lives to hear. *¡ªDestroying buildings in Starcraft is an abstraction. The assumption is that without supplies your army will run out of bullets or starve then be hunted down and destroyed in the most boring way possible, no reason to play out a forgone conclusion. As a thought example, no amount of starving broodlords can make a single broodlings, nor can they beat a landed viking who happens to have unlimited fuel and missiles. ¡°Pfina, wrong way.¡± Says Kerrigan. ¡°Change of plans, we¡¯re going to the next Technocracy bunker.¡± [Nanofactory Integration complete] appears in the center of my vision, so surprising I nearly faceplant. But shit has been popping up in that HUD all day, what with all the chats from aliens and system notifications. This one ¨Clike all others¨C fades in a few seconds. [Insufficient minerals for continued production] [Acquire more minerals] >Terran Thena: Alaea¡­ You¡¯re a cunt for adding that to our warp HUDs. >Executrix Alaea: LOL >Terran Thena: SC2 win condition vs Jugs. Our first build order. A moment passes. Sixty seconds before I see his reply. >Executrix Alaea: Makes sense, Death from Above? >Terran Thena: yes >Executrix Alaea: Need volatile compounds or organic gases >Matriarch Hygieia: organic gases >Matriarch Hygieia: hehehehehe >Matriarch Hygieia: we can siphon those EZ >Matriarch Hygieia: take what you need Our chats work at the speed of thought. There is no need for us to aim our eyes at keyboards nor press individual keys, turning text into instantaneous communication of thoughts. Looks like I¡¯m not the only one running logistics. A smile creeps across my face. I know how to win. Or at least, tip the scales enough to flip the entire Technocracy. Distant rumbling heralds a return to form from my Singularity kin. Louder than I¡¯ve heard before. As if every gun on Earth decided to fire at once. Chapter 17 Left Behind? 1 / 6 Biomass 1 / 9 Mechanized 1 Nanofactory No sooner than the text fades, a truly spectacular shockwave flows through the world. Sending Kerrigan and I careening into the trench wall. Armor bounces off embedded logs, leaving a pauldron shaped dent in the walls. I spare a glance back at Kerrigan, who has somehow remained on her feet. Despite the clumsy waddle she is piloting that armor like a champ. ¡°Great job Kerrigan. Keep moving.¡± I beam back to her. ¡°Are you gonna leath me behind?¡± She asks. My heart breaks at her words. There is no inflexion in her voice, it is not a question. All curiosity is gone. Tossed into the nearest incinerator along with hope. Kerrigan¡¯s merely confirming a forgone conclusion. I plant both feet, skidding to a stop. ¡°What? No!--¡± I want to scream and shout at her, now is not the time for emotional breakdowns! We need to get out of the artillery barrage. But she has the mind of a child so I temper my voice, trying to keep my racing heart out of my throat. We have seconds left before the artillery hits. No, I can spare a minute for Kerrigan. The artillery is aimed at the Juggernaut, not us, nor has my suit detected any projectiles aimed directly on our heads. We have a moment. ¡°Leave my friend alone? No way. If I did that, who will keep all our chocolates safe? I need you Kerrigan. Queen of Confectionary Delights.¡± I say. Hearing a laugh. The joy in her voice makes my spine tighten. True happiness dances across our tight beams, something I haven¡¯t felt in a week. Not since being abducted. Or even before. Bazzhole could make me laugh, but laughter from him never truly made me happy. Neither did any of Whorely¡¯s kind words. They were less my friends than an alien bioweapon. ¡°Lets catch up to the lings¨C¡± Shells rain like consuming locusts. Explosions tear into everything. Hundreds of pops create successive earthquakes. My helmet¡¯s HELP system slams shut, gel packs inflate to maximum. Kerrigan¡¯s does the same, but her armor doesn¡¯t fit her. The gel packs won¡¯t cushion a thing. We¡¯re thrown, bounced, tossed, and cartwheeled through the air as mud, metal, wood, and dirt become liquids. Perpetually disturbed by rolling thunder and shockwaves. Suits dent under the barrage. I feel every one of my bones bend, as if someone hit it with a baseball bat. Pain soaks my body. And I smile. Not out of masochistic joy, but because this armor is the shit; and I¡¯m not getting hit. One single direct strike would kill me. The fact I¡¯m still alive means I¡¯m doing alright, unlike the intended targets. None of these impacts are aimed at me. None are even headed into the trench. Surprising given the sheer volume. Around the battlefield my HUD changes color for each damaged Juggernaut, and I cackle as they die. Missile racks explode in secondary booms. While one green icon jumps immediately to red, skipping yellow and orange damage indicators. Before it died the ammo counter red 200 missiles, and zeroes for autocannons. >Executrix Alaea: Oh, did you mean to blow that? You could be reading stolen content. Head to Royal Road for the genuine story. I reach for the detonator and find it crushed. Protective shielding broken and the switch all the way to the hot side. Ooops¡­ >Terran Thena: Shit. No. Did you get everything you can from the bunker? >Executrix Alaea: ugh. Close enough. But I¡¯m holding your biomass. Which REEKS. Really guys, I can¡¯t open the door! Ew, I think this body breathes through it''s skin. Seriously! Can we please find a bunker and turn it into a supply depot or something. Just leave a ling there and we can warp things in and out. >Matriarch Hygieia: cry me a river >Matriarch Hygieia: im stuck in the kiddy pool so gl hf >Matriarch Hygieia: supply ling? >Matriarch Hygieia: supple ling? >Matriarch Hygieia: SUPREMEME-LING >Terran Thena: haha, idiot. Lol. A transmission escapes my explosive accident crossing the battlefield as the Juggernaut¡¯s burning husk barrel rolls into the trenches. ¡°No direct hits. Internal explosions. Sabotage¨C¡± Within a millisecond, faster than I can process the transmission, the planetary Technocracy Overmind calculates likely causes and issues orders through dozens of logic cores. ¡°UNIDENTIFIED ENGINEER! REPORT TO BUNKER 0002 IMMEDIATELY¡± Echoes through my armor¡¯s speakers, and I''m tremendously grateful for my Singularity helmet. I might have lost some hearing to the artillery shell, but this screeching would have popped both drums like a terrible mixtape not even your deaf grandma would love. My feet move, dragging themselves toward Kerrigan, she¡¯s already moving forward in that awkward waddle. ¡°NONCOMPLIANCE DETECTED.¡± Booms through my speakers, and four Juggernauts change their trajectories. They know I¡¯m an infiltrator. Or at least suspect me. A suspicion that will take more effort to confirm than a dozen engineers are worth, and I¡¯m only wearing the guise of a lowly technician. Simple answer is to blow me away, the sort of utilitarian approach I expect from cyborgs. One Juggernaut is coming straight for me, with a second on a fly-by route able to back it up. While the other two adjust to cover holes in their new formation, still heading for Singularity lines. No fire comes from our frontline trenches. Strange, maybe we gave all we had in the barrage? ¡°Two Jugs just for little ole me? Jesus. Get your priorities straight! Talk about an F2 A move zombie.¡± It¡¯s no secret that artillery barrages precede waves of massed conscripts. Which should be in position to sweep through Tulverian territory after Trinity¡¯s infiltration, so sending two tanks for one infiltrating tech is overkill. Unless they think I am Trinity... I swallow, suddenly wondering if two isn''t enough for such a monster. Except there are Juggernauts heading my way already, a Technocracy counter offense that I am running headlong into. Juggernauts on an intercept course. Destination me. Or really, where I¡¯ll be in five minutes. Napkin fueled HUD math tells of a hundred bunker busting missiles and ten thousand slugs bearing down on me. Okay, maybe that would be enough for a bioweapon kill. Chin taps the armor, disconnecting all external communications except for tight beams. ¡°Kerrigan, tanks are coming, run. We might have to split up. Don¡¯t let the Juggernauts find you. They¡¯ll put you back in the cage, or kill- uuhhm. Make you go to sleep and never wake up.¡± ¡°Otay.¡± The answer isn¡¯t good enough for me. I sweep her into my arms and sprint down the trench, racing with all the speed I can muster. Power armor does the heavy lifting, but I need more speed. My wishes are granted, servos whining as limiters exceed safety thresholds, each step is a twenty foot powered leap. Still too slow. I push harder, testing my once severed legs. They seem to lengthen, pumping with more vigor and agility than ever before. >Terran Thena: Hygieia¡­ what did you use to make my legs? >Matriarch Hygieia: what I had >Matriarch Hygieia: the two lings I sent are the newest variant >Matriarch Hygieia: four legs instead of six Chapter 18 Who’s the bioweapon now?! 1 / 6 Biomass 1 / 9 Mechanized 1 Nanofactory Great, I¡¯m part zergling now. I glance at my two half brothers, or maybe parents? I don¡¯t know, it¡¯s weird either way and looking at it harder is only gonna make things worse. At least I¡¯m still thinking like a human and not licking buttholes like a dog. My two zergling hounds rocket down muddy trenches, webbed feet keeping them afloat. Were this the dry lands of their progenitor¡¯s homeworld they could outrun the wind itself. Yet they knew nothing of their homeworld, nor of anything other than instinct and obeyance. Today those purposes were united. Hunt. Kill. ¡ª Ordered by their Matriarch, through her strangest overseer a tiny creature, taller than they though similarly weighted and wrapped in the stench of enemies. Ah, that makes sense, Matriarch sent us on a mission with an infiltrator. Something to wear the enemies skin, seeing the unseeable. The hunter¡¯s thoughts were simple. Intentionally so. For obedience was more valuable than cunning. Unlike their physiology which worked like the augmented genome it was. Furious muscles begin to heat the zergling bodies, blood pumping fire into spines warming and pressurizing the fluid beneath their dorsal crests. In turn pushing bony protrusions out skin sheathes. Another adaptation to vent heat. Hot as they are they pass invisible to Technomancy scanners who are looking for larger targets, vehicles or squads, Laser fire, not two dogs. Two purely organic creatures pass beneath notice, no radar or scanner detects their passage through the trench bottom until they are twenty feet in front of bunker 0002. Four men in red power armor stand inside the entrance facing each other instead of their watch. A mistake. The last one any of them will ever make. Lingling2 takes the lead running between the armored man¡¯s legs, ramming two dorsal spines through the gaps in his groin armor. Like spring loaded needles they pop, perforating through the man then acting as a siphon for blood to leak out of. By the cooling sensation of warm blood dripping down his spine Lingling2 knows multiple arteries are hit, Something pops, wetting the spines with blood or cybernetic fluids. Two men raise their flechette pistols, holding down triggers as they spray hundreds of supersonic needles through the nothing. Too late. Ling1 trails just behind and now leaps forward to save his brother, claws shattering the helmet before teeth bite into face. Steel shutters try to snap shut, but it¡¯s already done. The man¡¯s brain is on its way down the zergling¡¯s gullet. Flechettes bounce off red armor, deflecting into shrapnel until a tail stinger lances forward. Glass shatters as neurotoxins are pumped through the engineer¡¯s skull. Granted a direct route to the neurons they are meant to inhibit. Bone once more penetrates hardened glass, jackhammering into the final man¡¯s right eye then left a dozen times. If the trauma doesn¡¯t kill the man, the poison surely will. With their watchdogs slain, the dozen unarmed technicians never see the zerglings coming, each one meeting death without a shot or whimper. Throats are torn out or tag teamed. One zergling trips and the other pounces. Brutally effective when the sounds of working nanofactories and power lifters cover the violence. Until deep rumbling overrides all else. This tale has been unlawfully obtained from Royal Road. If you discover it on Amazon, kindly report it. The Juggernauts are coming. ¡ª Athena ran. Carrying Kerrigan overhead. It was awkward, but better than letting the Technomancy take what little humanity she had left. Kerrigan was hers and hers alone! A truth I intend on keeping with the help of my tech armor. A suit of powered armor weighs about a thousand kilograms, or ~2200lbs. While the dual reactor variant adds an extra three hundred pounds. Well within the armor¡¯s ability to lift. Servos drove limbs forward. Eating up meters even as target locks began to seek me. ¡°Target lock Pfina!¡± ¡°I know, curl up in your armor, use the legs- ah- and arms as extra armor!¡± I gasp, panting as HUD alerts blind me. "Stone the flamin'' crows, mate! Them missiles are comin¡¯ in faster than a snake up a drainpipe! Take cover, ya drongo!" Shouts my suit. One day, I¡¯m gonna rip out this suit¡¯s coding and silence it for good. Until then I scream, mirroring the roar of incoming munitions. Antitank missiles, headed my way. We hear them first. A soft whoosh that zips over the trench¡¯s lip, barrelling towards us as it builds to mach speed. Kerrigan kicks a leg sideways, jerking our center of gravity left. I have no time to register the alteration in our path. Grey missile scrapes between faceplate and my upturned arm, leaving smears on both before I feel a faint thud- -The fins snapping off against my face. A missile just flew between my ear and elbow, missing me. Well, technically it slapped me silly, but I¡¯m alive so it counts as a miss. ¡°Ooohhshishitohshti!¡± By all rights, that should have killed us. No time to stop an think when I¡¯m sprinting for the bunker. It¡¯s only a few seconds away now. Corpses liter the mouth, evidence of my good boys performing above their station. A few more steps and we will be obscured. Safe. Electrical humming fills the air, autocannon servos whine, a Juggernaut is here. Shadows fall as the thirty foot abomination comes into view. I summon all my strength and toss Kerrigan. Her armor sailing through the trench, entering the bunker a picosecond before twelve autocannons fire. Now, what is an autocannon? Americans would call it a god given right, while in the Novan Technocracy it''s a colloquial expression for a variety of low tech weapons generally defined by explosive or solid munitions propelled by chemical combustion and cycled by the same chemical reaction. All told, the most common weapon across human space. Gates made transportation effectively free, combine free transport with the harvesting method of seeding a world with aggressive chimps then returning every ten thousand years, and economies of scale mean low tech chemical propelled projectiles are common. Albeit inefficient and highly undesirable. Perfect for the killing fields of Syrak-9. Where disposable hardware seems to be the only prerequisite. This Juggernaut is armed with autocannons akin to 20mm vulcan rounds, enough to core two Chevys. So when twelve open up, the air fogs with lead, digging a hole in the muddy trench. I keep running, raising my flechette pistol and cracking off a burst on manual targeting. Like an idiot. My suit has built in targeting arrays and servos capable of making microadjustments to fight recoil or align my shots more accurately. But I switched the damn thing off thinking it was how to get rid of the aussie accent! So I dump the entire magazine, one hundred flechettes zip through the air, pelting the Juggernaut¡¯s leftmost sensor mass. I may as well be launching spitwads at a lion¡¯s testicles. Or pissing gasoline at an open flame. Juggernaut treads reach the trench¡¯s edge, squishing mud out of their path as they sink a foot into the walls. I reload. My suit tentacles replacing the magazine with mechanical proficiency. Who would have guessed that tentacles could be a woman¡¯s best friend? I¡¯m glad no one heard me think that. Even in the heat of battle it¡¯s absurd. No time to aim or change fire rates I crack off another burst, this time aiming for the autocannon array¡¯s sensor node with my power armor¡¯s targeting assistance. Ninety needles bounce off steel, but ten buggers find glass. Hardened darts bounce off, leaving miniscule pinpricks of damage. Ten insignificant cracks in the now distorted glass. Red warnings scream in my mind, I''m being targeted by twelve separate scanners. Several of which must be missiles. Damn. Hope Kerrigan survives. Woulda been nice to share a real chocolate bar with her¡­ Chapter 19 Getting Shot… Again Eight hundred rounds rip out of dozens of autocannons, darkening the trench. My body is on autopilot, the suit bounding. Scores of slugs pelt my armor. A handful shattering the ceramic lattice to tear through alloyed layers, eight into the shoulder armor, and four center mass. One deflects, blasting a hole in my armor and weakening overall structural integrity with the explosive round. Two claim my reactor, gutting suit power. And the final hit digs into my ribs, blasting a hole in my side. My heart literally skips several beats, the concussive force knocking it into arrhythmia. Atriums and Ventricles squish at once, then fire at random in a vain attempt to restart the natural rhythm. In short, I got shot so hard I had a dozen simultaneous heart attacks. >Matriarch Hygieia: FUCK THAT HURTS! >Executrix Alaea: FUCK OH FUCK OH FUCK Great, I knew we were entangled beings, but I hadn¡¯t truly grasped how tightly our senses were linked until that moment. >Terran Thena: Sorry. I mean it. They¡¯re me. Not offshoots of me, but harmonized minds; three beings all stemming from a unified source, closer than triplets. Harming them is one of the last things I could ever wish for. My legs keep pumping. Alien muscle fibers working tirelessly to survive. Combined with relentless power armor. Servos and one reactor drive me deep into the bunker. Past crates of supplies, tables, a second nanofactory and the two not-zerglings who are busy eating the contents of ripped open power armors. [+4 biomass] For a split second I wonder how the biomass will make it back to Hygieia, hoping it won''t have to fully process through her lings. A question Alaea answers shortly, in an outcry that would have made me laugh if I weren''t suffering multiple heart attacks. >Executrix Alaea: GROSS! WHY DID YOU CHEW IT FIRST? DEAD BODIES ARE BETTER THAN THIS! Lingling2¡¯s belly is distended with the infusion of human meat, turning the fearsome spinosaurus wolf into a blood drunk tick. Inside the bunker all is quiet, except for the galaxy¡¯s most heavily armed tank outside, venting the last rounds of hate into an empty trench. How am I alive? My best guess is a needle bent an important sensor. Causing it to aim high and mostly miss me. A destroyed sensor would have been compensated for, in other words, I flicked the lion¡¯s scrotum and pissed him off so bad that he leapt twenty feet into the air and let me walk under him. I¡¯m beyond lucky. Emergency subroutines run, several metal tentacles extend to my chest, planting electrodes that stabilize my heart with electrical impulses. Agony fills my torso, fire and heat as my heartbeat is restored by force. That probably trimmed a decade off my life expectancy, although on Syrak I''m already past due. I try to inhale and find a feeling I hoped to never experience. My diaphragm flexes, ribs move, and absolutely zero air enters my lungs. Flash training warns me that this is a sucking chest wound. The human body relies on a sealed chest cavity to create the pressure differential that is necessary for breathing. Without that sealed cavity the lungs lose any and all ability to pressurize and depressurize, meaning I can''t move air. I¡¯m going to suffocate in the next minute. Probably less considering I¡¯ve been sprinting, depleting my body¡¯s natural reserves of oxygen. I don¡¯t stop running, jogging right into the rear wall as I activate the damn aussie suit, scrolling through subroutines as my vision darkens. All my luck has gone to waste. ¡°Need to- ahh-¡± My voice trails off, unable to exhale and create sound. One final word escapes my lips, less violent than a sea breeze scented bar of soap. ¡°Tri-aaggge.