|
Post by Ruinus on Jun 12, 2015 17:11:53 GMT
Voyeurism protocol: Far Rim > Dholen System. Possible trespass: Extreme Caution Advised.
Captain Kirrahe didn’t like short messages from the higher ups; even in his line of work short messages often spelled trouble. The shorter the message the more there was that supposed to be kept secret; the more that is supposed to be secret, the more that was on the line. This, combined with the fact that his crew and ship had been rerouted from a prior mission, had him on edge. He scanned the message again and again as he waited for his ship to drop out of faster-than-light. What bothered Kirrahe was the destination, the Dholen system. He’d been there with his crew on a previous op; providing clandestine support for Spectre Vakarian during his mission on Haestrom. His crew had spent the better part of an hour engaging Geth ships with a prototype cyber-warfare suite, disabling the ships and preventing Geth reinforcements from swarming Spectre Vakarian’s position. They’d succeeded and Spectre Vakarian had rescued the Quarian Tali’zorah, improved relations between the two governments. The Spectre never had a clue that a full STG regiment had been fighting alongside him; just as it should be. That had been the only excitement to grace the Dholen system in millennia. Outside of the interests of a few astrophysicists here and there no one paid any attention to the system. So why was there a possible trespass? “FTL drop in 5.” Kirrahe’s eyes snapped up to the CIC screens in front of him; information about the system began to fill the screens, though the probe his team had left behind when shadowing Vakarian failed to respond. “Link up to our probe,” he ordered, his pilot and sensor officers both responding as they maneuvered the ship to its last known location. “Activity?” “Negative captain,” one of his officers responded. “Nothing to report. Slight variation from Dholen.” “Variation?” Kirrahe questioned, new information being sent to his CIC from the sensor stations. There appeared to be a slight increase in the trace amounts of dark energy around the star, but he doubted that this was the cause for their mission. “Have we linked up to the probe yet?” “Negative captain,” his officer responded, “We’re having trouble picking up the probe’s signal.” “Equipment error?” Another of his officers supplied. “Or deliberate action.” Another countered. Possible trespass. “Keep searching for the probe, low level scans. Deliberate action possible.” He rattled off, the crew, who were unaware of his orders, now tensed as they sensed that something was amiss. Something was out there, hidden from their view. Kirrahe knew this; years of covert operations had honed a gut feeling that let him know when someone was hiding. And he had a mission to find it. *** Kirrahe looked at his omni-tool’s clock. 48 minutes. The hour was almost up and they’d seen nothing, not a trace of the probe or whatever the probe had reported back to headquarters. His crew had quickly ruled out some sort of equipment error or natural event. It was rare for an STG probe to fail, especially deep space probes like the one that had been deployed in Dholen. Onboard obstacle detections and the computer’s own course correction systems meant that it could avoid asteroids with trivial ease, not that such measures were needed in this system. That left deliberate action. Someone had removed the probe. He’d conversed with one of his techs, double checking what he knew of the probe model. STG custom made, very hard to tamper with, very hard to spot. That was suspicious. The probe, his technician had told him, would start broadcasting back towards headquarters if it picked up low or high level sensor sweeps. If a ship had discovered the probe, the probe would prioritize identifying the ship over any previous duties. That the probe had only begun its emergency signal moments before going offline meant that whoever had disabled the probe had done so without being detected until the very last moment. Technically, the probe hadn’t even detected the ship, it had only detected something. That was troubling. Stealth ships were limited to the Manea and a few other prototypes. But Vakarian and the Manea were currently stationed at Palaven and the locations of the other Manea-class stealth frigates were quite well known to STG. Even if they were not, there was currently no reason to suspect the Turian Heirarchy. No other Citadel species had the capability to build such a frigate. Which left outside forces. The Terminus Systems were quickly ruled out; they had not attempted such a stealth system since the failure of the Kophet prototype. This left the Geth as a possible suspect. Kirrahe looked over the 72nd sensor sweep his crew conducted. If it was the Geth, where were they? This system was certainly uncontested enough that they could have established a minor outpost and yet there was no evidence that they had been to this system since the Dholen Engagement. Kirrahe’s eyes roamed around the CIC. He surveyed his crew. He knew them, all top specialists. And not a single one of them had a clue as to who had been in this system before them. Which meant it was someone no one had heard of before. A new player. That was quite troubling indeed. *** It was nearing the 2 hour mark when one of the sensor techs suddenly gasped quickly followed by the CIC screens filling with sensor information. Kirrahe momentarily didn’t understand what he was looking at. Or what he wasn’t looking at. Dholen was gone. *** Normally Valern wouldn’t have bothered to inform the other Councilors about the particulars of an STG mission. While Sparatus had a certain understanding, Tevos often gave the impression that she didn’t much care for STG operations. However, recent developments were beyond the scope of the STG and the Dalatrass had ordered full disclosure in this matter. Valern had some reservations, advising that more information should be gathered before advising the Councilors, but the only STG ship in system had no new information to report beyond the obvious. Frankly, it was a testament to the respect the Councilors held for each other that he wasn’t immediately dismissed as a madman. “Are we absolutely sure that this is not an equipment error?” Tevos asked for the second time. Valern schooled his features, he didn’t want to point out the insult in suggesting that STG ships had equipment failures that caused them to lose track of a star while being in said star system. Luckily Sparatus stepped in. “Tevos, please. We all know sensor systems don’t fail in such spectacular ways. Is this related to the Quarian investigation? Perhaps the unknown phenomenon that was reported in Dholen caused this?” Valern nodded. “Good hypothesis. Possibly related to the dark energy readings the Quarians discovered. But for the entire star to disappear so rapidly…” “Perhaps this is some newly discovered stellar phenomenon?” Tevos questioned, her brow furrowed in concentration as she reread all the reports on the Dholen investigation. “Element zero does not account for all sources of dark energy, perhaps this star is somehow generating it in much the same way supernovae generate element zero?” “Unlikely,” Valern replied. “Dholen was losing several hundred billion tons of mass per second when the Quarians examined it. This rate was maintained under STG observation. Dholen was aging prematurely, but at current estimates the star still has at least a few-“ “What we are forgetting,” Sparatus cut in, “is that nothing is left. All that matter simply doesn’t disappear, dark energy or not.” Valern’s attention was caught by his omni-tool’s notification system. Situation changed. File appended. Valern scanned the file. His eyes widened. “Councilors,” he looked up at them, “This is not a natural phenomenon.” *** Lore: Citadel Species 1
TRANSMIT - initiate Dholen signal - RECEIVE - initiate the tin hat frequency – I WANT TO BELIEVE - initiate Mulder syntax - WITNESS – The Citadel Species.
|
|
|
Post by forceecho on Jun 15, 2015 3:54:51 GMT
Where in the timeline does this take place? Just curious. Because Garrus is a SPECTRE yet the Geth are still a threat? Anyway, what in the Mass Effect Universe could disappear a star?
|
|
|
Post by Ruinus on Jun 15, 2015 12:50:43 GMT
Garrus, datapad in hand, stood in the communication room, Iciria standing beside him as she fed him information on the status of the crew and ship. Luckily, she reported, all repair and resupply orders for the Menae had been completed on time, even with their leave cut short as it was. Slightly worrisome was that two of the crew, Seiana and Pavus down in engineering, were drunk. “They’ll be fine,” Garrus reassured Iciria, “Those two are top experts, they can work through anything.” Iciria didn’t agree. “I’ll write them up for violating regulation 32a concer-” “Iciria,” Garrus interrupted, “The crew had been promised one month’s worth of leave, it’is not their fault they only got a quarter of that. That the crew dropped their leave and time with families to report for duty is enough for me. If it bothers you so much,” he added when he saw her remain unconvinced, “Tell them to report to med bay for sobriety pills.” “Noted.” Whatever quip Garrus was about to say died in his throat when Proceus’ voice came over the room’s speakers. “Commander, incoming transmission from the Council.” “Thanks Proc,” Garrus replied before handing back the datapad to Iciria, who saluted and walked out of the communication room. A second of silence passed. “Does she still have that stick up her ass?” Proceus’ voice inquired. “You’d think that she-“ “The Councilors,” Garrus cut him off, “Are you really keeping them on hold to gossip?” Proceus must have gotten the message through his head, because a second later the holographic images of the three Councilors materialized in the room with him. “Councilors,” he greeted their images. “Spectre Vakarian,” Councilor Sparatus began, “We’re sorry to cut your crew’s leave so short, but events are unfolding that require your immediate attention.” “Spectre,” Garrus’ gaze shifted to Councilor Valern, “I’m sure you remember your mission on the planet Haestrom and the scientific inquiries headed by the Quarian Tali’zorah.” “Yes,” Garrus nodded, remembering one of his best friends, “She mentioned something about the sun aging rapidly but…” he shrugged, “Honestly Councilors, it was far above my head.” “Not to worry,” the Salarian Councilor responded, “Information is being sent to XO Iciria and your science officers; they can brief you in greater detail. But the situation is simple; the Dholen star was shedding stellar material at an accelerated rate, causing it to enter the red dwarf stage much earlier than expected.” Garrus nodded, slightly irked at the Salarian Councilor. When he’d mentioned that the science was above his head, he didn’t mean that all the science was beyond him. He at least understood the basics of the situation. “Approximately 48 minutes ago, the situation changed. With the disappearance of Dholen, we are authorizing you control of the Fo-” “I’m sorry,” Garrus interrupted, confusion evident on his face. “We must have missed part of your briefing, could you repeat that?” “What Councilor Valern is glossing over,” Councilor Sparatus said, “Is that Dholen is gone. It disappeared right under the nose of an STG ship. No, it was not a supernova or any other natural event.” Councilor Tevos, whose hologram indicated that she was reviewing a datapad throughout the entire conversation, spoke up. “Spectre Vakarian, we suspect that this is the work of outside forces. Several minutes after the star disappeared, the STG ship moved closer in-system to gather more information at great personal risk to themselves. They were able to capture these images before the Geth discovered their position.” A new holographic projection appeared before the Councilors. A solid cube with objects at each point. Readings, captured by the STG ship, appeared all over the image, though most of them were labeled UNKNOWN. “We believe that what you are looking at is Dholen,” Councilor Tevos continued, “Or what is left of it. The cube, now refered to as Object 1, is anywhere from 10 km to 1 AU on each side. And was shrinking in size.” “That’s a pretty big error margin.” Garrus quipped as he tried to make sense of the situation. “It is.” Councilor Valern agreed. “The sensors aboard the ship are some of the most advanced in existence, equipment error probability is low. Both readings are correct.” “What we are most interested in,” Sparatus went on, “Are the objects at each point of the cube. No information was able to be gathered on them. Since you have had the most experience with the Reapers,” Garrus’ head snapped up at that, “We hoped you could shed some light on these objects.” Garrus’ stomach nearly dropped. Reapers? Now? He wondered if the invasion had started already, if this was a preamble to a full blown attack. Perhaps this is how the Reapers conducted warfare, simply removing stars from their systems and letting the lack of a gravitational center do the rest. The STG readings had already revealed that the planets in the Dholen system had lost their orbits and were beginning to speed off into space, no longer bound by the stars’ gravitational well. How do you fight something like that? Focus Garrus. One problem at a time. He concentrated on the shapes around Object 1, the report labeling them all Objects 2 through 9. They were completely unknown designs to him, not resembling any Reaper ship he’d seen so far. Those all looked like some sort of sea-creature, and Collector ships all appeared to be hollowed out of asteroids. These appeared to be needles that pinned the cube into space itself. Gold and gleaming bronze, blue lights tapering into the object’s point. But the Citadel and mass effect Relays didn’t look like Reaper designs either. They’d been made with the intent to lure all of galactic society into a sense of security and peace. Perhaps these things were also Reaper designs, made to appear completely unrelated to their master’s wishes? “What was the Geth reaction?” Garrus asked finally. The Councilors seemed to be thrown off by that question, before Valern answered. “By all indications, they seemed to be an unprepared for these events as we were. The STG ship noted several Geth warships heading towards each Object 2 to 9. Their interaction wasn’t captured as the STG ship had to flee the system to avoid pursuing Geth ships that had detected them.” “I remember your report mentioning the Geth aboard your ship,” Valern began, “It suggested that there are two factions of Geth, those that obey the Reapers and those who oppose it, correct?” “Yes Councilor,” Garrus responded, “I trust Unification with my life and I trust his information.” Sparatus nodded, “Then, I suggest you question Unification. If the Geth truly oppose the Reapers then perhaps he,” Garrus noted that the Councilor was trying to be as polite as possible, “may have information for us.” *** The Councilors cut communication with Spectre Vakarian, who promised that he would contact them again shortly after conversing with the Geth aboard his ship. “Are you certain we can trust the Geth?” Tevos asked, Valern looking at the two of them out of the corners of his eyes. “Spectre Vakarian’s hunches have proven invaluable in the past,” Sparatus commented as his omni-tools beeped with notifications. “We can no longer afford to ignore his warnings, however far-fetched they may sound.” “Disappearing stars is far-fetched.” Valern commented. “Exactly,” the Turian continued, “And we have evidence to corroborate this Unification’s words. We’ve all seen the reports near the Veil, Geth-related incidents have been at their record low, in one case even repairing a stranded ship’s engines.” “This still may be a Geth ruse,” Tevos persisted in her doubts, “We must maintain caution when dealing with synthetics. We are not fully aware of their capabilities.” “Tevos, please,” Sparatus commented in a dry voice, “Let’s not forget that the cover story we fed the public about the Geth super-dreadnought is just that, a cover story.” “The Geth may be as uninformed as we are.” Valern cut in, hoping to prevent on of Tevos and Sparatus’ famous disagreements. “We should hope not, because if they are as clueless as we are then we’ve got nothing.” *** “Perpetrators unknown. Method unknown. Purpose unknown. Capabilities unknown. Intent unknown.” Garrus sighed, Iciria frowning beside him. “Commander, what exactly is going on?” she asked while keeping her eyes on the synthetic. “No clue.” Garrus admitted, Uniifcation’s face plates shifting in a rare emotional display. “It looks like no one has any clue. Anything else Unification?” “Vakarian-Commander, the Dholen system is destabilized. We are moving to extract all Geth presence from the systems and salvage what resources we can. The unknown presence is still in system and is making no further hostile actions. No response to our hails.” “The Geth has nothing,” Iciria commented, “Commander, we are wasting our time here.” “Damn.” Some days Garrus felt much older than he really was. “Anything else?” Unification stood still for a second, enough time to have a conversation with the Geth Collective. “Vakarian-Commander, the Geth Collective will allow safe passage into the system for you. Perhaps you can see a consensus that we cannot.” “Commander, I suggest we ignore that invitation,” Iciria’s dislike for Unification and Geth was well known among the crew. “It could be luring us into a trap.” “Iciria, why would the Geth destroy their own star system? One rich in minerals?” “Vakarian-Commander.” Garrus turned to look at Unification, its face-plates flared. “I give you my word.” *** UPDATE: Geth programs 834-x – 2017-x [Unification] conversing with Priority Organic 1 [Vakarian-Commander] > Negotiation of safe passage through Geth Collective Space > Priority Organic 375 [Liciril-XO] voicing Objection > Priority Organic 1 [Vakarian-Commander] accepting Geth programs 834-x – 2017-x [Unification] assurance > Outcome: Negotiation Successful. Geth programs 834-x – 2017-x [Unification] > Requesting Open Communication > Granted. Geth programs 12.911-k – 90,021-z receiving Stand Down Order. Approach Vector collating > Approach Vector collated. Consensus Reached > New Directives: Geth prog- -PRIORITY- UNKNOWN Radiation spike from Stranger-Objects 1-8. Dholen-Object Critical Existence Failure. Scanning… Scanning… Scanning… Collating… Consensus Reached. Consensus: MORE INFORMATION REQUIRED on UNKNOWN STRANGER-OBJECTS INTENTION/CAPABILITIES/ENERGY PRODUCTION/MATERIAL CONSTRUCTION/STELLAR MANIPULATION/…. [9,238,012,755 STRANGER-OBJECT INFORMATION REQUESTS APPENDED] *** Garrus stood at the Menae’s bridge which was bustling with activity. The STG ship that had reported the situation had returned to the system after his personal word that the Geth would not attack them. Garrus’ reunion with Kirrahe wasn’t as happy as he had wished it could be and it certainly wasn’t under the conditions he would have liked. True to Unifications’ word, none of the Geth ships had made any hostile actions toward his or Kirrahe’s ship. Much to their surprise, and even Unification’s, the Geth Collective was feeding them every bit of information they’d managed to gather on the strange shapes that had entered the system. Which was almost nothing. Garrus looked out of the bridge windows, Proceus hands moving around the helms as he kept an eye on the nearby Geth ships. “Commander,” the pilot spoke up, “What are we doing with the STG, surrounded by Geth, and staring at nothing?” Garrus looked down at Proceus, then back out into empty space. Empty space that, up until a few hours ago, had an entire star in it. What the hell is going on? *** Lore: The Fifth Age
TRANSMIT - initiate cleansing signal - RECEIVE - initiate anima circulation – BOOSTING YOUR IMMUNE SYSTEM - initiate the slumber syntax – HERE’S A LULLABY TO CLOSE YOUR EYES - initiate enhanced clearance –CONGRATULATIONS ON YOUR PROMOTION - initiate greater responsibilities - WITNESS – The Fifth Age.
Sweetling, do you remember the fourth? It is still in your history books. The age of the secret world, of the secret wars. We remember how hard you tried to keep it secret.
But the foam and filth bubbled up and the lid could not hold. The pressure cooker of your world exploded in your hands, it was all out in the open. Cards on the table. The veil was pulled back. Tumors in your X-rays.
Sweetling, this is honesty. We did not suspect you would survive-you would survive-you would survive-you would sssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss-