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Chapter 10 – Pulse

  Chapter

  10

  Pulse

  DATE:

  7088.03.07,

  RECON

  ERA

  HAZARD 4 – Severed

  Fractured WreckOort Cloud, Gryanke System

  Pōkokohua!

  MOVE!

  There

  wasn’t anything I could do from here.

  I hit the

  button to activate the

  airlock and I felt

  gravity take hold, dumping me unceremoniously to the ground.

  My legs

  gave

  out and my head banged

  against the tough shell of the helmet.

  “Ouch.”

  I took a moment to mentally curse the primal force before scrambling

  to my feet, fiddling with my helmet as soon as the internal doors

  opened.

  I

  removed

  the helmet. The rush of the recycled air of the ship replaced the

  clinical taste of the suit’s oxygen. I

  slipped out of

  the

  suit, leaving it behind before booking

  it to the cockpit. I took the stairs up in threes, swinging myself on

  the railings to gain speed. My

  chest burned, the graft site aching from the sudden return of

  gravity.

  All I could

  think was Forty-Five, my finds and the asteroid that was coming

  closer to us. I pushed down a twinge of guilt for ignoring

  Forty-Five’s warning.

  I will

  apologise after

  he’s back on my ship.


  The static

  in his voice as he pushed me out had me worried.

  A flashing

  from the water

  reclamation system caught

  my attention, almost causing me to

  stop, but Forty-Five’s disappearance

  kept me moving.

  “Time

  for that later. Rescue

  now, answers later.” I repeated the mantra under my breath as I

  pumped my legs as fast as I could. I

  had to skid to a stop for the thick galley door for the sensor to

  activate,

  shimmying

  past before it fully opened.

  If I wasn’t

  in such a rush or focused, I would have patted myself on the back for

  not tripping by the

  time I threw myself into

  my fluffy throne.

  I

  disengaged the autopilot that had kept the ship still during our

  excursion. I

  turned the ship around, my hand hovering over the button

  to open the cargo hatch. The

  wreck was turning end over end. Pieces

  were scattering in all

  directions. I

  reached over and put on the pilot headset that provided a navigation

  HUD, converting the view so I could concentrate on flying while

  seeing what I was doing.

  I saw three

  intact humanoid shapes. One was clearly Twenty-Seven, but the other

  two were identical in the chaos.

  I gritted

  my teeth, my ship blaring the proximity alarm as the large asteroid

  was heading directly towards me. Us. I slammed down on the hatch

  control, aggressively jabbing the dashboard to get the ventral camera

  going. The camera feed snapped onto the glasses’ HUD.

  I couldn't

  hesitate. I grabbed them all. I stayed steady while the alarms around

  me got louder. Two of the humanoids were too similar to know if it

  was Forty-Five. I got Twenty-Seven’s body, the crates, and finally

  the last humanoid shape. I closed the ramp, accelerating gently,

  keeping the thrust steady so the loose cargo wouldn't be pasted

  against the rear bulkhead.

  Once the

  cargo bay was fully shut and pressurised, I flew ahead of the

  asteroid, switching cameras to view the interior of cargo space.

  A large,

  sentinel figure was there. Its limbs twitching. Back arching.

  I

  recognised the plating.

  Forty-Five.

  “Shit!”

  I muttered, I shifted the ship, activating a micro-jump that would

  take us in a clear space. I ticked down the time in my head, going as

  steady and smoothly as I could to get us to safety. The sooner

  I did, the sooner I could go and see Forty-Five.

  Slow is

  smooth, smooth is fast.


  Slow is

  smooth, smooth is fast.


  Slow is

  smooth, smooth is fast.


  I let the

  mantra dictate my actions as I finally activated the autopilot,

  grabbed my tablet while

  surging to my feet,

  and...stumbled. The

  adrenaline from the escape finally

  fading away. My chest

  my

  organic lung working overtime while my mechanical one lagged in the

  gravity environment. I

  leaned heavily on the railing down the stairs from the cockpit,

  taking shuffling steps

  across the living room, the gap wider than ever.

  I hobbled

  as quick as I could across the galley, out into the Engineering

  Section, and down the stairs to the airlock/cargo junction. I peeked

  into the Cargo Bay, the small window in the door letting me see a

  mess of metal bodies.

  There was

  no movement.

  The cargo

  bay wasn’t heated like the rest of the ship, but it had oxygen. My

  hand on the latch, I thought going in unprotected.

  Forty-Five

  would probably have something to say if I did. I

  turned to the airlock, the internal door still open. I put down my

  tablet and quickly slipped back into my space-suit, the thin

  isolating fabric and helmet would

  be enough to stave off the cold.

  Suited up,

  I activated the latch on the cargo bay, stepping inside. It was a

  mess. The two cages made to protect more delicate items

  for transport were fine, everything inside secured down and untouched

  for a while.

  But the

  rest of the space...

  I had scooped up a lot more than I thought. I limped over to

  Forty-Five, wedged

  between Twenty-Seven’s still

  chassis, and a chunk of the wreck.

  Stolen from its rightful place, this narrative is not meant to be on Amazon; report any sightings.

  He was

  lying on his side. I

  shoved Twenty-Seven out of the way, watching

  her carefully. No lights. No vocalisation. Just dead metal.

  I hovered

  over Forty-Five, pressing

  down on his data port, then

  connecting

  the cable with a click

  as soon as it opened.

  A metal

  fist closed over my wrist still

  holding the wire.

  His fingers squeezed just enough to make me wince in pain.

  Forty-Five

  turned to look at me, his head twitching. A static-laden voice

  sounded over the comms of my suit, hoarse

  and grating on my ears.

  “Ve-ve-vent

  m-m-me.”

  “No,” I

  said firmly, using my other hand to manipulate the Slab-Deck resting

  in my lap. “You got hurt because of me. Let me fix it.”

  I pulled my

  special pet project. A

  digital predator I coded with my mother to hunt down a mistake I

  never should have released. A

  virus hunter that zaps any replicating program before it has a chance

  to propagate.

  I ran it

  on the tablet itself

  first. It went

  sluggish and growing brighter than usual, then I ran it on

  Forty-Five’s systems.

  > ERROR

  UNKNOWN ARCHITECTURE

  Watching

  code scrolling past on two screens while my

  merry little program crashed,

  hard. My little chibi

  demon likeness

  morphed into a dead

  face as it failed to

  connect.

  “Shit,”

  I muttered, pulling up a code translator I used for diagnosing

  ancient machines. I knew the error, it meant that Forty-Five had been constructed

  pre-Severance. I estimated between 1,200 and 1,000 years ago. But the

  age of the suit didn’t make sense, it seemed only like it was

  constructed near the end of the Severance, maybe a couple of

  centuries ago. Still, drawing on my own experience and Gran-Gran’s

  nightmare trinary lessons, I modified my demon hunter.

  I stayed

  calm, Forty-Five still holding my wrist, his grip clenching and

  unclenching as if he was in pain. His head slipping down before

  reverting back upright.

  I treated

  this

  like a code camp competition, writing a real time update to the

  Class-7 Firewall that was already slowing things down.

  I added a

  couple of snippets from my little Demon Antivirus, hoping it would

  help against

  the virus’s

  attempt at control.

  The

  chibi demon then

  started crying, her teeth chattering like she was in pain. The

  malware

  was starting to

  overwhelm my

  systems, to say nothing

  of Forty-Five’s.

  “Forty-Five,”

  I said after a moment. “I need my other hand to type faster. Let

  go, now.”

  The servos

  in his forearm whined, fighting against themselves, but his grip

  didn't loosen. If anything, it tightened. The soft

  fabric

  of my suit glove did

  nothing to stop the vice, my bones groaning

  under the pressure.

  “Er-er-error,”

  he ground out, the static peaking. “Un-unknown

  er-error. Connectivity failed.”

  “I wasn't

  asking.”

  I gritted

  my teeth against the pain in my wrist and thumbed a toggle on the

  screen with my free hand. I didn't bother with the user interface. I

  went straight for the kernel.

  >

  SUDO_OVERRIDE_ACTUATOR_L_HAND

  > FORCE_OPEN

  I hit

  execute.

  A grunt of

  pain. Warped by

  crackling static.

  > ERROR

  COMMAND NOT IDENTIFIED

  On my

  screen, the command didn't execute. A

  different screen opened up, something new. Something I had never seen

  before. A mess of letters, forming into lines.

  The movement across the screen chaotic at first. But then I noticed

  patterns. The lines

  cycled between pulsating like a heartbeat and moving across the

  screen in waves, like… the brain waves the doctors showed me when I

  was in hospital.

  “Sh-shit.

  ”

  A panicked, stuttering voice sounded. The same distinct low,

  resonant cadence from

  the ship, but glitching. “Get out. Get

  out.


  I looked at

  Forty-Five; he had let go of my arm by himself, but was shifting.

  Supporting himself by his elbows, but not able to get much further as

  his legs seemed to not follow his commands.

  I turned

  back to the screen, seeing the patterns getting disrupted. ‘01R0N’

  started appearing in large batches.

  My eyes

  widened, I cried out and started purging some of the tablet’s

  memory to stall the virus. My flight logs. The architectural scans of

  the last three ruins, including the wreck. The repository of work

  orders from the last three years.

  I felt the

  bottom fall out of my guts as I did it, trading history and future

  security to buy myself three seconds.

  Going back

  to my program, I wracked my brain, thinking back to his skin and

  muscle from before.

  “Oh

  machine gods bless me.” I whispered, my synapses firing. “Neural

  Mesh. I’m looking at your synthetic brain. You have a literal

  brain!”

  Organic

  synthetic hybridisation

  had been

  attempted but outlawed by most, if not all, of the Core systems. The

  crossing of that line too much for ethics committees.

  “I guess

  someone didn’t get the memo,” I muttered, feeling out of my

  depth.

  I watched

  as my little chibi

  demon didn't just crash. She glitched. Her pixelated face twisted,

  the smile inverting into a scream of static as the virus tore her

  code apart. It wasn't deleting her; it was unmaking her.

  I

  whimpered as I watched her dissolve,

  fingers still dancing across the screen, and I almost forgot what I

  was coding until I was interrupted once again.

  “P-Pulse.

  Forty-Five

  managed to grind

  out, the voice stripped of its usual flat affect.

  “Pulse?”

  I asked, thinking quickly. The virus was overwhelming the screen.

  His

  neural mesh was seizing. If I couldn't cut the virus out, maybe I

  could shock the system into a reboot. Like a defibrillator for his

  processors.

  Or it could

  kill him… he
did

  ask me to vent him.


  I

  opened a root

  shell,

  on my device this time. I submitted an override on the safety

  protocols on the output port, turning the data cable into a live

  wire… just like he must have done

  to fry

  Grantham’s cable.

  I hit

  execute.

  My screen

  froze before going dark.

  Another

  groan of pain, before devolving into a deep, throaty scream,

  Forty-Five’s back arching. His forehead

  hitting the floor.

  “MORE!”

  The word

  roared across the communication line, distorted by static feedback.

  He

  killed my tablet.


  I thought, horrified, but I looked around to

  find the cargo bay’s power point.

  
I

  pointed. “Mains

  Port,

  by

  the control panels!

  But I don’t have a cable long-”

  He

  lurched

  to his feet.

  Thinking

  quickly I disconnected the cable from the useless device, letting it

  hang like an umbilical cord from his data port.

  He

  threw his head around, his body almost forgetting to follow through.

  His

  movements were disjointed, limbs lagging behind his intent. A

  marionette with tangling strings.

  I stood,

  watching him carefully, hugging my tablet to my chest. I started

  edging my way towards the door.

  He

  clutched towards the cable, making

  a few attempts

  before he finally grasped it. He

  ripped the safety cover off the wall port. He

  jammed the exposed connectors of my data cable directly against the

  live

  terminal.

  I could see the smoke curling up from the

  terminal and his

  back.

  The

  atmospheric warnings flashing red on my HUD.

  His knees

  gave out, and he turned to sit against the wall next to the power

  point. His groans turning into pained grunts, until he was screaming

  in pain.

  “Get

  the fuck out,”


  came a whisper.

  I scrambled

  towards the door, a hand on the latch, my eyes wide and my breathing

  heavy.

  “Activate:

  Oh-Four Override. Voltage disruption,”


  the voice continued, the syntax human but the tone flattened into a

  digital growl.“Get

  the fuck out of my brain,
Olron.”

  Forty-Five

  started clutching his head, sparks flying from the cable ends. “Zero

  Zero Clearance update,

  upload Demon Mimel Antivirus to Neuralcore. Conversion pending.”


  I

  stopped, hearing the name of my program. What…

  is he doing? Oh wireless…

  is he updating himself? Using my program as a base? The

  fuck is Zero Zero

  Clearance?


  The horror

  of the implication iced my insides more painfully than the suit leak.

  Either he will come out the other end craving chaos, or my code will

  corrupt the most advanced AI I’d ever met.

  The sounds

  of pain died off, replaced with heavy breathing.

  Forty-Five

  let his hands hang down before tilting his head back, twin ring

  lights appearing through his visor. Staring at me, cycling through a

  chaotic strobe of colours.

  “Status.”

  A breathless robotic monotone came through the comms. “Virus

  eradicated. Code repair initiated. Sleep mode activate.”

  His head

  fell sideways. His arms and knees went limp.

  Pōkokohua!- Boiled head/idiot/moron. Expletive.

  Progress is being made and as of now, it will be back to staggered updates (Monday, Wednesday, Friday). So Next update will be Friday. I want enough time to make sure I get the next two chapters done to a level that I am happy with. I AM NOT going to make the same mistake as before and rush. Gonna give myself enough time to work out the issues (and rereading it till my eyes dry out).

  Working on Chapter 13. What I will do is remove the OLD chapters until the Interlude. The old interlude is now no longer canon, I'm sorry. A different 'interlude' will take its place.

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