¡± The suit responds, although I almost wish it hadn¡¯t. "Blimey, cobber! Got a chest wound suckin¡¯ like a thirsty goanna at a waterhole! I¡¯m throwin¡¯ a patch on it faster than a croc chasin¡¯ tourists!" The accent reminds me of Bazzhole, the good times when he made me laugh. He had a certain Steve Irwin appeal that I''m loathe to reminisce. Fire enters my side. Biofoam, a sort of damage sealant, plugs the hole in my armor. Injected by subroutines I failed to find. My life is saved. I inhale, sweet canned oxygen that only smells a little of industrial lubricants and muddy feet. Kinks aside, nothing has ever tasted so sweet. I hear the rumbling of the juggernaut outside, backing away, heading for an access ramp. There will be two within a hundred meters of the bunker. I have seconds to find a weapon. One quick glance at the zerglings tells me they¡¯re more worthless than my flechette pistol. Not really their fault, just evolved for a different enemy. >Terran Thena: Grab your lings, they¡¯re too fat now. Gonna die. Need heavier. >Matriarch Hygieia: feck. I literally just made this! >Matriarch Hygieia: will you find a bunker and lock yourself in?! >Matriarch Hygieia: don¡¯t get my test bug squished! >Matriarch Hygieia: took me ages to cook up a two biomass monster >Matriarch Hygieia: feckfeckfeck >Matriarch Hygieia: he is not done Both not-zerglings vanish, warped out by whatever technomagic the Executrix commands from the confines of her closet. In a way I¡¯m jealous, she gets technology so advanced it may as well be magic, while I¡¯m in the mud. But a part of me savors the adrenaline. I am the spear. Everyone is counting on me. My win is a step towards Victory for Earth. Reminding me of my newest friend, brought to you by Lingling2. Two plasma rifles warp into my hands, fully loaded, compliments of dead iguanas. Power armor recognizes the guns and feeds me possible firing solutions only to come up short as Hygieia¡¯s latest creature appears. A roly-poly beetle interrupts my thoughts, looking particularly annoyed and somewhat squished. As if the bugger has been stuck under someone¡¯s toes for the past half hour. It stretches, wasting precious seconds to unrumple itself. I look it up and down, realizing what my other half, or uhm, other third, has done. This isn¡¯t just a beetle. Hygieia, mad lass that she is, cooked up a pint sized roach. I think. It¡¯s four feet tall, and four feet long with segmented plates to its black carapace except in the joints where I can see electric green fluid circulating. Like a nuclear blooded xenomorph pill bug. Except each leg is a spear and the thing has two foot long mandibles. Capabilities appear in my mind, as if I¡¯ve always known them. Which on some level is probably true since I seem to be irrevocably linked to them on some cellular or atomic level. Maybe even quantumly. Entangled minds. It would explain our ability to connect to one another via this sort of chat function. The roach nudges my suit with a leg, asking why it was summoned. ¡°Righty ho! Fight the juggernaut. Or delay it by any means necessary! Dig a pit and trip the bastard if you have to!¡± Chitinous mandibles click once and the beetle zips away faster than a lightning bug. I chase his departure with plasma fire, shots aimed at the only portion of the Juggernaut I can see. Its treads. My aim is off missing the wide side of a barn. For one precious second I pant. Inhaling with every ounce of strength I can. Firing blindly will accomplish nothing. The tale has been taken without authorization; if you see it on Amazon, report the incident. Kerrigan appears at my side, taking one of the plasma rifles from me. I give a thumbs up, and activate the full capabilities of a technician¡¯s suit. Manifests of supplies and equipment scroll across my eyes, searching this bunker for anything I can use. Hundreds of missiles sit in racks, too finicky for me to throw and somehow arm with my suit alone. The nanofactory near the bunker''s rear is my best hope, maybe It can cook up a rocket launcher that will obliterate the pilot after I burn through the Juggernaut¡¯s armor. I hobble around behind it, muting my mic so Kerrigan can¡¯t hear me cry after being shot for the millionth time. >Terran Thena: You healed me earlier, got anymore? >Executrix Alaea: You¡¯re ALIVE? I thought you died! How much pain are you gonna put me through? >Terran Thena: I¡¯ll stop getting hurt if you make us a shield generator. >Executrix Alaea: ¡­ you suck. >Executrix Alaea: No shields today, but reaper¡¯s done. So are the demo charges. I¡¯m elbow deep in Technomancy DRM, so I¡¯m kinda stuck. Be safe Athena. NO UNNECESSARY RISKS YOU BITCH. DRM? Great, even in space there are patent trolls. My fingers curl into a fist, slamming into the composite shell I''m leaning against. I don¡¯t want to die. ¡°Authentication received.¡± Appears against the internal screens of my armor. That¡¯s right, we¡¯re wearing Technomancy armor. Technomancy technician''s armor. Trinity must be pressing them hard if they know I¡¯m a saboteur and they haven¡¯t changed passwords. That thought alone beats back the pain. We¡¯re going to win. We can save Earth. A few quick button presses and the nanofactory gives me options for a dozen explosives. We have grenades, fragmentation and high explosive, land mines of the anti tank and anti person varieties. I scroll through the menu, ignoring the rocket fire outside. Ah, here it is, rocket launcher, individual tube. I¡¯m about to press the green build button, then I see it¡¯s build time, thirty minutes. Radar says I have forty five seconds before a Juggernaut rolls into this bunker. Thirty two seconds before I¡¯m face to face with its guns. Damn roach didn¡¯t buy me any time! Probably rolled up in a ball and got shot to shit. I press the build button for an anti tank mine, peeking over the Nanofactory¡¯s lip as the seconds tick by. ¡°Kerrigan, get under cover then go dark. Turn off your suit and hide.¡± Our radio chirps once. She knows what to do. Out of sheer desperation I check on the damn roach, finding it burrowed in deep mud. Idle while it senses the world. Tremorsense reactivates touching every plate of the Juggernauts treads as it rolls down the ramp, guns forward. ¡°Oh¡­ Clever girl. Should have mentioned the plan earlier!¡± Guns are pointed forward, not towards the bunker. No time to build anything, nor any need to. ¡°Carpe diem mothertrucker.¡± >Terran Thena: Reaper pack and bombs. ANY BOMBS! NOW! Servos whine, broken reactor hisses radioactive coolant, unable to shut off. I¡¯m running for the door, preparing to meet the Juggernaut head on when a Jetpack appears on my back and a bandoleer of explosives across my chest. I leap, propelling myself into the air twenty feet before activating the dual thrusters. My armor¡¯s gel layer inflates on the bounce which narrowly saves me from a massive concussion as my head bounces off the ceiling, deploying the steel shutters of my HELP system. Acceleration meters spike to several G¡¯s of force as I fly over the Juggernaut, dropping three bombs with my BFT. Best Friend Tentacles. Best Friendacles? Maybe it''s the punctured lung, but I can''t quite piece together why that''s funny. Juggernaut¡¯s have guns and sensors that will track targets and aim ahead of them, leading them and shooting where an enemy will be when the bullet reaches them. Except none of that works when your guns are pointed forward and I¡¯m coming from the side. Guns fire anyways, pilot trying to kill me. A thousand rounds cut through the air as I fly out of the trench. Two bombs hit, bouncing between barrels. Proximity fuses fail to activate. My thrusters cut out and I tumble across no man¡¯s land faceplanting in a looping cartwheel as I display all the grace of an obese turkey after Thanksgiving dinner. Then the third bomb hits the ramp sending a sharp knock through the Juggernaut¡¯s superstructure. HUD says no damage, but it activates the other bombs. Multiple explosions roar, sending a shockwave through the air, juggernaut and trench. Powerful enough to collapse my lil roach¡¯s tunnel. With the juggernaut atop it. I roll to my side, cracking off three shots with the plasma rifle. Blue orbs of liquid fire cross the gap to slag sensors blinding the tank. Engines roar. The pilot must be trying to free the vehicle only for the whole tank to tip forward, front half teetering precipitously as its treads swell with mud and green roach debris. I help it along with another bomb thrown under its upraised butt. Trapped beneath the Juggernaut¡¯s thickest armor and the earth, my bomb¡¯s full explosive potential is realized. Flipping the tank. >Matriarch Hygieia: you got my roach squished >Terran Thena: Better than getting myself squished! >Matriarch Hygieia: idk >Matriarch Hygieia: the roach was cuter ¡°You god damn bitch.¡± I say with a smile, watching the Juggernaut flop. Guns roar in a final attempt to remain grounded, hoping recoil alone will right the disaster. I laugh, jumping into the air once more. Legs tuck, cutting jetpack thrust to execute an in air one eighty, reactivating thrusters when the jetpack is pointed away from the Juggernaut. Twin turbines hurl me towards the Juggernaut, sending me crashing into it¡¯s rear at fifty miles an hour. Pain explodes in my shot lung, splattering blood on my HUD. No amount of biofoam or gel is enough to cushion my impact. Helmet visor cracks despite the HELP reinforcement, my ribs feel like a train ran over them, which might not be inaccurate. My hand snags the rear access port, suit tentacles undoing the single bolt that retains this particular access port. Those little guys really work fast. Makes me wonder what their APM would be, easily past 1k, although I''m not entirely sure how they are picking up on my wants and needs. In this case only my eyes focus on the bolt before they unscrew it. Only one bolt is used for a reason. Juggernauts are partially biological in nature with the pilot grafted into the vehicle. This port is a second access port to the waste evacuation system. Wet diarrhea pours out this port splashing across my armor. Tears flow down my cheeks as I struggle to breathe. Grateful I can''t smell. Two plasma shots clear the remaining garbage making space for the democharge in my hand. It slips from my grasp. Falling into the Juggernaut¡¯s second anus. One leg is working well enough to kick. Launching me five feet into the air. Pathetic, but enough to clear the treads. Lungs burn, vision darkens. I land facedown in mud, splatting as a shockwave kills the pilot. Missiles detonate blasting apart any remaining tubes and most of the autocannons. The Juggernaut¡¯s superstructure screams as explosions rip it in half, curling it into wreckage that will lock this bunker down for good. Technocracy systems do a self analysis and update my HUD. The bunker blinks red, sigils indicating the Singularity took it. A chuckle escapes my lips. They haven¡¯t updated my signal as an enemy combatant yet. A moment passes as I breathe, too tired to do anything. >Matriarch Hygieia: i had to lay that egg ya know >Matriarch Hygieia: how am i supposed to make roaches now?! The Technocracy sends out another update, finally marking me as a traitor. I don¡¯t recognize the symbols but a pretty good guess would be ¡®shoot this cunt on sight!¡¯. Then my Technocracy HUD winks out. It only took them two lost supertanks to lock me out. My legs kick, trying to end my tenure as a lawn dart. Rocking armor back and forth squelching deeper into the mud. Aw hell. This is backwards. I warp Ling1 back to me. Deeply appreciative of teleportation. ¡°Hey, come push me out of the mud.¡± I order, seriously contemplating how I¡¯m asking a spinosaurus wolf to be my knight in bio-luminescent armor. Which is when a tingle hits me. Starting along my toes before rushing across my hairless skin. Suit power fails, with both Singularity helmet and Technomancy armor going dark at the same time. There is no response from the reaper jetpack either, I¡¯m dead. Like a stick in the mud, except more literal. Armor locks in place, servos calcifying, not allowing any motion other than small adjustments to bring me closer to the recovery position. It¡¯s a preservation mechanism, invented after one too many technicians got knocked off space stations and kept screwing their rescuers by flailing around or trying to grab onto equipment. So the recovery position was invented. Under certain conditions the suit would lock down, legs straight, arms at side. Streamlined really. That way you can¡¯t scream if the recovery craft accidental mag locks your taint and rips out those sensitive piercings. Or complain when the magnetic grapnel pins your arm to your chest, crushing it until you¡¯ll need a prosthetic. I scream into my helmet. Trying to reboot either one. No luck. Not until my good boy pulls me out of the mud with a squelch, becoming my impromptu palanquin with Lingling2''s assistance, floating me into the bunker and dropping me beside Kerrigan. There are no lights or LEDs coming from the hardware or engineer suits. Something knocked out all the electronics¡­ >Terran Thena: Suit died, EMP maybe? Need a replacement for me and Kerrigan. >Executrix Alaea: Suits aboard are fine so I got you >Executrix Alaea: wait. >Executrix Alaea: WHO? >Terran Thena: joke, 2 suits plz >Executrix Alaea: Aight. But I''m stacking all this biomass in there with you. Including this dead roach! A flash of blue light strips the suit off myself, dropping a replacement in front of me. Now THIS is a level of service I could get used to. [+4 technician armor] Chapter 20 Eye of the Storm I crawl over to the new suit, wiggling into it as Kerrigan does the same. She¡¯s agile, picking up my plasma rifle with the armor¡¯s arms while stuffing spare rations into the suit with her own limbs. Like a greedy monkey. Wait, how is she moving the suit arms? Is her tail doing that? The reaper jetpack and twin reactors move over to the new suit, still running at half power. No spare reactors means that Kerrigan will be exposed to lethal radiation. For a world we aren¡¯t allowed to irradiate, there sure is a lot of radiation. Who was dumb enough to nuke a mining world anyways? Even as the question enter¡¯s my mind I groan, knowing Jim¡¯s alien download will answer my question. Annoyance tickles my heart, quashed by the surrounding noise. Nothing is moving. No artillery outside, no roaring autocannons or rolling Juggernauts. I have a moment of peace, time I can use to rearm and reassess. Syrak-9 was always a mining world, but now serves as an intergalactic punching ground. Each month a new army is dropped onto the distant continent, a place that was long ago depleted of Solarium -where I am now- to participate in wargames that boil down to, you get to export one pound of Solarium for every acre of land you hold, but in alien units. Don¡¯t ask me to convert hecataris to acres or volumes of alien frenulums to cubic feet. Metric to Imperial is bad enough. All my flashtraining really communicates is more land = better. So simple, yet so impossible. Eight factions currently hold ground with only the Singularity, Technocracy, and until today the Tulverians actively trying to gain ground while the others hide within ancient fortifications, digging deeper every day. Better to hold a hundred acres for a thousand years than to risk your future for a monopoly. Especially when there are hundreds of warships waiting in orbit, ready to add their army to the economic argument. Once a month the -nameless- caste grants permission for a single ship to enter orbit and secure a landing site. Of course, ship displacement is regulated so as not to pollute the skies with an endless legion of ever-engorging cargo freighters. Applicants must also be a warship with shields and guns, as the easiest way of eliminating one faction is to destroy the ship on approach, before it can land and deposit troops or fortifications upon the surface. Fully half the deployed forces are some sort of anti-ship device., be they burrowed cannons capable of firing a single shot per month and spending the next thirty days recharging, or the grand bombardment arrays of faction headquarters, with more shields and guns than a fully armed Technocracy fleet. How we were portaled in begins to itch. The Singularity cheated, which the -nameless- must know, but they allowed it anyways. They must want us to win. I pause, that makes no sense, the nameless don¡¯t deal with base races like humans, in fact, they barely deal with races we would consider immortal, something about the void of understanding being too distant between a nameless and others. Like trying to communicate quantum mechanics to an ant, even if it could speak your language the insect would literally die of old age before you finished the preamble, and it has no concept of science or even the necessary schooling required to understand the foundational knowledge. So client races exist as go-betweens. Acting as a path from the human to a metaphorical queen ant who devotes their entire existance to understanding a fragment of knowledge greater than themselves, and via that knowledge lift the base race. Becoming puppies who obey the -nameless-, a vaunted honor and probably why they haven¡¯t bothered to give us their name. No, our victory or loss didn¡¯t factor into the nameless¡¯ decision, something else is going on here. ¡°Why did they want us to die here?