Chapter 406 (1/2)
Vuxten walked quietly next to Sergeant Addox, listening in on the rest of the platoon talking to one another on the chat channel. They were either taking bets on how long the little green mantid had been in cryostorage or bitching about the taste of the nutripaste or their water.
All good.
Addox stopped in front of the door that the little green one pointed at before settling back down on the top of Addox's helmet. Vuxten checked and saw that Addox was running his internal heat at three degrees above normal and raising the threshhold for dumping heat into his heat sinks or deploying the small cooling fins.
”Past. Open and there,” the little greenie said. It settled back down and began gnawing on the beef jerky that Casey had run up for him.
”Casey, crack the door,” Vuxten ordered. He opened the channel to the rest of the platoon. ”Everyone, weapons off safe but fingers off the trigger.”
One by one the icons went to amber.
Casey knelt down and started working on the door, bypassing it in only a few minutes. It took a few more minutes to break the weld holding the door closed and Casey took a minute to lube the track the door was set on.
”Ready?” Casey asked, holding up the two wires.
”Ready,” Vuxten told him.
Casey touched the wires together and the door slid open. Helmet lights and shoulder lights illuminated the inside of the room with harsh white light for the first time in millions of years.
”Mantid automation, man,” Addox said softly.
The computer was obvious. Quantum systems, supercooled, the piping repaired over and over again. The dangling superconductor wires woven through everything.
Vuxten saw the ”Phasic Control Maintenance Manifold” right away. Looking at it gave him a headache as the psychic shielding jumped six points. The system was complex, the shielding and casings removed on half of the equipment.
”Dropping my psychic shielding five percent,” Addox warned. He gave a low grunt. ”Wuff, I can feel the tingle across the back of my teeth.”
”471, talk with your ancestor, check the system, see what you guys can do,” Vuxten said.
--roger roger-- 471 sent back. --better have turkey for us--
”I'll have Casey fab you up some turkey jerky,” Vuxten promised.
--casey use too much lemon pepper-- 471 said, opening the clamshell.
The psychic protection clamped down hard enough the little mantid's knees buckled for a moment. He shook his head, the other dozen green mantids following suit. He climbed down Vuxten, moving across of the floor to the electrical conduits.
--it appears to run off of some form of power-- 471 sent.
Vuxten laughed.
--checky checky-- 471 said. --we will see what we can see--
Vuxten watched the greenies check out the computer systems, the phasic system, the wiring on the walls. He moved over and leaned against a computer console, watching everyone get to work.
”He's asleep,” Casey said, jerking a thumb at the green mantid on top of Addox's helmet. ”Poor little guy has some serious freezer burn. Probably been in cryostasis on and off since the Precursor War.”
Vuxten nodded, remaining silent.
Long minutes passed while Vuxten chewed a piece of gum and watched.
”Glory, do you read?” Casey asked from where he was standing next to one of the computer consoles.
”I read you, Sergeant. Line's full of distortion and interference though,” Glory answered.
”How's your dataslicing? Any good at it?” Casey asked.
Glory chuckled. ”I'm a DS, what do you think?”
”We've got a Precursor Era computer system here, VI run. Can you do your thing and, you know, take over the system?” Casey asked.
There was a pleasant laugh. ”No can do, Casey. Your pipeline is wide enough for me to talk, maybe do some data exchange, but the interference would cause too many errors and your pipeline is too thin for my fat ass.”
”Heh, first time a woman's ever complained about the width of my pipe,” Casey laughed.
”I'm hard to please,” Glory laughed with him. ”I'll help what I can, but you're going to have to depend on the greenies. 680 was in Digital Warfare Corps before transferring to the Telkan Marines,” she said.
”680, can you lead everyone into cracking that computer open?” Vuxten asked.
--easy peasy lemon squeezy-- 680 sent back.
The greenies crawled over the equipment, using access hatches designed for them but not.
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Cordexen sat in his command chair, staring at the console he had moved in front of him. He had traced, as best he could with only limited permissions, the areas where the servitor caste had stopped responding for a long period before responding again.
It was a wandering, meandering path from the Deep Ore Miner Maintenance and Processing Bay that led the empty area on his map that Cordexen knew contained the Hive Queens chambers, the primary phasic control system, and the facility's master control computer systems.
He wracked his brain, trying to figure out how the mere passage of the bipeds could be disturbing the servitors. Perhaps they left behind some of their numbers to be devoured?
No, that would be done by primitives, and primitives didn't fashion high tech combat armor or work Substance W.
Cordexen knew he should be alarmed by an alien species invading the facility but he honestly could not muster up the emotion to care much. If they destroyed the facility, he would be free. If they busted down his door and shot him, he would be free. If they destroyed the computer and the phasic system, he would be free.
No matter what happened, as long as it changed the unending status quo, he would be free.
”Warning, unauthorized entry to computer mainframe detected,” the facility VI suddenly said. ”Security control alert: unauthorized entry to computer mainframe housing.”
”Open the door. I will examine the breach,” Cordexen said, sitting up.
”Unable to comply. Message is as follows,” the VI said.