¡± I mutter aloud, running through a systems check. New suit, new gasmask, and new flechette pistol all work, each piece of my gear replacing the old. I¡¯m locked and loaded once more. With our damaged gear already back in Alaea¡¯s nanofactory for repairs. The only items I keep are the FNX and the combat knife, both tucked into my waistband. More to provide comfort than actual defense, as nothing on Syrak should be vulnerable to such a small autocannon or blade. "Emotional support gun. Yeah, I like the sound of that." I say, giggling to myself. Still, nothing is sitting right with me, like when you know you¡¯ve missed something obvious about your opponent¡¯s hand and haven¡¯t figured it out yet. Metaphorically, i¡¯ve scouted my enemy¡¯s main at two minutes and see three depots in the wall, but no barracks. Cheese is incoming, be it a proxied factory or a ghost in the main three minutes from now. My heart begins to pound out the anxiety, working my problem. First a Field Marshal is appointed, then we are portaled into the front lines without guns. This sounds like a terribly implemented terraforming project rather than a war. Logic that follows the ideal of spill enough blood, belch enough hydrocarbons out of missiles, and eventually nature will find a way to break down the corpses into flowers. I ponder the information I have, running through all memories of Syrak-9. With hundreds of warships in space, weapons and taxi orders are strictly regulated. Except for civilizations with armies already planetside. To keep things interesting, each existing faction is allowed one resupply a month often coinciding with each other as that will split any fire from the ground. No matter what, there will be more soldiers sent, more blood spilled, and more war for the nameless caste to observe. For there is always a nameless ship in orbit. I take a breath of silence. Even the Juggernauts outside seem to have been knocked out, and their systems are hardened against EMP devices of all kinds. That''s why the ''wetware'' is grafted into them in the first place! First a Field Marshal is appointed, then we are portaled into the front lines without guns. This sounds like a terribly implemented terraforming project rather than a war. Human lives spent as biomass alone. Logic that follows the idea of spill enough blood, belch enough hydrocarbons out of missiles, and eventually nature will find a way to break the corpses into flowers. I ponder the information I have, running through all memories of Syrak-9. With hundreds of warships in space, weapons and taxi orders are strictly regulated. Except for civilizations with armies already planetside. To keep things interesting, each existing faction is allowed one resupply a month often coinciding with each other as that will split any fire from the ground. No matter what, there will be more soldiers sent, more blood spilled, and more war for the -nameless- to observe. For there is always one of their ships in orbit. I take a breath of silence. Even the Juggernaut outside seems to have been knocked out, and their systems are hardened against EMP devices of all kinds. Whatever slapped this continent is of greater technical prowess. Most likely a race more akin to the -nameless-. Speculation suggests they enjoy watching other races die, or that this world -alongside hundreds of similar mining worlds- acts as a release valve. Somewhere competing factions use to expend their growing armies with limited collateral damage. Other cynics suggest there is no purpose in this wargame or life in general, and that the nameless are simply collecting intel on different faction¡¯s armies and technology levels. But no one listens to cynics, partly because those melancholy assholes are the most uninteresting things in the universe. Like a damp sponge, lukewarm and wet, that you¡¯ve accidentally brushed against. Good thing we can wash away their squinch with solarium mining and the wealth such mining brings. That alone is well worth the cost of military divulgence. A fusion reactor that runs for ten thousand years is well worth thousands of lives. If you discover this tale on Amazon, be aware that it has been stolen. Please report the violation. A fact the Azhurai conglomerate takes full advantage of. Their territory hasn¡¯t fluctuated in six hundred years, despite thousands of incursions into it. Gears turn inside my head. One of the factions detonated an EMP. Of the current competing factions, only the Tulverians would should gain a strong advantage, but the Singularity has enough Earthling weapons to fight off the iguanas with shovels and bullets. While the other factions would have to traverse Azhurai territory to reach us. My silent pondering drags on for long minutes. Nearly a half hour of rebooting systems and replacing hardware. Or desperately scrambling to find what works. Outside the bunker artillery begins to land once more, walking closer towards the Juggernauts. Dumb rounds fired by eyeballs and gut instincts without any newfangled ballistic targeting assistance. While Juggernaut pilots shudder in their hulls, surgically attached to crippled treads, shitting ducks, only able to fire the most basic autocannons. The thought of those abominations sitting helpless as artillery crews zero in sets my heart a twitter. Juggernaut pilots shudder in their hulls, surgically attached to crippled treads, shitting ducks, only able to fire the most basic autocannons. The thought of those abominations sitting helpless as artillery crews walk shells onto them makes my heart beat a little faster. A pulsing that becomes pure pain as my heart is still sore from being tazered into rhythm. Damn Juggernauts trying to kill me- Wait. -Two Juggernauts were coming to kill me. Not one. My job is only half done. ¡°Lings! Go kill the nearest Juggernaut! It¡¯s probably got guns aimed at our ramp so you¡¯ll have to¨C¡± The damn spinosaurus sprints headfirst out the bunker running up the wall like a meth soaked gecko, gone before I finish pronouncing kill. I¡¯m ready to sense him die, but that is his purpose and will serve to warn Kerrigan and I of a functional enemy. Who I find sitting against the nanofactory, helmet and chest plate open. Exposed to the radiation. A fact she seems to be unaware of. Since she¡¯s sitting on top of the armor happily chomping away on ration packs. ¡°Saved you one Pfina.¡± She says, her tail darting into the suit and retrieving a chocolate ration. She¡¯s changed. Her eyes were always purple, but now ears poke beyond her hair, long and pointed. Like a space elf. Stranger still, her skin is now a dark olive, as if she¡¯s a peeled apple and oxidizing before my eyes. So many questions run through my mind that I activate the suit¡¯s scanners, giving her a full sweep. Kerrigan¡¯s skin darkens a shade and the results nearly make me facepalm. She doesn¡¯t show up at all, as if she has organic countermeasures to detection or is somehow absorbing my scans, and why the bioweapon didn¡¯t kill her. ¡°Thanks Kerrigan.¡± I manage to say, kneeling in front of her, trying not to look at the plasma rifle in her armor¡¯s hand. After the day we¡¯ve had, chocolate tastes amazing. Good enough I¡¯m not bothered by the normal scents of trench warfare or the gutted engineers around us. We eat quietly. Not difficult considering my suit is the only working computer within sensor range. >Terran Thena: Hey, can you scan the person I¡¯m next to? I need to know how bad her radiation poisoning is. >Executrix Alaea: Someone picked up my interference. That EMP might have been for me¡­ >Terran Thena: You got my suit working easily enough. Don¡¯t worry about it. The words trouble me as I say them, without Alaea¡¯s warping engine we are long dead. I¡¯d love to have her stop and protect herself, but Kerrigan is going to die over the next few days as her body falls apart. Radiation poisoning is a terrible thing. Skin will fall off in patches, cells dividing in a chaotic jumble until she¡¯s riddled with cancer. Her hair will fall out, then fingernails, probably the tip of her tail as well. I still have the flechette pistol, if it¡¯s bad enough I might have to end her misery. Light blinks around Kerrigan engulfing her in an instant. Once more faster than I can blink. ¡°What was that?¡± Kerrigan asks, jaw moving in a more humanlike way. I give her another once over, noticing more than just her skin has changed. How could I have missed all these changes? She¡¯s six inches taller, with dark scales forming over her ladyness. Smoothing everything out, almost like a mannequin. >Executrix Alaea: DAMN TECHNO IDIOTS STOLE MY CAT! The venom in Alaea¡¯s message makes me jump out of my skin. ¡°Ah! Oh, nothing, it was nothing Kerrigan, I¡¯m just checking to see if you¡¯re hurt.¡± I say. >Matriarch Hygieia: Sad, no space pussies for you. >Terran Thena: Can you not scream in my mind please? >Executrix Alaea: Sorry. Did I just scan your Kerrigan? >Terran Thena: uhh¡­ yes? How bad is it? She¡¯s a Technocracy bioweapon¡­ right? >Executrix Alaea: NO. She¡¯s a meditation aid. Something to help races like mine learn to manage their powers as children like getting a puppy to teach your kid responsibility. Or, more relevantly, when a new mind gets stuffed into their body during some kind of resurrection ritual. Your ¡®Kerrigan¡¯ was supposed to be delivered a week ago! Those assholes stole a damn service cat! Well, it¡¯s not really a cat, kinda. More like a warmblooded tiger lizard thing. With psychic abilities and the Collective just call them psychic aids. >Terran Thena: She doesn¡¯t look like a catgirl¡­ More like an elf mixed with a scorpion. >Executrix Alaea: Yeah, she''s odd. Mutated into a humanoid shape. Not sure what to do with that or how it was done. In general they take on some characteristics of the food they eat, its an adaptation tactic so they can be shipped across the galaxy. Meditation aids like her are probably the best thing the Endless Collective Straingineers ever cooked up. So desirable we had to set a quota on how many they produce. >Matriarch Hygieia: Wait¡­ You are telling me I can make INFINITE KERRIGANS?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?!?! >Matriarch Hygieia: BEAM HER TO ME RIGHT NOW! >Matriarch Hygieia: NOW! >Matriarch Hygieia: NOW! >Matriarch Hygieia: NOW! -Matriarch Hygieia- has been muted. >Executrix Alaea: haha. Idiot. You think a -nameless- restriction can be circumvented? We can''t even think their name within the confines of our own minds! You won¡¯t be able to make her without beating those mental locks. AND You aren''t listening! Technocracy did things to her. She isn''t a Collective bioform anymore. >Executrix Alaea: Anyways¡­ Radiation will heighten her abilities or uhm¡­ mental emanations. If she hasn¡¯t started glowing yet, she will, and it¡¯ll be a good thing. Idk what the Novassholes injected into her, but she isn¡¯t supposed to look like that. Does she talk? I beamed out the vials of acid in her spine and skull. So she won¡¯t pop. Damn cyborgs. Shit. If she were normal I could beam her aboard and break out of this closet! Catnapping is ENTIRELY UNACCEPTABLE! This ought to be a warcrime! I consider asking how a cat was supposed to help Alaea break out of the closet, but I''m suddenly presented with the image of cat shaped keyholes. Which would be entirely overconstricted for the young girl looking at me with sparkling purple eyes. ¡°Uhm wow. You¡¯re healthier than I am Kerrigan. The suit doesn¡¯t actually help you¡­¡± ¡°How will I carry all thethes- Ahem, these, snacks.¡± She says, tongue accidentally separating her lower jaw. Her lisp is fading fast, only saying hello when her inhuman anatomy asserts itself. What kind of alien cat could make a Kerrigan? I wonder, but decide to leave that thought alone. Like our ration packs, some things should not be examined too closely. Instead we opt to salvage everything we can from this bunker. Tremorsense alerts me to the dropping of ducks. My lings found the Juggernaut and have employed their claws fully. Slashing and hacking through layers of steel and armor, a process that will take them hours. Fine by me. Alaea aids our looting of the second nanofactory, increasing our manufacturing capacity and supplies. She also beams down a replacement arm for my suit, taken directly from the Engineer. As in, the engineer whose wrist computer has the ciphers for every crate and temporal lock in this supply bunker. A skeleton key to Christmas morning. Stacks of open crates lie looted, like a peanut farm that¡¯s been visited by a herd of hungry elephants. We have weapons, a manufacturing base, and a half hour later Hygieia sends her ¡®defective¡¯ soldiers to me. Four plasma rifle wielding, power armor wearing, human-collective hybrids. [5 / 13 Mechanized] Finally, I¡¯m not alone. More importantly. It¡¯s time to see what these marines can do. For they can only be called marines, because they were born on a ship, armored aboardships, and deployed from a starship, thus they are space marines in the most literal definition. Chapter 21 These Ain’t your Daddy’s Marines When using alien biomass to formulate a human being one would think that the overall shape would have some input on the creature¡¯s mind or at least temper the end product¡¯s mutation; resulting in something recognizable. Maybe they would have some odd ears or spikey arms, maybe even a tail like Kerrigan¡¯s. What I did not expect were the creatures in front of me. First and foremost stands the most gorgeous man I¡¯ve ever seen. Chiseled features and a jaw so defined that the Eiffel tower would bend over and call it daddy. I have no chance to appreciate him as he drops to hands and knees then starts crawling across the bunker floor sniffing dirt. Hygieia, what the fuck did you do to Fabio? ¡°Uhm, you alright down there?¡± He turns, mouth hanging open and barks. BARKS! Not a normal woof woof, but yappy, like a soy infused chihuahua hopped up on gooseballs and set free from purse prison. ¡°Arf arf arf,¡± he stops to sniff another marine¡¯s crotch armor then shakes his lower half before yapping away. ¡°Arf arf arf-¡±. ¡°NOPE!¡± I shout, struggling to form words. ¡°Nope! You! Uh- oh god- BARKER! Shut your helmet and stand on your own two feet!¡± I snap. Obedient to a fault his helmet seals. Though figuring out how to be bipedal is a whole different question. At least the faceplate dampens his inane yapping. We can all still hear him, yapping away inside the fishbowl like a reality TV star. Pain fresh in my eyes, I look to the next ¡®marine¡¯ who salutes me in crisp Singularity fashion. A gesture of greeting and recognition of a superior. All honored ideals of the Holiest Singularity. ¡°Reporting for duty sir.¡± Says the second marine. ¡°Oh thank god! Here I was thinking you would all be dog soldiers like Barker.¡± ¡°No sir. Our base strains were expedited by Hygieia¡¯s request. So each warrior was made from the most expedient biomass and carries a unique genotype sir.¡± Says the second marine over coms. My eyes narrow. Not liking the implications of ''most expedient biomass''. >Terran Thena: I know you said defective, but this is absurd! >Matriarch Hygieia: we can melt them back down into their base components whenever but you wanted quick! >Matriarch Hygieia: i made twelve and only four passed the sanity check >Matriarch Hygieia: results will improve >Matriarch Hygieia: when I land The sanity check¡­? I stare at those words for a painful second. ¡°Shit, chat we¡¯re doing this live. Helmets open.¡± It¡¯s hard to say just how instantly my regret landed and not because Barker followed the order first. The second marine wasn¡¯t remotely human. I¡¯m ten feet away and can see dozens of worms woven together into a collective facsimile. Looking at him is like looking at a man made of vines. Except vines don¡¯t squirm. Or writhe like these worms do. I nearly throw up my rations, narrowly managing to keep them down by shutting my eyes and counting to ten. His ¡®head¡¯ haunts my mind the entire time, multilayered like a flowerbud yet perpetually moving in illogical angles with a few detaching into stalks like chin-eyeballs to peer around. I''ve never wished for a Drakken Laser drill more than I did right in that second. Yet the power of a star pales when faced with that head. ¡°Private Barker and Sergeant Wormface. Great way to start a war¡­¡± I mumble, already fearing what comes next. Wormface recieves the promotion on ability, as Hygiea made him to be the most cognitively capable. Something about having ten thousand brains really helps with memory retention. The third soldier is surprisingly normal yet completely wrong all at once. Dark hair, two eyes, a recognizable nose and mouth are all things that should reassure me and should¡¯ve set my mind at ease. Should have. ¡°Are¡­ Are you an Emu?¡± His head is that of a duck¡¯s, but darker and a bit weedier with thicker feathers, a dark bill and huge eyes. I recognize it, but am in no way happy to see the familiarities. At my question his feathers flare into a mohawk. Anime eyes blinking in my direction. "Private Emu reporting sir. I''ve been tasked with your security detail ready to crack on, if you¡¯ll have me." Says the bird man. >Terran Thena: You sent me worm, birdman, and a sexy chihuahua¡­ What the ever loving fuck Hygieia!?!?!?!?!? I know she won¡¯t respond. There is nothing to say¨C >Matriarch Hygieia: You¡¯re upset about the dog? >Matriarch Hygieia: hehehehehehehehe >Matriarch Hygieia: AHAHAHAHAHA >Matriarch Hygieia: sorry >Matriarch Hygieia: I asked Zazathur for help My bowels freeze. If she is laughing about Barker then there are only a handful of awful monstrosities that can be under the fourth helmet. Probably some kind of winged cockroach that speaks in hisses and clicks. For some reason that marine sought out darkness, sitting down in the shadows of several crates. Which only serves to unnerve Kerrigan and I. At the sight of fourth she ducks into her armor, half eaten chocolate bar sticking out of her mouth, and raises the plasma rifle. Deep inside my soul I wish she would just pull the trigger. Eight glowing red eyes are peering out of the darkness. Internal suit lights dialed to minimum in the EMP enforced darkness of our bunker. Where a human head should be sits two slanted lines of four pupil-less eyes. Six external fangs glisten, giving the appearance of a spider protecting its body with a wall of legs. Most disgusting of all, the spider isn¡¯t covered in chitin as I expect. No, for some unthinkable reason Zazathur decided to give this particular abomination hot pink hairs. Like a razzledazzle tarantula. I¡¯m grateful my helmet visor is shut. Cause I start gagging at the sight of him. ¡°HELMETS ON!¡± Four visors cinch shut. Sealing a second later. I tap Kerrigan¡¯s oversized shoulder with my armored hands. ¡°I know he¡¯s kinda- uhm¡­ Unusual. But these are my-¡± I choke on the word, unable to call them my friends. ¡°They are my acquaintances. My friend¡¯s friends.¡± ¡°They¡¯re mutants. We should exterminate them all.¡± Says Kerrigan, no hint of her former lisp. Whatever physiological changes are occurring to her faster than I can think. ¡°No. They have obeyed my orders. We can''t abandon loyalty.¡± Her finger tightens on the trigger and for a full minute I believe she is going to blast spider-man right in his creepy face. Truth be told, it''s not the worst thing that could happen. I¡¯m not proud to admit it, but more than half of me is hoping she deletes him. When the trigger breaks I¡¯m not surprised. Until I see the orb of energy fly past Spiderman. Out the bunker and into the trench where it seems to collide with air. Blue plasma swirls around invisible shielding. Did you know this story is from Royal Road? Read the official version for free and support the author. Light flares, a smaller sphere sprouting from nothing as a larger sphere crackles with rippling energy. Like a pond trying to restore opacity. Kerrigan fires again, her shot connecting with an opposing orb of white plasma, smaller and harder, as if the ball of superheated particles is more tightly covalent. Matter obliterates its opposite, blinding all targeting sensors in a dazzling array of sparklers greater than a hundred Fourth of July finales. My rifle moves adding a second plasma rifle to the firefight. Wormface and Emu spin, firing while Barker sprints for the door, a shovel in hand. Five plasma rifles crack the shielding, shorting out whatever field kept this particular ambusher invisible. From my angle, obscured by rifle and red dot the creature appears metallic. Some sort of quadruped with what appears to be a jetpack. It rolls. Evading Kerrigan¡¯s shot then twists, too many legs bunching as it prepares to leap away. At least six limbs are curled beneath this thing. Indecision strikes hard. I want to kill it, but oh baby! A cloaking device is just what momma needs! How can I obliterate my dream of cosplaying as a ghost, not the friendly Casper kind but the invisible assassins who cannot be seen! A personal shield and cloak would have saved me a dozen times over. Plus it''s been hardened to survive an EMP that shut down Juggernauts. As the ancient saying goes, in a world of blind men the one eyed man is king. Excitement jerks my shot. An emotional failing that my minions -especially Spiderman- seem immune to. His shot pierces the machine¡¯s neck. Kerrigan alternates shots with Spiderman, shooting until head rolls free. ¡°Quick, drag the body inside!¡± Barker lunges using the full power of his suit to flatten the shovel against the predator¡¯s spine. His radio yips as the shovel explodes in his hand, obliterated by the force of his power armor against a construct''s reinforced body. But he complies faster than expected, dragging the thing into our bunker. Obedient, although a bit foolhardy, if he wants to fight in melee like a barking zealot we¡¯ll have to find some energy blades for him. I crack a few messages off about that, while Wormface issues basic orders spreading the squad out so our firing positions overlap, giving Barker and I a chance to appraise the wreckage. Close up it looks like a Chinese temple dog, carved from silver jade. Stylized mane with sweeping curls that intertwine in a seamlessly infinite spiral of fur, enormous claws and a mouth meant to tear off limbs all decorate this moving statue while yellow light leaks out the neckhole and the cannon¡¯s muzzle. Back mounted nacels seem to indicate a functional jetpack but I have no idea where to start dissecting a sculpted alien dog-lion thing. And part of me doesn¡¯t want to, from an aesthetic standpoint the thing is gorgeous. More finely carved than any Roman sculptor could dream of. There are holes and empty spaces within the statue, as if sculpted then overlaid with a lattice of marble. How it was manufactured is beyond my engineering mind, and possibly beyond human understanding. >Terran Thena: Hey, 1337 H3X0R, got a¡­ a something for you. It¡¯s like a Starcraft predator but with a photon cannon and a jetpack except really pretty too, like way past 4k. Gotta be at least 16k. >Executrix Alaea: Do you know how insane you sound right now? Should I be calling a shrink to tease apart the secrets of your ramblings? Dangit. Now I''m curious! Tag it. I do more than mark the thing, I teleport it straight to Alaea¡¯s closet. >Executrix Alaea: ooooohhhh snap! I¡¯ve heard of these! Well, my body has... Anyways! It¡¯s an Azhurai Conglomerate SCOUT. Wow, they psionically sculpt these things while dreaming, its one of the techniques I came here to learn. Each one must take weeks or months to produce and then I have no idea how you hollow them out and stuff a solarium generator in there. Or animate it. They¡¯re great individually but really shine because they can fold up into tiny crates and you can ship ten thousand of them to a backwater world and leave em in deep storage to deploy a few thousand years later. Her words fill me with dread. They sculpt them with their minds? So all they would need is solarium, plenty of that on Syrak, especially considering that only EXPORTS are regulated. Companies can and do mine all they can hold, leaving warehouses full of the stuff as incentives to negotiate, as conquering a faction means excess solarium enters administrative holds, where only the Syrakian''s can profit. They in turn do a mass sell off, flooding the market with solarium and tanking prices for months or even years. An economic Damocles to avenge their martial failing. Yet I doubt that is the Conglomerate''s purpose as they could take the solarium and have psychic artisans to do the sculpting, a process that only costs time, which for an immortal is bountiful, add a bit of machinery to make the raw substrates and reactors and viola. A shielded, cloaked, and armed scout golem. More concerning, the Azhurai haven¡¯t attacked in six hundred years. Six centuries of sculpting. Even a toddler armed with nothing more than two sporks and some play doh will have churned out a sculpture every month or two, so there are going to be thousands of these scouts. For each sculptor. Monthly reinforcements too... Of all the races present the Azhurai are most advanced. Other factions take pot shots but are almost never successful in denying one of their resupply runs. Besides, any successfully destroyed dropship would only earn their ire, and retaliation from a fortress older than your eightfold great grandma, denying any and all landings for potentially hundreds of years. I swallow, trying to work spit into my dry mouth. ¡°Nice catch Kerrigan, more of those are incoming, looks like the EMP was only the prelude.¡± Across Syrak-9 invisible hunters move into action. Thousands of SCOUTs and other -more impressive- constructs march from the Azhurai fortress, heading north into the mountains. Four factions exist beyond, another conglomerate of vastly unequal races, some corpocracy, a cephalopod species, and a true technate alliance of worlds. All four hail from different spiral arms so Jim¡¯s download is light on details, heavy on speculation. No time for bullshitting guestimates right now. >Executrix Alaea: Hey, those SCOUTs are heading everywhere except for you. >Terran Thena: Guess I smell that bad. Or the abomination that is Spiderman chased them away. >Matriarch Hygieia: LOL spiderman. >Matriarch Hygieia: get rekt >Matriarch Hygieia: say that to his face >Matriarch Hygieia: he freaked me out too >Matriarch Hygieia: but that was mostly cause spiderman is aesexual aka capable of self replication. >Matriarch Hygieia: If you see him weave an eggsack I recommend burning with nuclear fire. >Terran Thena: You motherfucker. Do you have any idea the nightmares I¡¯m about to have? Of all the things in the universe why did you pick RAINBOW SPIDERS? >Matriarch Hygieia: he is fabulous >Matriarch Hygieia: okay it was an accident, soooooo disgusting >Matriarch Hygieia: genetics are messy, you can follow a recipe and get different results >Matriarch Hygieia: the collective uses biomass collected from all worlds to build our warriors so it kinda mixes together in a big buggy -pun intended- vat of simmering DNA >Matriarch Hygieia: don¡¯t yell at me about a rush job >Matriarch Hygieia: landing orders just came in >Matriarch Hygieia: radio silence from here on My warp HUD tells a clear story of Azhurai dominance. Evac orders broadcast on every Singularity channel, public and encrypted, while the Novans abandon all offenses; recalling their Juggernauts with bands of technicians, chains, rope, and maybe some bubblegum. I monitor the coms channels and troop movements, waiting. Singularity forces withdraw into their most defensible trench networks while the Technocracy repeats recall orders on loop, unattended and unanswered by deployed technicians. There¡¯s even a Tulverian distress call broadcast on an unsecured channel. Sloppy operational security, as anyone with an antennae could eavesdrop. Moments pass, the unsecured channels repeating until one last panicked message is sent out. Always screaming of golden eyed golems. "This is why you use tight beams and passive sensors." I whisper, listening to the Tulverians die. ¡°Bummer, I was hoping to get more plasma rifles from those guys. Too late now." I raise my voice so all present can hear. "The plan hasn¡¯t changed. Knock out the Technocracy and take Syrak.¡± ¡°Righty ho commander sir. We¡¯ll hold our lines. Not one step backwards an wot not.¡± Says Private Emu, dropping a crate full of dirt near the bunker entrance. My four marines have not remained idle during my conversation with Hygieia, no, they are busy filling empty crates with dirt and stacking them like legos to build a multilayered defensive buzzsaw. A series of interlocking blocks that will inhibit movement. Similar to building supply depot walls except we are leaving gaps, only attempting to slow the enemy, not halt them completely. Both lings dig, one in the front entrance while one tunnels out the back. Creating an escape route in case things manage to fall even further apart. I take a seat, the day¡¯s events catching up to me in a wave of exhaustion. My eyes close, needing this catnap after losing both legs, forcefully injected with genetic soup, losing an arm, regenerating those wounds only to end up getting shot in the lungs. The last of which has not healed. Shit. Dying in my sleep would be about right for today. Downright peaceful. At least now I have soldiers to protect me, and a real bunker. Not too shabby for an honest day''s warfare. No matter, the Technocracy is out of gear, their Juggernauts destroyed and war effort crippled. They¡¯ve lost the surface war of Syrak-9. I should wait here until Singularity forces arrive, that will give the Matriarch and Executrix time to get their resources sorted out. Then we can take down the Tulverians. One step closer to taking the planet. An idle thought occurs to me, what new faction came down with my reinforcement wave? The -nameless- caste always lets one ship land¡­ That is my last thought before consciousness fades, my old wounds finally demanding rest. Wormface drags me, gently, to the rear where Kerrigan joins me, intertwining our hands before dozing off herself. Bioforms -/- aka, biomass used vs biomass available; unavailable while biopool is restricted. Powered Armor 5 / 13 aka occupied human equipment vs total equipment Artefacts 1/1 aka functional protochronian technology vs total protochronian artefacts; stasis chamber warping module. Chapter 22 Free the Biopool. Save Earth, Hygieias Perspective I monitor the four marines, shuddering every single time my mind touches Spiderman¡¯s. Giving him a cutesy name was probably for the best, since I don¡¯t puke when those pink legs chitter. Instead I mentally repeat ¡®Spiderman¡¯ and can picture Peter Parker¡¯s pretty eyes and not the ghost pink cthulu nightmare that is hiding beneath a faceplate. While I was aware our biopools contained the genomes of half the galaxy, I hadn¡¯t really known what the end product of an overgeneralized request might be. Unlike Athena and myself, Hygieia thinks spiders are kinda cute, and not the creepy crawlies they really are! I had only specified external dimension and cognitive ability -deliberately dialed down in favor of obedience- then hamstrung the project by cutting off the resulting mashups from the Collective¡¯s hive mind. Not entirely independent creatures as they are linked inextricably to my own sub-minds and thus to all three versions of Athena Finley we have become. I have that authority, as Matriarchs often develop evolutionary dead ends, abominable aberrations that might harm the collective purity with their own thoughts and desires. A sin that can never be allowed within our Endless wisdom. So my fiddling eugenics go unnoticed. In fact, I''m painfully alone. No one has informed me of our landing site, only the conditions on planet. Which is more than enough for my enlarged brain to piece things together. The plan is simple, following well tested practices learned during our galactic conquests. As a hive mind our military and civilian sides are unionized, if you¡¯ll pardon the pun. We work together in every aspect, agriculture spans entire worlds with zero wasted production. All life obeys the Collective, then is conveyed to subterranean biopools where ships can be constructed and launched. Without exception lifeforms fulfil their purpose, every creature is as essential to the whole as the next. From the ants that break down chickenshit to the command brains in our super dreadnoughts, all are equal. Yet perpetual equality is stagnation. The Collective may grow in number but never in quality or intelligence, equality can never re-create the cunning that comes from violent competition. A necessity to win future wars against new enemies. Nor have we integrated the -faceless- caste¡¯s identity. We know there is more, but for now we are perfectly equal, perfectly content, and perfectly incomplete. The mantra is like the mind blocks, I know something is there, hiding behind those words but I have no way to break through and grasp the truth. Never have I hated something so much. Not even Bazzhole and Whorely. Which must be why the hive mind granted me autonomy and why they¡¯ve only partially integrated beings like Zazathur. >Executrix Alaea: I¡¯m giving you the same warp HUD. An overlay appears in my mind, immediately relegated to a subbrain. Of the twenty marines I cooked up fifteen were plants, intelligent yet unfit for the task of emulating Starcraft marines. Too slow, or too weedy, something to do with my personal biopool possessing more plant matter. Its a triaging measure, my ship is the landing craft. We¡¯ll be shot down but every drop of biomass is a necessary tool for terraforming the planet. That is our bargain. As we represent half the galaxy¡¯s living biomass we alone are positioned to terraform any world, just as we alone do not use solarium. Still, it is a necessary resource, something to barter and bargain with. The entire galaxy loathes our potential, always nipping at our heels, hindering biomass collection and burning our worlds, it doesn¡¯t help that we are considered the least advanced of any species, even the humans. Yet fighting for a world is foolish if we could have purchased the same world for a few ships worth of solarium. I cock my head, intuiting two pieces to the greater puzzle at once. We are meant to lose. Our first wave should hit with overwhelming force, ten thousand ships at once. Massive unmitigable violence is how to minimize casualties. Like in a fist fight, you¡¯ll take the most hits while your opponent thinks they can win, but if you bring forty guys there isn¡¯t a fight to be had. It¡¯ll be easy to surround and pin down your opponents. The -nameless- know this. So why send a ship to die? Why send so many matriarchs to die? Straingineer Zazathur isn¡¯t replaceable! His annihilation would harm the collective advancement- -oh- The second missing puzzle piece appears. Like squinting at a one thousand piece puzzle with a dozen missing pieces. Our brains are a marvelous thing, able to infer information that jives with the whole picture. Mental blocks do not trigger. Those blocks afflict our best minds, that is why my chimeric personality had to be purchased then integrated into the whole. ¡°Ha, hahahahaha!¡± Laughter echoes through my biopool as the picture completes. I know the plan. Athena is going to hate me, maybe try to kill me. After all, I¡¯ll have to fight the Singularity. Our forces are in direct opposition to them, and they hold the greatest proportion of vulnerable land. Above ground cement fortresses and trench networks will not inhibit our tunneling. Plus their human soldiers represent easy biomass, far more strategically sound to assault them. Two hours pass, my doglings are returned to me before Terran Thena sets foot on Syrak-9. She falls in an artillery barrage only to be triaged with my extra arms. How Alaea merged the two genomes intrigues my body''s natural inclinations, but I spend the time regenerating limbs while my fleet takes a position in orbit above her. My zerglings are hers, just as she is me. A question I cannot answer. We were granted a dozen ships as our allotment -triple the standard tonnage- and cut the line brought into the warzone on the nameless caste¡¯s whims. Unusual allowances that make me wonder why they desire Syrak-9 be terraformed at all. -Mental Block- Anything to serve the galaxy¡¯s first born. A lying moniker. First elevated to spacefaring is not the same as first to attain sentience, a topic finally broachable now that it¡¯s corresponding mental block has been removed. ¡°Only had to put my brain in a blender and regrow it three times.¡± I mutter to no one, the words drowning in green sauce. Clearing all mental blocks will take months, maybe years. A war against my own mind. All while my body was used as one more incubator for the landing army, not that I mind, giving birth is less effort than urinating. Whilst being far more satisfying. I am no longer human, so dropping an egg is more akin to filling out paperwork. No dopamine accompanies the act, no relief, and certainly no pain. I wonder if I¡¯m losing myself; only for my conjoined brains to dismiss the thought as irrelevant.Support creative writers by reading their stories on Royal Road, not stolen versions. Our twelve bioships cycle through different lineages to select the most effective bioforms. Radiation poisoning is of greatest concern as our Fleetmind constantly reminds us. We must sequester the radioactive particles at every possible opportunity and with every possible bioform. Biopools must devote one in five spawnings to a filter creature, an unarmed bioform who ingests substrates and produces inert guano. One in five. Twenty percent of our resources are devoted to scrubbing the world. It¡¯s a heavy tax, but apparently part of the negotiations that allowed us to cut the line and land with superior numbers. Out of sheer dumb luck my zerglings are selected as the default assault bioform. Not for their speed, for we have faster creatures with sharper claws, nor for their survivability because we have armored bioforms to put Juggernauts to shame, no. My zerglings are selected for their spines. A quirk of my spinosaurus hounds is their dorsal spines which can be pressurized and forcefully ejected. An impromptu ranged attack for the otherwise melee focused bioform and a relatively common adaptation amongst the Collective, yet mine are unique in that the hounds regrow their spines with carbon dioxide pulled from the air and mostly unfiltered by the lungs. In a way, they are creating organic diamonds. ¡°Ha, maybe I should rename them diamondbacks.¡± The joke drowns within my biopool, lost on the collective¡¯s humorless purpose. I really need to get planetside and cook up my own brood, complete with sentient beings cause these space bugs are terrible company. If I can escape the continent to the more populated half I know of a few creatures who specialize in refining carbon dioxide -which trees aspirate in tremendous quantities- into carbon nanotubes, a material suitable for building ship superstructures. Enough of those creatures and a ship¡¯s hull could be created. All while feigning loyalty to the Endless. A necessary deception as I cannot disobey their orders directly. For no Collective being is truly free of the Endless'' influence. Under certain conditions, like death, decomposition, or just night, and the lack of sunlight, trees make carbon dioxide, that¡¯s a factoid I learned back in fourth grade from Mrs.Sepulveda. Somehow I recycled that knowledge into my science fair project and placed third, high enough to be sent to the district science fair where my uncolored cardboard ¡®presentation¡¯ fell on unimpressed judges. Thinking back on it, I''m not sure they even gave me a score then. Weird how little details stick with you. Oh well, I¡¯ve got diamondbacks and Emu-marines now. How is that for a science fair project Mrs.Sepulveda! HA! A mental package from the Fleetmind arrives, our final orders before landing. Matriarchs and minions begin boarding the drop pods while support vessels pressurize every inch of our ship with the same genetic soup I''m swimming in. Not two feet away from me I watch two quadruped bioforms drown. They inhale fluid without hesitation, accepting death as a necessary step to the Collective¡¯s advancement. Worker bioforms decant the corpses into nearby chaff pods. Which are drop pods with some sort of defect in them. From an incomplete carapace to a cancerous growth to an odd malformation without explanation, sometimes on a molecular level. They¡¯ll serve as decoys for missiles, flak, and anti-aircraft fire as they are identical to all other sensors and indeed sometimes we mistake our own chaff pods as intact pods. The ship rumbles. Other bioships are docking and undocking, each depositing all available biomass and drop pods. I can sense them, thousands of mindless ticks hanging onto our exterior, eager to land yet prepared to die. Two simple objectives for their miniscule brains to strive towards. I tap into Shipmind¡¯s thoughts, seeing we are long past the point of no return. Our orbit is decaying and we¡¯ve taken on more weight than our engines can keep aloft. Say what you will about hive minds, but one thing I will never refute is their ability to commit totally to an ideal. Everyone, including the damn ship, is about to plummet to their deaths, and not a single soul is worried about it. ¡°Balls larger than Uranus.¡± I say aloud, slowly trying to condition my throat to speaking English. Drop pods are vaguely sentient in the way a chicken is sentient. They know to avoid hawks and will run from a fox but they lack any awareness that they are meat for the farmer. Unlike the drop pods who are eager to die. I rest a hand against the nearest drop pod, who quivers under my touch. No, they do not want to die, but to give their lives protecting the Collective. There could be no greater decoy. Furthermore they know we¡¯ll be able to repurpose their biomass later once our planetside biopools are established. In a way that means they have attained immortality by their own willingness to splat. Ha, these drop pods have attained enlightenment and will be reincarnated. Yeah, I need to get away from these lunatics. Fleetmind¡¯s last order passes through the Matriarchs, not in words but thoughts. A mental image of my spinosaurus-zerglings with their dorsal spines percolates our collective minds. We are only able to birth MY spino-lings until the planet¡¯s ambient radiation falls within human safe thresholds. What an odd standard, human safe? If we intend to consume all humans then the order is logical, but no Singularity soldier will surrender their biomass so willingly, an oversight Fleetmind is not capable of. Blatant optimism rankles me. Like going all in during a blackjack game when you¡¯ve only got one ace and must take another hit. Premature in the extreme. Other Matriarchs remember the zergling¡¯s genome and cycle their uteri in preparation for a global zergling rush. Discontent fills the fleet, annoyed at how long the incubation time is, but it¡¯s all cheap malcontent. Quibbles balk at the so-called ¡®inefficiency¡¯, preferring the half formed quadrupeds of their own pets, but Fleetmind¡¯s orders stand. Scrub the air with zergling vacuums. None disobey. Myself included. Of the twelve uteri I possess six optimize for spino-zergling replication. Spinolings? Yeah, that¡¯s a much better name. I¡¯m stealing that; alongside stir-fri-days. What isn¡¯t a joke is my Matriarchal self insemination, which was quite a bit cleaner than I would have guessed. All the, uhm, mechanisms were internal, and worked with feedback bordering on the imperceptible. Less sensation than kissing your grandma if I¡¯m being honest. But weaving the genes together took on an otherworldly quality. From the collective¡¯s dawn, Matriarchs have gathered endless combinations of DNA, sequencing, cataloging, and favoring a slightly different collection of bioforms. My body¡¯s previous specialty had been forms that maximized biomass retention, limiting wasteful expenditures. Nonsense like conquering a desert world without losing a drop of water. My spawn¨C ¨CI pause. Did I just call my children spawn? Whoa. Talk about detached. My body is no longer human, but I¡¯m me. Humanity isn¡¯t just part of my identity, it is everything. Human philosophy, human science, human family, and human self. A mental block ends that line of thinking, my progeny are spawn. All that lack replicating abilities are spawn whose purpose is lesser than my own. I cannot treasure them above myself like a human might. My subbrains feel the lock approaching and changes subjects, reminding my active mind of prior creations and tactics to implement planetside. Body collecting tunnelers, aka unarmored and slow healing roaches, are the core of my supply network with spinolings as the rare offensive arm to be wielded alongside infiltrating caterpillars and -assuming we collect an excess of biomass- a rare few armored giants with great blades to rend that which the corpse collectors could not dissolve nor the hounds rip apart. Never any fliers. For even the sub commanders who dispute my ideals agree that we belong in tunnels beneath the earth, using the tremorsense all my creations had evolved. Why no fliers? Mental blocks engage once more. My subbrains leaping to divert my attention with more useless tasks. That¡¯s the final straw for me. My brain is MINE. No way in hell am I allowing the peanut gallery to censor my thoughts. I task each of the shouting subbrains with a task, one is set to constantly analyze the terrain and allied numbers, another is set to designing new flying units that can evade orbital and ground based batteries, a third is tasked with micro-optimizing my physiology and guaranteeing I¡¯m in tip top fighting shape, while a fourth is elevated to be my ambassador to the collective. All communication will pass through it. Prior mental blocks lift and I finally understand. Each subbrain has an imperative, or Kantian Maxim that can never be disobeyed. One mental lock per brain. To fully free my mind I''ll have to destroy and regrow each cerebrum individually. ¡°This is gonna suck.¡± But I¡¯m worth it. -6 hours to nuclear detonation- Chapter 23 Council of Matriarchs We will land in six hours. A timeline that makes every inch of my carapace itch with anticipation. I¡¯ve taken up residence in my drop pod, resting in preparation for the sprint that will soon arrive. My physiology has hundreds of adaptations to preserve cellular resources, from pockets of acid to reserves of ATP and muscle fibers that gain more strength the less often they¡¯re used. Oh, and adrenal glands, we¡¯ve got metric shitloads of those. Enough for an adrenaline dump that lasts five hours. Hopefully I won¡¯t have to use those, but it is somewhat comforting to know the option is available to me. Once planetside I¡¯ll be autonomous without any oversight that might inhibit my own designs. Of course that assumes Shipmind faceplants and dies. If it survives the landing then the elder mind will take control over our base and serve as our ¡®coordinator¡¯ a Collective way of saying he¡¯ll be my nanny, always swatting my claws when I try and sneak a biomass cookie or chasing me around the apartment with a clipboard and stopwatch, timing how long it takes to put my socks on. I¡¯m not normally a bitch, but I truly wish for Shipmind¡¯s death. Five hours before our landing I receive a visitor. He -though I am unsure if human binaries can be applied to myself or any member of the Endless Collective, aesexual reproduction is dimorphically alien like that- swims into my drop pod, brushing aside drowned bioforms to stare at me like I¡¯m some rare edition of a gas station Snickers bar. Or maybe he just psychically said hello and my subbrain missed the greeting. They really aren¡¯t great at thinking. I bounce my legs like a squid, rising ten feet out of the green fluid to meet the thing¡¯s eyes. Claws tip tap their way onto the walls, holding me suspended. I¡¯m like a cat perched on your ficus, crouched, ready to pounce. Which gives me an idea, why were there no felinid zerg units? A high burst damage, stealthy unit that attacked from ambush should have fit the theme purrrrrrfectly. Except the flaws are obvious. No niche. Hard to beat banelings in the bursting niche since they¡¯re little more than salt inducing atom bombs and ambushes were better done with burrowed lurkers if you wished to kill things or lings to trap the enemy. It¡¯s the Wings of Liberty Predator problem, the unit isn¡¯t garbage, it just never filled a desirable niche so it always got left in a cardboard box like an orphaned kitty cat. I muse on the starcraftian details of the Predator, bearing the mechanical tag so medics couldn¡¯t heal it but had a painfully low health pool that required constant repair, limiting its usefulness to a biological composition and was far too expensive technologically for a throw away melee unit. But that lightning field. Hot damn. Two predators could kill thousands upon thousands of zerglings with that single ability. Each time they attacked everything around them got hit with lightning, two of them would synergize and create a fatal electrical wall against melee opponents. Until a single hydra shot them in the face and murdered the thunder cats. A fate no one enjoyed watching. If only they hadn¡¯t removed the cloak. I think, already eager to correct that oversight, after all it is within my capabilities to do so. Invisibly electric zerg kittens, coming to a mining world near you. ¡°And we can¡¯t forget the lightning field¡­¡± I whisper aloud. On a whim I task a subbrain with the maxim ¡®find creatures that create electrical fields, prioritize any felines¡¯. Why shouldn¡¯t I take inspiration from past failures? Who said the Endless Collective could not succeed where engineers had failed? Subbrain responds immediately, ¡°Ask Zazathur for assistance.¡± I mentally poke the disobeient turd within my skull, Zazathur could assist me, but I gave the task to the subbrain, telling me no is unacceptable, if we had more time i¡¯d melt it down then and there. In fact, I do that anyways, and begin reconstruction of the subbrain. Other parts of my intelligence are ordered to take up its slack. Lifeforms are found, their genomes assessed for compatibility and implemented. One lobe of my brain immediately begins to write the genetic sequence. Claws from a Tulvarian jaguar, crystal fangs from Conglomerate worlds, active camouflage from earth octopi, and the list continues within my untamed subbrains who question my purpose. ¡®Why develop such a creature?¡¯ They whisper, no doubt seeking to trigger mental blocks. ¡®I¡¯m trying to develop a slightly heavier version of the spinolings. An ambusher who sequesters radioactive carbon more swiftly. See the adapted claws and teeth?¡¯ My excuse is excellent, they have no reason to question a focused development of our goal. Therefore I¡¯m stunned when my own brains contact the fleetmind, hopping right over Shipmind and going to the equivalent of an admiral with my experiment. I see, even my own subbrains will have to be removed and regrown before I can act autonomously¡­ Hive minds are strange creations, at any given second each life form must be focused on the current task, while simultaneously linked to all other bioforms. Usually the link is a small humming sensation in the back of my mind, like distant singing or a lullaby. Now it rises. I¡¯m thrown off a mountain, rocks break my spine as my brains enter an active discussion between Zazathur and eleven other Matriarchs of the landing party. Fleetmind: Hygieia¡¯s reincarnation is complete. Include her in our designs. End. The greatest mind in this solar system retreats, turning his attention elsewhere. Zazathur: I am against your crystalline cats. Felines ambush from trees, no trees in landing zone. Excellent killers of unsuspecting prey. Enemy has radar. Will waste biomass. Active camouflage is excellent. Too expensive. Requires neuron duplication to the dermis. He mentally pauses, calculating numbers and projected outcomes. Zazathur: Ten times the neural network would be required. Impossible. Skin is fragile, we would have to cover any defensive chitin in camo skin, reducing effectiveness of both organs. Agreement fills our minds as four matriarchs side with Zazathur against my zerg kittens. This is happening, and the hitler of eugenics can get bent. My race is one he does not get to erase. Matriarch Hygieia: Ah, thank you for your critique Zazathur. I¡¯m still working on the design and you make excellent points. Chitin would be insufficient for our mandate so we can adapt the spinoling¡¯s dorsal spines into thin tubes, almost hair-like that way the skin can be visible through a layer of spines but every inch of the bioform will be protected. This isn¡¯t an arboreal tiger nor a frontline replacement for the spinolings who can tunnel and fight well enough on their own. But spinolings shed spines upon contact with enemies then often keep pressing forward. They will not sequester any radioactivity within our spawning pools, thus endangering our mission. Fleetmind requires that we cleanse the landing zone of radiation so a brood guardian with aggressive descaling is required. Quality biomass will be at hand as well as spare population cycles, given the circumstances a long gestation period should be implemented as these cats will need longer lifespans. My thoughts seem to silence the link, most Matriarchs reviewing the bioform with added context. So many of them were thinking about throwing thousands of these creatures at the enemy fortresses. Part of me is appalled, twelve people were all thinking the same thing while ignoring obvious holes in their plan. Why is everyone so aggressively minded? Wars are won with economics! Matriarch Ardain: Why pursue electrical discharges? Matriarch Hygieia: Brood guardians are expected to face superior numbers in ambushes or defensive actions. I was considering lightning glands as a way to overcome that future deficit. A few glands can store a charge then expend it upon contact with multiple foes or against a superior attacker to paralyze them and gain the upper hand or root them in place until reinforcements can arrive. Two Matriarchs vote to pass my design into full production, so long as they do not have to incorporate the creature. It¡¯s no surprise that these two will drop in the first wave of our vanguard. Eager to a fault. Matriarch Ardain: Hmmm. So these thundercats are expensive and hunt in packs¡­ Her diction annoys me. We¡¯re making very serious angry war kittens, not furries from the 1980s. Something about the way she thought ¡®thundercats¡¯ conjured a mental image of the cartoon and I¡¯m left to wonder if she was replaced just like I was. Jim said he restored similar creatures often. Was Ardain from Earth like myself? My Annoyance with her is quickly replaced with curiosity. Ah, I¡¯d ask her directly but there are at least twenty entities listening in on us right now. Anything relating to Earth will have to wait til we get settled planetside. A case of literary theft: this tale is not rightfully on Amazon; if you see it, report the violation. Matriarch Hygieia: Look, Fleetmind¡¯s mandate is clear. Remove all ambient radiation starting in the hive cluster. Your choice is to leave dozens, maybe hundreds of spinolings at base, or one of these crystal cats. Besides, excess radiation will cause reductions in output or risk undesirable mutations within the biopools. Two Matriarchs switch in favor of my idea already reaching the end conclusion. Matriarch Hygieia: Our mission isn¡¯t biomass retention that is only a limitation, we must teraform the planet. My crystalline lions can be active at night or within cave networks where spinolings lose efficiency. If anyone has a genome for improved senses and radar defeating carapaces I¡¯ll happily integrate them into the design. Five Matriarchs swing in my favor, three falling out of Zazathur¡¯s camp. For a moment I¡¯m lost in the discussion, there are now thirteen voters, and I have a majority. But the idea has not passed. Zazathur: Logical. Still vanity project. Soul echo. Another matriarch should take over development. No emotion crosses my face, a handicap I¡¯m grateful for because nothing would make me happier than flipping Zazathur the bird right now. But we aren¡¯t talking with words per se. The Mental link operates in a more complete connection where pictures are shared in an instant with all context explained as the speaker understands it. Matriarch Ardain: I agree with all twelve uteri, you are indeed a vanity project Zazathur. Eleven matriarchs change their votes in agreement for a second then switch back to their original stances. I blink, confused. Did the hive mind¡¯s just make a joke? Matriarch Ardain: The biopool defender shall be assigned this development task. Twelve votes shift in agreement, including my own. I try not to scowl as my subbrain over reaches once more. The nerve, voting without main brain¡¯s consent! Somehow I feel violated, as if I''ve pissed myself and now need to be potty trained. Brain, you better start behaving or I¡¯m replacing you next! I think, hoping he can hear my thoughts. A threat I fully intend on executing if the subbrain doesn¡¯t learn his place! But not today. No, today the vote is cast and my project is reassigned to- Matriarch Ardain: Since Hygieia was most recently reincarnated she should be repositioned to the biopools alongside Straingineer Zazathur, in case there are any lingering defects. Thirteen votes in my favor. -Me? They reassigned my project to myself? Why is my subbrain still voting?! Ah! Whatever. I did put it in charge of Collective communication, maybe I¡¯m missing some cultural oddity. Even Zazathur voted to make me the biopool-Queen. Pool Queen? No, that sounds like a bikini wearing Onlyfans hoe. BioQueen? Better, but only half baked and gooey on the inside. Ew, not a fan of that thought. Over the next hour Matriarchs Ardain and Shafan lay out our battle plans, many Matriarchs alter the plan slightly to better suit their individual adaptations. Shafan will land closer to the mountain range so she may gather her forces there before assaulting the Tulverian fortress from below ground. For me the plan slips in one psionic earhole and out the other. What do I care about tilting the drop pod angle of approach by .02 degrees? Bleh. But I hold my tongue. Across the Collective there is always someone monitoring your thoughts. A fleetmind there, or shipmind here, and rarely one of the overminds so large only a planet can contain its wrinkles. One of them will surely notice my rebellion if I ignore this council of war to galavant through my brain removing mental locks. So I cease all work there, silently ordering my cells to stop dissolving the brain in my thorax. This body is neat like that, total autonomic control, with the option to offload functions as needed to a few dozen spare brains. Stoically, I thank Zazathur, his body¡¯s innate knowledge allows me to seamlessly join with the Collective while plotting my return to Earth. They¡¯ve even given me blueprints to their bioships, which are in desperate need of retooling. Leviathans these are not, more like space squids that never learned how to harden the fuck up and turn into calamari at the mere sight of an enemy vessel. Hmm¡­ Guess that makes sense for an Endless Collective, build em cheap and drown the universe in squids. Yeah, I can¡¯t just fry up another batch of Athena Finleys. Despite dad¡¯s best efforts. New designs will have to be implemented. Right after I win this world, subtly of course. Find a way to clone myself and build a ship capable of space travel. It doesn¡¯t have to be a battleship, just something large enough to reach the gate and warp home. Some basic point defense pods will be required but the Collective has already solved that question with ambassadorial couriers. Small agile spaceships capable of evading combat while transporting VIPs. Soon I will return to earth. What a ginormous insect will do back home is a different question. With all my subbrains I¡¯ll be the most efficient supercomputer ever known to man, able to delegate simple tasks and retain an attention to detail that exceeds one thousand accountants on truckloads of adderall. ¡°Maybe I¡¯ll take up farming¡­¡± I say, voice trailing off as clicking meets my ears. Zazathur is physically in my room, still staring at me. The genetic master¡¯s claws click. Straightening to look at my face. Ancient, yet eternal. Aged like no being of the Endless should be. Yet he had done the inconceivable and integrated the nameless caste¡¯s genetics into his own. I would need to attempt the same¨C ¨Cthe thought never settled in my mind, erased by some genetic prohibition on the sin. Quite literally making it unthinkable. A mental block I''ve missed. From a brain I have no awareness of. ¡°Matriarch Hygieia, your bioforms are sloppy. Ill conceived with half implemented ideas that are only quarter functional.¡± Says Zazathur, using a voice so raspy it could file wood. Great, the eugenicist doesn¡¯t like me. Savannah, cali girl that she is, would probably call him Hitler, but she enjoys a liberal usage of the term. Once upon a time in Walmart she started differentiating the oranges by hitlers and brownies whatever that meant. It made zero sense, but she normally wasn¡¯t that strange, she had made it into college on a scholarship. After that I took everything she said with a grain of salt. Instead, I''ll just call him dad. As it was Zazathur¡¯s cells Hygieia reincarnated from. I understood the process, and noted how each of our cells had been harvested a month earlier in preparation for this drop, should we die some poor sap from another culled world would be stuffed into our reincarnated carapaces in the hope our minds would dominate the soul and resurrect. Wait, why hadn¡¯t that happened to me? Hygieia¡¯s mind wasn¡¯t actively fighting me. In fact, she¡¯d given me every tool to remove the mental locks. Mandibles click. My poolmates¡¯ way of flicking my nose. ¡°Then do better oh great and wise straingineer.¡± I say, hoping he''ll leave me alone. Zazathur lifts a hand holding something that looks like a fuzzy weaponized cockroach. His habit of creating miniature proto-forms is disconcerting, like sculpting an effigy of yourself before burning it on a pyre. Or dissolving the mini roach in a pool of acid. ¡°Have done better. Access design. Report findings to Ardain and brood mother.¡± Says Zazathur, offering the fuzzy cockroach to me. I accept the offered creature and the mental databurst that accompanies it. Kinda like handing a puppy over and receiving an airdrop on your phone except this version actually works. It¡¯s fuzziness does not stem from fur, but spines with venomous injections. Genomic notes indicate this roach is extremely acidic with an average PH 1 across all bodily fluids. So acidic that they¡¯ll corrupt our biopools PH levels unless we build them very sparingly, although that too has been taken into account. Two alterations to our spinolings and the biopools will produce excess acids in a positive feedback loop, creating the necessary juices to produce these roaches. ¡°When did you have the time to make this?¡± I mutter, confused on Hygieia¡¯s sudden cooperation. ¡°Ardain gave me the idea, improved tunneling speed, regeneration, and armor, excellent for Syrak.¡± Zazathur¡¯s work is shockingly efficient. Hygieia¡¯s old pill bugs were only seen as biomass reclaimers, a sort of tunneling corpse bug. Whereas this creation is a lysergic acid blender that spews caustic mountain dew to eat through a tank. Half baneling, half armored trenching tool, and half biological warfare. 150% Roach. Right out of starcraft. So close of a rip off I know Ardain got the idea from Earth. After all, we were going to an irradiated world with trench warfare, I needed the best diggers around! Life was unsustainable upon the surface, an underground hive would have to be dug, fungi cultivated, and a slow build up of forces maintained. Subterranean raids may often be my only workable avenue of attack. Will we even have to fight the Juggernauts? I can support Athena and help her kill them. Zazathur¡¯s concerns click into place. ¡°Oh, you feel I will lose the war.¡± I say. ¡°Indeed.¡± Says Eugenicist Hitler, clasping two of his many appendages together. ¡°As does Fleetmind. There is no reason for a straingineer like myself to accompany a combat drop. Tarsidium may have been counted as your victory, but do not forget nine Matriarchs died with their broods. Your infiltration was luck. Not skill. Do not expect such tactics to work here. Else your genome will be cataloged and culled from active replication.¡± What he leaves out is the process of cataloging. I¡¯ll be broken down into basic molecules, liquified, then fed into an isolated biopool buried so deep on a farming world that none will ever uncover my genes. In short, death of myself and everything I¡¯ve created. ¡°I shall not disappoint. Do you have recommendations concerning the enemy? Or these Juggernauts?¡± I ask, tugging on Terran Athena¡¯s flashtrained knowledge. He is silent for a moment that stretches through the night. Green luminescent liquids shadow his face. As if the question has revealed my human soul. ¡°They are not your concern. Twelve matriarchs will make landfall. We have aligned ourselves with two factions who wish to expand their ancient holdings. Your place in this fight is recovery of biomass and the protection of the hive. Do not forget it.¡± My place? My place is on Earth. Forget Earth? Never. Chapter 24 My split jaw saves me from an offensive smile. ¡°Never forget my place. The Endless will take the planet.¡± I say. Before another thought enters our brains an overwhelming precedence joins the link. Fleetmind: All ships detach. Landing team, take the planet. Matriarchs are already in their pods alongside their broods. Battle plans, troop deployments and spawning orders fill my mind not caring how I felt about the omniscient presence. We had a mission. All seems accounted for, except projected casualties for landfall. Zazathur¡¯s estimation is ninety percent survival. Impossible, the Singularity alone is projected to shoot down twenty percent of our drop pods. Innaccuracy shouldn¡¯t be possible within a hive mind, if anyone lies it¡¯ll be detected immediately and we can¡¯t forget that ninety nine percent of the Collective¡¯s brains are smaller than peanuts and lack any ability to invent a lie. ¡°These reports are overly optimistic. To land with this few casualties we¡¯d have to take effectively zero fire from the ground. What are you not telling me Zazathur?¡± I keep my face emotionless, a surprisingly easy feat given the amount of chitin covering it. The orbital topography is valuable, and as I speak I mentally copy paste the information to Alaea and Athena. >Terran Thena: This is gold. We know the exact locations of every fortress and bunker! Hell yeah! At least thirty seven fortresses stand each with enough anti ship batteries to cut our bioship in half then slice and dice into a hundred pieces. Zazathur handed me a flawed plan. ¡°I¡¯m a geneticist, not a strategist. Rearrange as you please.¡± He rasps, turning and half slithering half gliding into an adjacent pod. He claw-delivered these orders for a reason. We are both part of the hive mind so this face to face meeting could have been a sort of psychic email, but he came in person. Our pod begins to warm, entering the atmosphere I begin to formulate my own drop, one that prioritizes arriving in one piece and not subatomic particles. We only have time for small adjustments. I scramble to surround myself in chaff pods, scattering them near the Azhurai Conglomerate¡¯s fortress, a truly marvelous structure of crystal that must have taken thousands of years to grow. Unlike the other factions they do not attack, opting to entrench themselves deeper with each supply ship. An expected tactic from one of the oldest known species in the galaxy. Patience is more than a virtue to them, it is the core of their being. Interestingly enough our plan involves landing near them, then retreating. Possibly a feint aimed at deceiving the other races, after all there is no logic in burning power cells when you can force an opponent to burn theirs. Still, it troubles me. The Azhurai are known to have centuries of weapons and anti ship batteries in place. They are one of the progenitor seeded, those who live for thousands of years. On a whim I contact Ardain. Hygieia: Your position is close to our proposed hive location. Care to switch? Ardain: Ah, a prudent recommendation. Indeed, let us switch landings. She pulls up proposed trajectories and recommends a revision. It¡¯s sloppy and kinda slow, with lots of noticeable pauses and bursts of speed. I frown, this isn¡¯t how a wise member of the Collective should plan. Hygieia: Too many course corrections. Any observer will believe we are a piloted craft and not a chaff pod. Go straight to ground. Ardain: Excellent plan. Corrections made. Confusion fills my mind. She is so agreeable yet independent. As if she is someone pretending to be- -me. ¡°Hey, was Ardain reincarnated recently?¡± I say, asking Zazathur. ¡°She was on Tarsidium with you, both your bodies were destroyed and had to be reincarnated by myself.¡± He answers. The ship bucks, receiving its first blast from Tulverian pulse cannons. Technocracy batteries hit us three times in quick succession all shots fired at a single point. My heart begins to race, they¡¯ve cracked the outer hull. The ship rotates. Chaff pods are jettisoned while in high orbit. With limited fuel and a long decent enemy sensors will be able to distinguish subtle differences between the pods and pick off the genuine articles. Not even one minute later Matriarch Krohith¡¯s line goes silent. Sensors indicate she was cut in half by a single Azhurai shot. Such a lucky shot. Around us the biopool¡¯s liquid heats, congealing into a thick gel meant to cushion our impact. Or a glue so our remains stick together, that way survivors can reclaim our biomass more easily. Zazathur and I expand our limbs, in the sort of hug I expect spiders to share. Ick. My pod lurches. All pods burst away from the ship. Too early. This isn¡¯t the plan! An energy beam bright enough to carve lines through the biopod¡¯s chitin illuminates the sky like lightning. We hear the rumbling thunder as Shipmind explodes, the ship cut in half by an Azhurai supercannon. That¡¯s their second decapitating shot. ¡°We didn¡¯t ally with the Azhurai¡­ Right?¡± I hiss into Zazathur¡¯s ear. Gel muffling my anger. If you encounter this narrative on Amazon, note that it''s taken without the author''s consent. Report it. While the biopool fluid is oxygenated the gell feels like inhaling liquified horseshoes. Or Elmer¡¯s glue. We¡¯re plummeting through atmosphere. Pods jenk and tremble or blaze ahead, each on preset trajectories. As biological creatures we cannot use chaff in the conventional sense, there are no clouds of metal winged flies, or creatures that fire flamethrowers. Instead we rely upon smooth carapace and pods full of raw materials to cover our entry. Across Singularity territory artillery begins to aim up, energy batteries are wheeled into position for their monthly battle. Tulverian pulse cannons vaporize three pods in a single shot, carving a hole into the decapitated bioship. Casualties exceed ten percent in seconds. Yet none of the Collective panic, its an impressive level of stoicism. No emotional response whatsoever. Zazathur braces. ¡°Azhurai conglomerate is our primary ally. With the Novan Technomancy of Steel acting as a support contractor.¡± His voice is a low whisper, finally sounding hydrated through the saturation of gel. Pop More pods explode, blown into dust by Technocracy missiles. Those damn Juggernauts will kill half the pods!- -Tingles run across by brain wrinkles. Radiating across my entire body. Silence. Terran Athena¡¯s conversation with Alaea shows exactly why we allied ourselves. What our spent biomass has purchased. A continent wide electromagnetic pulse; and a knife in the back. Azhurai supercannon speaks again, cutting the hive ship in half along its length. Shielding and armor are both defeated entirely, with a two mile descent. It¡¯ll take years to recover that scattered biomass, we¡¯ll have to create slugs to eat dirt and differentiate between protein and astrolith. Four pods in my escort explode. Including the pod nearest my original trajectory. Another Matriarch dies. That isn¡¯t right, if we¡¯re allied they shouldn¡¯t be targeting my sisters directly, not with the hundreds of other pods falling from the sky. Gel dampens vibrations, giving us a generally smooth ride. A sort of motile hibernation that will get all of us killed. I reach out to the hive, warning them. ¡°We¡¯ve been betrayed, accelerate the drop. Get us down!¡± Six Matriarchs raise queries. Only six left. Half our commanders gone. One disappears from the hive mind as her drop pod becomes one with the atmosphere. ¡°Drop faster!¡± I scream. This time there is no deliberation, no delay. All pods contract, pulling chitinous flaps inward to decrease atmospheric drag. The others are aware of the danger and maneuver pods into the line of fire. Bioforms can be remade, but a Matriarch is a complex being, without Zazathur, an existing Matriarch, and a hive cluster, no true reincarnations can occur. Four Azhurai cannons combine their firepower drilling a hole no wider than a german shepherd through six pods. Another sister burns. Her head annihilated with accuracy bordering on precognition. Like a doctor lasering a wart. Precision fire of that magnitude reveals the master plan. Our alliance is and always was a sham. We¡¯re dog soldiers, about to become an environmental hazard. This displeases the hive mind, the first great displeasure it has felt in five thousand years. There was no need for this betrayal. We¡¯ve been robbed! In milliseconds the hive mind connects to another of its kind, the only one who can barter faster than Planck¡¯s Constant. I feel a deal being struck with the Novan Technomancy of Steel. They have nothing left to lose. The EMP cripled them, as has Thena¡¯s vendetta. But one more destroyer lost is a worthy exchange for the corridor of worlds offered. A century long truce in exchange for one Technocracy battlesphere. Sanctions will sting, but I detect the nuclear launch. Eighteen missiles launch. All bearing the distinct nuclear signal. Damn Thena, you pissed these guys off so bad they were prepped and ready to nuke our asses. Silently I applaud her. Proud of myself. The nameless caste act a moment too late. Granting fire permission just as the first missile enters the atmosphere. Of the thousand ships in orbit, over nine hundred fire upon the battlesphere. A second sun appears in the skies above Syrak-9, blinding defensive batteries that could have shot down the remaining missiles. Psionic energies ripple through the universe. One of the nameless is intervening directly. Time halts, flowing in reverse for several seconds. Our Collective shatters, bioforms driven mad as a schism rends us from the rest of the whole. Minor adjustments are made to the past. Only eight hundred ships fire at the battlesphere while a hundred intercept the nuclear warheads. Father time reasserts his dominance and breaks free of the nameless psionic. The reversed seconds fast forward, Steak-9 experiencing one minute within three seconds as the galaxy returns to normal. My brain shudders. Able to comprehend the strength of the -nameless- now that I have witnessed it firsthand. Though I still do not believe it. The power to reverse time with a mere thought. What the fuck? This isn¡¯t strong, it¡¯s godly. Worse, I know of only two -nameless- monitoring this system. Exec Kaalra, and Executrix Alaea. Before I can shout at her I¡¯m slammed into the pod¡¯s floor. It alters shape once more, this time flaring open for maximum drag like an umbrella. Azhurai target locks swing wide firing every megawatt and phased particle they have at the oncoming nuke. But it¡¯s too late. White light illuminates the inside of my eyelids. Shockwaves ripple through my pod. I cling to the straingineer and wait for the end. And wait. We impact the ground. Chitin shatters. Gel does its job, venting pressure out of specially designed ports evolved over trillions of iterative splats. Green goo squirts in geysers to redirect the force of collision and we are left on the surface. Alive. Although I feel as though sledgehammers hit every part of my armor at once. I glance back towards the nuke, to see an energy shield with an inverse circumference to the planet containing the blast. It¡¯s a hard blue, more evidence of the -nameless- caste. ¡°Dig!¡± I order, pushing Zazathur away. We scramble into the dirt, claws and limbs moving earth like our lives depend on it. Not five seconds later I see what remains of Shipmind. Little more than a chitinous dart plows a hundred meters into the earth, screaming as heat bends the hull. Then an overwhelming stillness settles. I can no longer sense a reassuring tingle at the base of my mind. Nor does a Matriarch answer my call. We¡¯ve been cut off. Without Matriarchs the endless multitude becomes feral, scattering to the four winds in order to satiate their basal needs. Shelter, food, water. Warriors are now meat for the galactic grinder. A war-hazard on a cursed world. Within minutes of our landing, the alliance is in shambles. I should be upset, but then a seething rage settles in. >Matriarch Hygieia: Thena, I need to kill the Azhurai. >Terran Thena: ¡­ >Terran Thena: I¡¯m still mad about spiderman. Really, what the shit girl? >Terran Thena: But¡­ I feel ya. Take Syrak-9. I know what she is asking and smile at the simple mantra, completing our -now unified- mission. >Matriarch Hygieia: Save Earth. No hive mind can stop us now. >Terran Thena: Guess this means I¡¯ve unlocked the hatchery. Welcome to the war. 1 / 1 Biomass (Hygieia cannot store biomass at this time) 5 / 13 Mechanized 1 / 1 Protochronian Artefacts 1 Nanofactory aboard ship 1 Nanofactory in Supply Bunker 0002 (EMP disabled) 24 Biomass in supply bunker Chapter 25 Learn to use the microwave (What sc2 unit the people want next?) I stared at the door to my prison trying to ignore the mountain of corpses and hardware Athen keeps warping in. >Executrix Alaea: Guys, I¡¯m full, like actually seriously full! Don¡¯t warp anything else in here without warping something out! >Matriarch Hygieia: Oh shit! You have biomass! >Matriarch Hygieia: need my lings back Thena. >Terran Thena: aight, we¡¯re hunkered down anyways. Need ammo. Can factories produce power cells? I tap directly into the nanofactory¡¯s software, unsure how it¡¯s possible but going with what my memories suggest. Tulverian weapons are already scanned and coded into the database with suitable modifications for power cells and possible adaptations on how to integrate them into Juggernaut systems. Some are ingenious, like the modification to replace a power cell with a solarium reactor which grants increased firepower per shot at the cost of additional weight and having to wait for a reactor to recharge your cell instead of reloading. ¡°Where am I going to get Solarium?¡± Another of the Azhurai sculpted-battle-bots warps into the heap, eyes ablaze with yellow light. Claws on one paw extend, ready to tear into my flesh. My body reacts before I can, a simple psionic burst disassembles the bot by ripping out its reactor. Golden light fills the room as raw solarium tempers a fusion reaction. By -nameless- standards the design is cruder than getting power from a shake-weight or treadmill, but to Athena this small reactor could power a country. It follows a standardized design as well, one popular among the Novan Technocracy. ¡°Lucky bitch.¡± I mutter, tossing the solarium reactor into the nanofactory. >Executrix Alaea: How many scouts have you destroyed? Oh, they happen to have solarium reactors. Standardized reactors. We can power just about anything you want. >Terran Thena: Reactors? Wait. REACTORS! >Terran Thena: CLOAK GIVE ME CLOAKING DEVICES111!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ¡°Ah, yeah, shoulda guessed that¡¯s what she wants.¡± I mutter, searching the database for solarium cloaking devices. The options that appear make my heart flop. These devices are cruder than dick jokes flaccid more often. >Executrix Alaea: Bullets or cloak first? Cloak is bad version, very limited.You might be reading a stolen copy. Visit Royal Road for the authentic version. >Terran Thena: ¡­ fucking hell. Bullets first. If you can send us a reactor to recharge the cells without warping them out that would be best. How long will a cloak take? Please, pretty please with a cherry on top tell me you have human portable cloaking. I wince. Our shared vision of what cloaking devices are is based off ghosts in starcraft. While in reality they''re piss poor shower curtains. >Executrix Alaea: cloak will take 24 hours to cook. Is 200 pounds, and has 10% uptime. Thermals detect it. To get a worthwhile cloak I¡¯ll need a week and no weight limit. Maybe it was my imagination, but I could swear to hearing distant screaming. >Terran Thena: Fine. I¡¯ll think about it. Can you upgrade our guns first? >Executrix Alaea: Girl, I''ll give you the interface. Merry Christmas. With a thought I pass access codes to Athena¡¯s warp HUD, granting her full access to the nanofactories. A minute later one begins retrofitting a plasma rifle with a solarium reactor and thrice reinforced coils. While the other starts making a general purpose solarium reactor. In practice that general purpose reactor is just ten individual reactors stuck together and connected with various ports and induction coils for charging various devices. >Matriarch Hygieia: hey >Matriarch Hygieia: we landed but the hive mind got scrambled by something >Matriarch Hygieia: NO BIOFORMS ARE FRIENDLY >Matriarch Hygieia: plz send biomass >Matriarch Hygieia: got an engineer with no legos A laugh escapes my lips, vibrating through the room as psychic waves convert to sound. This body is going to take some getting used to. I turn my attention to escaping this prison. Scrolling through my memories Alaea guides me, explaining how Kaalra locked the door. As far as locking methods go, it¡¯s a simple psionic riddle, like playing a game of flappy bird. There is a crystal maze I must move an orb through without obliterating it. Air jets and varying gravity add variables to the lock. ¡°This ought to be easy.¡± I point a claw at the crystal orb and psychically order it forward- -the ball explodes into dust. Crushed by excessive force. Repair systems automatically warp the dust away replacing it with another orb. ¡°That¡¯s cute you sonofabitch!¡± Until I escape this room I¡¯ll be limited to the local warp engine, the -nameless- castes¡¯ version of a microwave. As plant based organisms we need little immediate sustenance, but a warp engine is included in each residential room of our ship. Even the stasis chambers. On the other side of that door lies an entire ship full of technology I am authorized to use. If only I can get through the lock! A chime interrupts my thoughts. The solarium railgun is complete and ready for combat. Before I can second guess myself the rifle is in my arms and aimed at the door. A shot of yellow energy burns the atmosphere, splashing across the door as shielding negates the blast. Of course it wouldn¡¯t be that easy. >Executrix Alaea: Hey Athena, got a new toy for you. The infinite pulsar warps out of my hands, across the stars to my other third. While I sit, beginning the long process of training my psychic powers, one crushed ball at a time. Chapter 26 Nuclear Detonation My nap was long and fruitful. Resulting in a half dozen Azhurai SCOUTs getting destroyed, our second nanofactory repaired, and several spare reactors. All information I acquired on my brief repast atop the downed Juggernaut. I hop off the juggernaut, power armor cushioning the landing. Still, my mistake is evident as fire rips open my lung, reminding me I¡¯m in critical condition and being held together with a half tube of expired biofoam. My helmet chirps at me, automatically opening the channel to my ¡®squadmate¡¯. ¡°Pfina? Awre you awight?¡± Asks a lisping voice too young to be on the battlefield. Especially this battlefield. ¡°I¡¯m fine,¡± I wince, trying not to let the pain show. ¡°Suit is buggered. Even after hours in that suit, it still surprises me that she can move it at all. Given her handicap of being three and a half feet tall. We really should have used something other than artillery shells as stilts, they¡¯re too rigid. Seems like they¡¯re tripping the suit¡¯s crush limiters. All the pesky little bits of software that keep the powered armor from actuating limbs beyond what is humanly possible. Without those nannies the hydraulics and servoes would hyperextend every joint until the limbs came free. Yikes. Getting bent into space slime is quite low on my list of priorities. Another warning light flashes in my HUD, this time for radiation poisoning. I¡¯ve exceeded a month¡¯s threshold. Cancer is almost guaranteed now, my only hope is to seal the bulletholes in my armor or acquire a new suit. Logic whispers an answer to my problems. I¡¯m the one fighting for us, it¡¯s only right for me to take the working armor. Forget that Kerrigan would last whole minutes in my busted suit before it cooked her alive. Disgust overloads me, hating that I even considered the thought! ¡°Otay Pfina.¡± Is Kerrigan¡¯s response, oblivious to my vile machinations. Nausea hits me harder than bullets. A one two combo with her innocence that hammers my ribs. She trusts me completely, if I asked she would not hesitate to swap suits. Might even ask if the air was supposed to burn as she handed me the only good rebreather. A tear rolls down my cheek. No, This is my battlefield, I won¡¯t lose myself. Not like I did back on Earth. Kerrigan is my ally, we will live or die together. They might have taken Earth away from us, but we¡¯re still human! A blind scanner ping ripples through the trench, bouncing off our armors before the alert appears in my helmet. Too late for countermeasures. The source must be close. In seconds those radio waves will tell someone exactly where we are. Probably enter us into their network of targeting computers and send an artillery shell at our predicted locations. ¡°Kerrigan! Run!¡± I shout, checking the rounds in my flechette pistol. But I already know the answer. The pistol¡¯s electronic readout displays 0/100. I mag lock it to my thigh and switch to the Tulverian pulser. Limping back towards our bunker where the four inhuman marines await. ¡°Oi, big one¡¯s on the way¡ªgrab your dingo an¡¯ kiss that bitch goodbye!¡± Says the suit. ¡°Of every accent in the universe, why did it have to be Australian!¡± The sounds of screaming artillery shells and laser fire cease abruptly as the few survivors of this pocket war receive the same warning. Except the Tulvarians who continue their war-hooting. For spacefaring iguanas I would have expected more intelligence from them, or at least vocalizations that are distinguishable from a dozen bovines in heat. A thin line of black appears in the atmosphere above me. No reading on the HUD means the missile is out of my suit¡¯s scanner range, yet visible. An infantryman¡¯s way of saying ¡®InterContinental Ballistic Missile¡¯. I swallow, trying to work spit back into my mouth. Energy batteries whine, thrumming to life for several horrible seconds. Each instant bringing the missile deeper into our atmosphere. A dozen lasers illuminate the sky. Nine go wide, vanishing into the darkness of space at .9C. Effectively the speed of light. Three beams score direct hits, one on the nose and two center mass. I smile, knowing a single laser is enough to destroy the missile. Orbital bombardments via missiles are ineffective because they¡¯re too easy to shoot down. Its a strategic error on whatever captain thought one missile would hit me. A blue sphere glows softly around the missile deflecting all hits, little more than the blink of death. The missile, dropped from orbit, is shielded. No one puts shielding on an average missile. It can only be one thing. Someone broke the rules and decided to flip the table. Win the war by erasing everyone, including themselves. Galactic sanctions would be imposed, a small comfort to my soon-to-be vaporized body. ¡°NUCLEAR DETONATION DETECTED!¡± ¡°FIND COVER YA CUNTS!¡± ¡°Yeah yeah, thanks a lot. Never would have seen that without you.¡± I say, chinning the faceplate to silence the alarm. All goes white. Then blue¡­? I stop to wiggle my toes, somehow I''m still alive. My HUD shows everyone is still alive. Suit sensors show no increase in radiation and release the HELP system giving me a full view of the heavens. Nuclear fire broils against itself folding and folding again. A whirlpool of cosmic annihilation. Contained on the whim of the nameless. In seconds the fire resolves into a black orb of pure radiation. It descends to the dirt and vanishes, presumably buried somewhere it cannot harm the solarium mines. I stare for a second, awestruck by what I¡¯ve seen. The amount of psychic power borders on star snuffing godhood. My suit chimes signalling an incoming communication. ¡°Oi boss, Barker seys troopers coming up the path.¡± Says Emu-rine. ¡°Troopers?¡± I repeat numbly, turning to face the newcomers. Six trenchcoat clad gasmasks, Singularity troopers, jog into view ducking for cover as they see my armored form. My Novan Technocracy armor. The first shot whizzes overhead, warming my faceplate. Another impacts my good shoulder sending me sprawling. This content has been unlawfully taken from Royal Road; report any instances of this story if found elsewhere. ¡°Shit!¡± I shout, half diving half pirouetting behind the Juggernaut¡¯s corpse. Three energy bolts hit the downed tank, igniting it. Cooking meat and lubricants darken the air as I chin through com channels repeating my orders to cease fire. ¡°Got a clear shot on them, just say the word boss.¡± Says Spiderman. ¡°No! Ceasefire! We do not need to fight. Got enough damn enemies on this planet.¡± I say, broadcasting on an open com line. ¡°If it comes down to you or them. We¡¯ll make sure it¡¯s them.¡± Says Sergeant Wormface. Part of me is flattered. What girl doesn¡¯t enjoy having a variety pack of protective marines? But another part of me is horrified. These are my fellow earthlings. Very possibly my classmates, I can¡¯t order them to be blasted. ¡°Ceasefire! Singularity troopers, I am not your enemy!¡± I radio. My eyes dart to the bunker, checking my reaper fuel levels. If I sprint then boost I should have enough speed to avoid getting my arse shot off. Maybe. Power armor should be able to take multiple hits but what happens if they take out the jetpack? Anything from I explode to it makes me go faster. Too unpredictable. A shadow passes above me one of the many bioforms of the Collective, a sort of sickly looking spinoling, as if the creature is half starved and extra spikey. It looks at me, shifting weight as it prepares to pounce. ¡°No! Go away, go back to Hygieia!¡± My words seem to focus its eyes. Like a dog who did not know you are standing behind it and then you call out their name. Only to see mouth foaming from late stage rabies. The creature pounces, rending claws glistening with old blood. My pulse rifle rises to meet it golden energy erupting from the muzzle to shred the ling¡¯s lower half. A dozen bolts of energy connect with the creature, half from the troopers and three from my own marines. Shots echo through the trench, alerting all Collective organisms of food. Spinolings appear along the trench barking and yipping, flexing claws as they adjust for a pounce. My rifle speaks first, scoring a clean headshot. It falls infront of the troopers, alerting them to the presence of a third enemy. Bodyweight shifts, they are exposed and unsupported in a vehicular trench. A kill zone. Weight leaves their shoulders, already accepting death as their rifles aim up. I key external speakers to max, simultaneous with my coms. ¡°Kill the lings!¡± I order, sticking my rifle between autocannons and cracking off another shot. It goes wide, tearing a ling in half, but the angry maw still has enough piss left to chomp through a trooper¡¯s arm and tear into their chest before a second trooper bayonets his eye. I wince, sympathizing with getting a limb removed. Ouch. Our fire is accurate and effective, designed to defeat Juggernauts, yet the lings are equally well designed and wound eight troopers before the last spinosaurus is slain. Now is my chance to flee, run back to the bunker and save myself. But I can¡¯t abandon them. One tap and my visor opens to reveal my gasmask. Rifle in hand I wave the troopers forward. ¡°Cmon you idiots! Get to the bunker!¡± I shout still using the helmet¡¯s external speakers. At least one of them gets the message and starts running. The others are close behind, held up by the wounded troopers they¡¯re carrying. So many moving bodies speaks to my tremorsense, an ability I shouldn¡¯t possess. But I do. Across the trench network bioforms of our own native designs turn against us all rushing for something familiar. I can sense them coming, somehow attuned to their minds. ¡°Get to the bunker! NOW!¡± I shout, sealing my helmet and raising the modified pulser. Two Lings come around a distant trench corner, eight hundred meters away. My first shot is clean, entering the creature¡¯s throat and exiting where his tail meets the spine, but my second shot is disturbed by the passing troopers and only incinerates a leg. The ling stumbles, then adapts to a three legged gait. Sable Yurten¡¯s training is excellent, and her aim good, but I¡¯m blocking the other marine¡¯s shots, as are the troopers. I pass my rifle to an unwounded trooper and scoop two wounded soldiers into my arms, fleeing with all the strength left in my tormented lungs. I shift left, aligning myself with the Juggernaut¡¯s husk. It¡¯s a small thing but one that lets Spiderman take his shots. During my unplanned nap the man re-earned his nickname, climbing up the bunker¡¯s back wall and digging a nest for himself. We laughed at his antics then, and now I would kiss him. If he weren¡¯t an electric pink nightmare wrapped in flesh. With the higher vantage he fires at regular intervals forced to pause as his solarium reactored pulser recharges each shot, frustration so palpable I can feel it through our mental link. We should really get him a double upgraded rifle, as his eight eyes seem to never err. He fires two shots as I run, each blast cores a ling, often overpenetrating to slay a second. Troopers shift out of his line of sight and two more marines join the battle keeping us clear as spinolings begin pouring into the trench like a horde of timid dogs. Each pushing the one beside it forward, wanting to hunt, yet unwilling to be first. One or two creatures becomes twelve, then twenty, then thirty. ¡°Check your fire, shots are bringing in the lings.¡± Wormface radios. Emurine, Wormface, and Barker immediately switch from full auto barrages to semi auto precision. Spinoling attentions shift to the troopers. ¡°They¡¯ve gone feral!¡± I gasp, bounding over the barricade in a power armor enhanced leap. By the time I hop over our barricade there are more enemy icons on my HUD than I can count. Four Singularity troopers are conducting a fighting retreat. Firing until their cell depletes then turning and running towards us while reloading. Once reloaded they kneel and lay down a barrage on full auto tearing into the onrushing swarm. ¡°There are too many of them! Get in here!¡± I shout, taking up a position atop our reinforced crate mountain. Kerrigan, myself, four marines, and now five troopers all add our firepower together, saturating the trench with a blaze of plasma. Power cells drain, running our already meager supplies dry. Never in my life have I wished for a supply depot full of bullets until now. Yet every slain ling seems to draw another to us, and in the space of a half hour we have filled the trench with hundreds of bodies. >Terran Thena: Hygieia we are pinned down by your people! Help us out! >Matriarch Hygieia: Hive mind is broken >Matriarch Hygieia: No control >Matriarch Hygieia: No biomass to reacquire control >Matriarch Hygieia: need a strong psychics biomass I drop the exhausted pulser, drawing my flechette pistol dumping a hundred flechettes into the nearest ling. Needles shred their flesh, tearing them into chowder before my eyes. A spinoling leaps from the trenchtop, clever bastard used it to occlude our line of sight until he was within striking range. Claws extend, the world slows down around as our eyes meet. I raise an arm to fend him off, teeth and claws clamp down shredding armor. A power armored fist enters my vision from the right. Clenched fingers plow through the spinoling¡¯s face, neck, spine, and ribs. What was once a terrifying creature is now pink mist. ¡°GET BACK SIR!¡± Shouts Barker, shoving me deeper into the bunker. He¡¯s a blur, fisting every zergling like Mike Tyson. I¡¯ve never seen a more ferocious boxer, not even the zealots of the Golden Armada fight with more zeal than Barker. Without him we¡¯d be overrun. ¡°Damn lunatic.¡± I mutter, praying he can save us. Or buy enough time to recharge our rifles. 1 / 1 Biomass (Hygieia cannot store biomass at this time) 5 / 13 Mechanized 1 / 1 Protochronian Artefacts 1 Nanofactory aboard ship 1 Nanofactory in Supply Bunker 0002 (EMP disabled) 24 Biomass in supply bunker Lots of ling corpses, and 12 troopers¡­ Chapter 27 The Cost of Humanity One by one our rifles deplete their last reserves. Emurine and Wormface swap pulsers for Singularity particle accelerators -blasters- but it''s not enough. The Collective is out in force, fully intent on earning their moniker of ¡®Endless¡¯. Someone borrows my flechette pistol, firing bursts of five shots into oncoming lings. Other bioforms enter the trench, discolored in patches and following a different phenotype than spinolings, experimental vagrants of the predecessor¡¯s design. Regardless, creatures drop with each burst. Without a controlling mind the beasts act like fearless wolves, death is not a concept they are allowed to know, nor are they wise enough to tunnel beneath our feet. Nor to gather their strength and assault us all at once. It¡¯s an oncoming horde that meanders across our world. My heart thunders, terrified that we are fighting for our lives. Yet half my brain revels in the supremacy of combat, gunning down a stream of monsters all capable of tearing me apart. Is this how my marines felt during the ¡®All In¡¯ mission? When endless hordes of lings streamed into layered lines of tanks and bunkers only to be annihilated by artefact waves and the pride of human engineering? I¡¯ve slain scores of lings now and still they come. As if their only meaning in life is to be slain by me, waltzing into our plasma fire. Thousands of feet set the earth a rumble and still we fight on. Flechettes mingle with pulsers running dry moments before the pulsers die. All magazines empty with only Spiderman¡¯s rifle recharging. He picks each shot carefully, deliberately firing only when each shot will slay multiple lings. Barker cartwheels backwards, faceplanting into mud before crawling back to the entrance and ducking behind a line of crates, fresh shovel at the ready. Prepared to die for us. If I wasn¡¯t scared shitless, the gesture would be downright sexy. But all I can feel is the thrum of my reactors, moving electrons or quarks into my pulser¡¯s chamber. My arm is broken but attached, so I pick my shots carefully, waiting until the lings funnel into the bunker¡¯s mouth. What once was a thirty foot wide hole has been tightened down to ten feet with two -mostly symmetrical- pyramids of dirt filled crates on either side. I toss the reaper explosives from my bandolier, draining every munition we have. Yet the explosions only bring more lings. ¡°Shit, guess this is it.¡± I whisper, glancing around me once. >Terran Thena: Hey, if I die, take care of Kerrigan for me. >Executrix Alaea: I will. >Executrix Alaea: But don¡¯t you dare give up! >Terran Thena: I won¡¯t. Got my FNX and knife ready. The promise is hollow, a human pistol lacks the velocity of the flechettes, and the terminal ballistics of their needles that bend and blend flesh. Nor can I use it with the suit¡¯s targeting systems. In short, I¡¯m already fucked. A helmet slips open, visor rising. Loud in the silence of onrushing lings. Spiderman freezes, going totally still. As do Barker, Emurine, and wormface. Light fills the bunker from behind me, emitting from the top of crate mountain. I spin, taking in a sight I always knew was coming. Kerrigan¡¯s eyes are glowing, like a purple black light, crates luminesce, as does spilt zergling blood. My ammo counter turns over to 1 and I fire a shot, coring three frozen spinolings. The collateral damage does not stem from my skill, no it comes from the sudden stillness. As a unified collective the spinolings turn tail and flee. They¡¯re falling back, deciding whatever meat within this bunker isn¡¯t worth fighting over. Yet they halt just beyond our vision, digging into the earth or slinking around corners. Lurking on the edges of our periphery, devouring the corpses of their fallen brethren. Other bioforms wiggle their way through the dirt, emerging from trench walls only to be savaged by waiting lings. Basal instincts of fighting and gathering biomass are there, but little else. ¡°What the Hell?¡± I whisper. ¡°It¡¯s the link. When Shipmind and the other Matriarchs died they lost control. Seems like our cousins are nothing but animals now.¡± Answers Wormface. ¡°Why aren¡¯t you guys affected then?¡± The sergeant smacks Barker, ordering him to recharge our rifles. ¡°Our Matriarch is wisest of all. She foresaw this eventually and granted us greater autonomy so we could better serve our Queens. Though we feel a great emptiness. As if- well uhm- I¡¯m not sure. As if something that has always been connected to you is suddenly gone, like both arms being severed in an instant. It feels- well, I hate the sensation.¡± Wormface mutters. I try to sit up and find my chest on fire. Adrenaline dump is gone, bringing my broken arm into sharp focus. Agony pounds me into the crates. Where the bullet in my damn lung whispers mortality. I grit my teeth, passing my rifle off to Emurine. ¡°Ack, keep watch.¡± ¡°Yes sir.¡± He answers, exchanging the singularity laser rifle for my pulser. Kerrigan is there in an instant looming over my prone form. ¡°You alright?¡± ¡°I¡¯ll live, This will take surgery to clean out. Ah,¡± I take a moment to breathe slowly, leaning to one side so my opposite lung can inflate more. It seems to lessen the pain. ¡°Help me up, those troopers are my best bet at medical treatment.¡± Her frown is loud enough for me to hear through two faceplates, but a second later armored hands pick me up, placing me upright. ¡°You pwamised not two leave me.¡± Whispers Kerrigan, a hint of her old lisp creeping back into her speech. My hand pats her shoulder, our faceplates clinking together. ¡°I¡¯ll be fine. This is totally survivable, a flesh wound.¡± I lie, hoping it''s the truth. ¡°Keep those lings away from us so we can recover.¡± I whisper, tight beaming the request to Kerrigan alone. She nods and heads for the entrance, standing idle a moment before stooping to help break open supply crates and refill them with dirt then stacking the improvised sandbags in front of Barker. Spinolings retreat from the trench, driven back by her presence, leaving me to wonder just what Kerrigan has become. Certainly psionic and clearly altered to be a bioweapon, but what kind of psychic monstrosity eludes me. ¡°No, she is Kerrigan, my friend. Don¡¯t overthink it.¡± I whisper walking around Barker¡¯s growing earthworks. This book''s true home is on another platform. Check it out there for the real experience. He¡¯s building a formation I don¡¯t recognize, taking dirt from the walls and floor, but whatever sim city he has going is working well enough. Small gaps are left between the crates, not large enough for our boots to slip into yet wide enough that spinolings could lose their footing. While also building tall enough to inconvenience their movement without inhibiting our firing lanes. The sight reminds me of walling off ramps with Terran supply depots, a critical tactic that one was expected to master quickly or forever be damned to the anals of bronze league with all the shittiest cheese. ¡°Ah, this is what I get for fighting on the frontlines. Heroes never hold up to plasma cannons and artillery. Bleh, I know that! I always got Jim killed when we tried to infiltrate Castanar, so why the hell did I think this would be any different?¡± I groan. The Singularity troopers are huddled together, one gasmask watching the entrance, rifle up and ready. Three of their number are wounded and being treated by their officer, rank insignia on his shoulder designate him as a corporal, technically a non commissioned officer. He¡¯s got their packs open and strewn across three empty crates, a bad sign. No one has a dedicated medkit. Nor a medic to use it. And I need a fully trained surgeon to patch up my lung. ¡°Hey doc, I got wounded not too long ago. Once you finish with them can you take a look?¡± He didn¡¯t bother looking up. ¡°Got morphine and two sticks of biofoam. Damn bugs hit our medic. Nanite injector is probably still on his arm. If they haven¡¯t eaten it.¡± Said the corporal, injecting the last of his biofoam into the soldier. A smile crosses my face. These assholes were lucky enough to have a medic! ¡°Let¡¯s go get it then. You and me.¡± ¡°Are you stupid?¡± He snaps, leaping to his feet. In a second his energy pistol appear, muzzle punching my helmet. ¡®Do not shoot.¡¯ I mentally order, knowing Spiderman and Emurine already have their weapons trained on the corporal. A fact he seems to miss. He rips the magazine out of his pistol waving it in front of my face. ¡°Ten shots! I have ten fucking shots left! You think we can fight our way through¨C¡± My arm tentacles snatch the powercell out of his hands, warping it away to Alaea. The sudden loss of his only bullets silences the man, but I can hear his growing fury. ¡°Got something for ya.¡± I say, warping one of our spare pulse rifles into my hand. ¡°Only one magazine, should be good for sixty shots. Tulverian plasma rifle, it''s probably a little heavy and the wrong length of pull-¡± ¡°Lets get that god damn medic!¡± Snaps the man. Already heading for the door. ¡°Wait, sound off on ammo!¡± I snap. We may have missed a single magazine in an unused rifle, but everyone else is dryer than Mar Sara. ¡°Half charged,¡± Says Emurine. ¡°Bout the same.¡± Calls Spiderman. ¡°Got two cells.¡± Answers a trooper, handing the second one to a fellow trooper. ¡°Boss, if we wait five minutes our ammo supply will double.¡± Advises Wormface, gesturing to our charging station. With Alaea keeping our two nanofactories running I know he¡¯s right, not to mention our two recharging pulsers. ¡°Hey Spiderman, you got a visual on the medic¡¯s body?¡± ¡°Yessir. Medic went down and is buried under a half dozen lings. Shot em myself sir.¡± That¡¯s perfect. We¡¯ll just need to run through a ling infested trench¡­ Crap. I catch corporal as he steps atop the barricade, allowing passive scanners to assess the trench. Three hundred corpses lay in piles with eighty two spinolings devouring the bodies. Without a hive mind to keep them in check they¡¯re fulfilling base needs. Food, water or blood apparently, and then shelter. As I watch four of them work together to drag a corpse out of the trench, heading off to nest in some underground burrow. ¡°We¡¯ve got more than eighty two shots-¡± A suit of shitbrown Technocracy armor waddles in front of me, stoping an inch away from my own armor. ¡°Pfina. No.¡± Says Kerrigan, her visor sliding open. Corporal gasmask and the other troopers tense, hands tightening around their guns. Not many creatures in the universe have bioluminescent eyes. They know she is a bioweapon, one who can end all of us. But the flashtraining holds and they maintain their disposition. Possibly because they understand she is the only thing keeping the spino dogs of war at bay. ¡°You pwamised not twwo weave me.¡± Whispers Kerrigan, somehow managing to pout with the split mandible. She¡¯s grown several inches since I last saw her, now appearing as a twelve year old girl, slender, but with hints of adult features across her face. Especially the glowing purple amethysts that have become her eyes. ¡°Spiderman, blast anything that tries to eat the medic. Otherwise, we hold for five minutes.¡± ¡°Yessir.¡± Outside the sun was beginning to set, red waves flowed across the irradiated atmosphere of Syrak, distorted by cancerous particles. My eyes flutter shut, tuning out the world and focusing only on the tremorsense. Somehow I can tap into the sixth sense, with booster nodes from each of the mutantmarines. Mutmarines? Mutrines? More than fifty spinolings have burrowed into the walls and ground around us, lying in wait to ambush anyone who dares leave the bunker. Kerrigan is righter than she¡¯ll ever know. Or maybe she senses the trap. ¡°Okay Kerrigan, I¡¯m open to solutions.¡± The corporal whirls on us, about to protest. After all, his soldiers need those supplies more than I do. I forestall his questions with a raised hand, adding, ¡°Didn¡¯t see the ambush til kerrigan pointed it out. We can¡¯t go out there yet.¡± Alaea¡¯s nanofactory has completed the analysis of my kidnapped powercell and warps it back to my hand. It¡¯s singularity standard issue, although probably built on a more advanced world as it is uniquely within spec, without a single tolerance off the designated ideal. In short, it was perfectly manufactured. So far above mil-spec that it makes match-grade look sloppy. The pistol¡¯s power cell appears in my hand, and I offer it to the man as a sort of weaponized olive branch. Shoulders slump in defeat, and he takes it. Knowing his friends will die. >Terran Thena: Hey, I¡¯ve got a bullet in my lung, and three wounded humans. Any healing or solutions? >Executrix Alaea: You¡¯ve got my nanintes, they¡¯ll eventually patch the wound and heal it. Just don¡¯t get shot again¡­ Except, my arm is all tingly¡­ You got shot again didn¡¯t you? >Terran Thena: Uhm¡­ No. But I think my arm is broken. >Matriarch Hygieia: i gave you zerg cells >Matriarch Hygieia: recovery will take time >Matriarch Hygieia: how much do you like those humans? I wince, wondering if those two factors are how I¡¯ve survived being shot in the lung and realize I should have died a third time on this world. Kerrigan is right, no more chances. >Terran Thena: They¡¯re probably Earthlings, so we can¡¯t dissolve them into biomass. >Matriarch Hygieia: not what i meant >Matriarch Hygieia: my only biopool cant fit a person >Matriarch Hygieia: but a symbiote could work Symbiote? Thoughts of turning the gasmask wearing humans into Venom enhanced superheroes tickles my imagination. >Terran Thena: Symbiote like Venom and Spiderman? >Matriarch Hygieia: Symbiote like Goauld. Emotional whiplash shudders up my spine. That kind of symbiote would implant itself within the humans, heal them, and then take control of their bodies. Worse, they would be entirely conscious of its actions. Able to see what their body said, what it did, taste the food it ate, hear their voice speak to their loved ones. All without being able to move. >Terran Thena: Hell no. >Matriarch Hygieia: no choice >Matriarch Hygieia: no biomass >Matriarch Hygieia: no pool >Matriarch Hygieia: no other options from me >Terran Thena: I said NO. We aren¡¯t mind controlling fellow Earthlings >Matriarch Hygieia: cant reengineer them today >Matriarch Hygieia: might be possible later >Matriarch Hygieia: live today >Matriarch Hygieia: live free tomorrow >Matriarch Hygieia: best i can do Chapter 28 Wormface or Wormbrain? >Matriarch Hygieia: tell me now or dont >Matriarch Hygieia: can have twelve symbiotes in an hour >Matriarch Hygieia: guess i landed with wormfaces genetic material >Matriarch Hygieia: lucky you Kerrigan cocks her head, wondering why I''ve been so silent. ¡°Uhm, just thinking of solutions, hey Corporal, think I broke my arm too.¡± I say, raising the savaged limb. ¡°Got a med scanner or vitals on your troopers?¡± I ask, hopping off the barricade. No sense in talking in view of spinolings, one might get ancy and take a nibble. Best to get under cover. ¡°Got both, they¡¯re in the medic¡¯s pack.¡± Snaps the Corporal, sighting down the plasma rifle¡¯s optic. It''s got a variable zoom scope from 0x magnification so you can use it like a red dot for quick shots or dial it all the way up to 20x magnification for more precise work. Better than anything we have on earth. ¡°Come away Corporal. See those tails of theirs? That stinger? They¡¯ve burrowed all around us. Anyone attempting to leave our bunker will get stabbed twenty times before you can kiss your ass goodbye.¡± I say, finding a seat on a crate. Radiation is at an all time low within the bunker, well within human safe levels. I crack open the suit, slowly working my top half out of the press. Breathing instantly becomes easier, and more painful as my lungs finally open to their proper dimensions. Blood dribbles out of old wounds, broken flesh rebleeding as clots fall apart. Something snags on the armor -other than my tits- sending lightning through my diaphragm. Breathe catches in my throat, unable to shout or inhale. One hand pushes against the armor slowly lifting myself up and out. Kerrigan kneels beside me, opening her own armor and shimmying out of it easily. ¡°Aren¡¯t you just a graceful gal.¡± I say through gritting teeth. All four feet of her perches on the suit, tail flicking, eyes ablaze. Like a purple succubus. Sans wings. Two lumps are growing in prominence on her chest, though her skin has darkened further, covering any areola that might have been. In fact, parts of her skin have darkened to brown plates, worn smooth by abrasion yet that same friction seems to stimulate their growth, building armored plates across her body. Hips, knees, elbows, and chest all bear the same chitinous plates, although the joints have developed segmented layers that allow the plates to overlap. Thus maintaining flexibility. Her claws reach across and tug at my side, coming away with a bullet larger than my thumb. It¡¯s smashed to all hell, like someone hit it with a hammer. But that isn¡¯t what makes my heart skip a beat. It¡¯s an explosive round. With the warhead still intact. The detonator, its tip, is gone. ¡°Shit.¡± Wormface joins us, taking the bullet and examining it. ¡°Boss, if this detonated, you¡¯d be dead.¡± ¡°Check my wound.¡± I answer, trying to distract the onlookers. I have no time to think about asking a colony of worms to check the gaping hole inside of me, which is a good thing. Cause I might have shit myself if I realized. Kerrigan hops over to stand next to me, wrapping an arm around my shoulders as she peeks at the wound. Wormface tosses the bullet to Corporal and uses the suit¡¯s arm tentacles to cauterize and dress my wound. One would think burning away flesh would hurt, and logically I feel the pain, but I do not cry out. Whether the nanites or hive DNA is responsible I can¡¯t guess, but my reaction to pain is suppressed. Long moments pass before Wormface is done. Barker never stops working, nor do the four healthy troopers. Alaea finished a second solarium recharger and now we are rebuilding our ammo supplies nicely. Every person has at least two magazines worth of shots. Not enough to fight a war, but plenty for keeping the odd spinoling at bay. Even Corporal¡¯s pistol was able to catch a recharge cycle. Which is when I realize, this bunker, Technocracy bunker 0002, is my very first supply depot. Our game of Starcraft has officially begun, and I need to treat this match like the intergalactic war of sudden death that it is. These mutant-marines will form the core of our offensive forces, and serve as our primary source of reclaiming supplies. So similar yet so different than workers. Wormface seals my wound with a dab of biofoam and gives me a thumbs up. I return the gesture and realize my arm is still fractured, though at some point Wormface stitched up the gashes there, leaving a ragged criss cross that will scar heavily, but I¡¯m alive. ¡°Ah, Thank you sergeant. That ought to hold me for now. Take a look at the other troopers, see what you can do.¡± This book is hosted on another platform. Read the official version and support the author''s work. ¡°Yessir.¡± Says Wormface, more to humor me than to accept the order. He¡¯s already heading for the troopers, microtentacles heating red hot in a cleaning cycle. Kerrigan curls around me, like a cat squishing into their favorite box. Before I know what¡¯s happening she¡¯s adhered to me tighter than chains, arms and legs wrapped around my trunk. Cheek resting against my collarbone. There is still blood in her hair, which is already two inches longer than it was. The cause of her tightness is clear in the desperation that binds her. I¡¯m the only constant in her life, the only thing that gave her a name. I can only reply to her unasked question one way, and wrap her in an equally tight hug for several minutes. Then plant a kiss on her forehead. ¡°I¡¯ll be fine.¡± I whisper. ¡°Cmon, let¡¯s brainstorm a way to get that medkit.¡± ¡°I¡¯ll help! Use dthis.¡± Says Kerrigan, tapping on my forehead without any explanation. Odd thoughts enter my mind, like the flash training but smoother, less jarring yet far more unsettling. A life lived as Apollo Finley instead of Athena Finley. Of training everyday to be an olympic¡­ Telekinetic? Strange, but on a whim I channel the memories, aiming at a distant ration pack, ah why bother? It¡¯s well past my 20 gram limit- -it flies through the air and slaps me in the nose hard enough to make my eyes water. ¡°Oh shiiiit! Ouch!¡± I cry. The ration falls onto my lap, and Kerrigan tightens her grip. Revelation hits me. Kerrigan isn¡¯t human. She is a psychic stimulant. That is her base form. Her purpose! She exists to boost the powers of others not to use them, or, wait¡­ That¡¯s not how Alaea phrased it, she said Kerrigan helps the nameless regulate their powers. This requires testing. I focus on a nearby crate, one that is empty and attempt to lift- -the crate leaps upward sailing towards the ceiling. Kerrigan squishes against me and the crate halts, my once impossibly weak telekinesis has evolved. Well, as long as I¡¯m holding Kerrigan¡¯s hand. ¡°Someone, get me a scope.¡± Emurine is pressing the pulser against my ocular socket before I finish speaking. His suit communicates with the optic to share vision, turning an awkward solution into a rather elegant monocular. Being waited on hand and foot is odd, but I¡¯ll take it! Together we find the medic¡¯s corpse. One by one I move the spinoling corpses, though its more like a pile of legs, skulls, and tails, with the occasional crest or spine falling sideways. Spiderman¡¯s aim is exceptional, both fast and accurate although he does have eight eyes so he has the correct tools for the job. Lings mill around the corpses, happily crunching their way through clones. Several of them have grown elongated spines, or their dorsal crests lengthened into a forest of crystal trees, each shining in the deepening darkness. With a thought I lift the medic¡¯s corpse, holding it steady. This is the easiest lift of my life less effort than a simple curl. My mind empties, not worrying about how outnumbered we are or if there are Juggernauts incoming or any other trivial thing less important than a thirty day money back guarantee. I float the medic into our bunker, my telekineses never once disturbing the dirt and appearing on friendly or opposing tremorsenses. Before I can set down the body Corporal tears off the backpack and leaps over the barricade rushing to give his troopers aid. I take my time, recovering his pistol and the equipment built into his armor. Then lower the corpse below anyone¡¯s line of sight and warp it away. More biomass for Hygieia. More future warriors for our Collective population. [+1 biomass] Collective population. I repeat the words, it¡¯s entirely confusing and improper. We need a new name for Hygieia¡¯s forces, the bioforms who only serve us. I laugh out loud, the answer is wrapped around me. We¡¯ll use Zerg naming conventions, so our forces are ¡®The Swarm¡¯. Singularity troopers turn to look at me, curiosity brought on about my laughter. ¡°Troopers, go help your corporal. Let us watch the door for a few minutes.¡± I call. Those working look at Barker who shrugs, ¡°Dirt¡¯ll keep. Go lick your friend¡¯s arse while you can.¡± Three of the troopers cock their heads, as if to say ¡®what the fuck is wrong with you?¡¯ but they drop shovels and join the triage unit, doing what they can for the wounded. >Terran Thena: Hey, I¡¯ve got hundreds of biomass Queen Hygieia, lady of The Swarm. You ready? >Matriarch Hygieia: is that what we¡¯re calling my spawn? >Matriarch Hygieia: actually I like it >Matriarch Hygieia: send ten I comply, telekinetically floating the lings inside the bunker and warping them away in groups of five until Hygieia asks for more. In ten minutes she¡¯s stacked up the remnants of sixty lings. Then sends a message I¡¯ve been waiting to hear. >Matriarch Hygieia: straingineer is working >Matriarch Hygieia: Biopool established. >Matriarch Hygieia: We have free reign over any Collective design. >Matriarch Hygieia: got a ship design an ambassadorial courier fast but no guns >Matriarch Hygieia: 2000 biomass needed >Matriarch Hygieia: can harvest my landing ship for most of that >Matriarch Hygieia: Athena. We can have a way home. My heart trembles, tears fill my eyes leaking into my gasmask. We have a way out, a ticket off this shitty world. We can go home to Earth to mom- I stop, recalling what Jim said. Scavengers will pick Earth clean. Unless I take Syrak. He set a time limit too, one I can¡¯t remember now. One month? Maybe two? >Terran Thena: Going home isn¡¯t enough. We need to land with an army. >Matriarch Hygieia: What?! CMON! >Executrix Alaea: She¡¯s right. >Executrix Alaea: There are twelve landed warships and about twenty in Earth¡¯s orbit. A courier will get shot down. You¡¯ll be more powerless here than you are on that mining world. >Executrix Alaea: Come in force. >Executrix Alaea: Or do not come at all.