Cordexen slumped in his chair as the Queen's words were repeated back to him.
”Unauthorized breach to...” the computer started. ”Access granted. Welcome 'little teapot', admin access granted. Maintenance access granted. Power user group 'all your base' has been created.”
Cordexen perked up again, watching his screen. Data was flowing by at an incredible rate, the screen's refresh capability actually being overloaded by the amount of data flashing. The VI kept reciting groups being created, access being granted to groups, power users logging on.
He watched as the facility actually posted a maintenance update to his screen.
Half of the facility was dormant. The cryopods were at critical. The power was running at one tenth power. Life support was at bare minimum.
He felt the heaters kick on, blowing warm air into the control room.
Cordexen slowly unfolded from his chair, moving over and standing under the vent.
He raised his face up, closing the armored eyelids, relishing in the warmth.
He imagined he was standing outside.
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Klakeka stirred as the lights came on in his command center. He heard the environmental system kick in and felt warm air pour from the vent, enveloping him in a warm blanket of heated air. His monitor was showing a deep level scan of the facility's status.
”Environmental system lockout lifted by admin power user 'hip hop soldier',” the VI stated. ”Nutripaste lockout lifted by power user 'delicious delicious turkey'. Facility lockout under review by power user 'all the electrons to my yard'.”
Klakeka stared at the monitor as data flashed by almost impossibly fast. User groups he had never heard of were taking over systems, rebooting some systems, powering down others, powering up the rest.
”Power user 'Great and Powerful Zig' has issued autonomous mining machine recall and maintenance phase,” the VI reported.
”Define user 'Great and Powerful Zig',” Klakeka ordered.
”Cannot comply. Message is as follow,” the VI said and Klakeka started to huddle in on himself.
”Hi. My name is Technical Sergeant Grade Six 'proton movement in high gravity low temperature semi-solid strange matter' but you may call me 538. If you shoot at us we'll kill you. This facility is under lockdown by the Terran Confederate Military. Please keep all hands and bladearms inside the vehicle and remain seated at all times. Question and answer period will be after full facility control. The war is over but we'll still kill you if you resist. Turkey is delicious and we will share it with you. End message,” the VI said.
Klakeka just stared. ”Computer, replay message.”
The VI obediently obliged, repeating it.
Klakeka frowned slightly, his antenna crossing slightly.
”Computer, define... 'turkey',” Klakeka ordered.
”Cannot com... data loading. Loaded,” the VI said. It suddenly showed a picture of a fat strange looking fowl. The feathers flew off of it, the head fell off, and it suddenly fell in boiling grease. It emerged looking golden brown and covered with a light crust of ground up grain flour. The skin and meat was pulled away, revealing moist white meat that dripped grease and juices.
Klakeka found himself salivating just staring at the image.
The meat was ripped away and dropped to cartoon green servitors, who were all dancing with strange little icons replacing their eyes to display happiness.
”Turkey,” the VI stated with authority. ”Is delicious.”
”I would very much like some,” Klakeka said softly.
”Cannot comp...” the VI started to say. ”Do not resist. Resistance will be met with 15mm high explosive armor defeating phasic enhanced antimatter kinetic rounds delivered in groups. Compliance will be met with delicious turkey.”
Klakeka kept salivating, watching the picture.
Comply? I'll do more than comply. I will put on a hat and dance like a Vurkeent at a mating ritual for a chunk of that delicious looking meat, he thought to himself. It sounds much more delicious than bullets.
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Abriketa petted the little green servitor in his lap gently. He was able to generate enough of a psychic field that through contact he could ease its anxiety at not working on the task it had been ordered to complete. Its chitin was dull and flaky, waxy and distressed, but it huddled up against Abriketa in the cold and dark of the command center.
”Someone please talk to me,” Abriketa mourned.
”Cannot comply. Message is as...” the computer suddenly cut off. It had been spouting gibberish for the last few minutes and Abriketa had tuned it out.
”Hi. My name is 'P2=G1(M1m2/r2^3)3' which is the universal law of phasic strength over distance accounting for gravity but you may call me '680',” the computer suddenly said.
”I am Abriketa,” he said. Part of him, ancient commands from a queen long dead, wanted him to immediately storm out and kill this '680', but he ignored it, the command no longer having the power to induce anxiety or stress. ”One of the facility security commanders. What of you?”
”I am a Technical Sergeant Grade Five with the Terran Confederate Military, specializing in computer system penetration and protection,” the computer stated. It sounded different, like the words were almost tumbling over one another despite the steady cadence from the computer. ”I'm only dataslicing your archive records so I can spare attention speak with you while I carry out my task.”
”Are you real or is this another hallucination?” Abriketa asked.
He had once suffered hallucinations for the entire time he had been outside of the cryopod, his brain taking him back to the time he was in the creche learning to be a warrior caste. Not that the VI had cared. It had merely put him back in cryosleep.
”I'm real, but that's what a hallucination would say, isn't it?” the voice answered. ”Huh, rare earth mining, like we suspected. Interesting, the liquid nickle-iron core is nearly 11% rare elements, down from 14%. You've been busy. Oops, sorry. What do you want to talk about?”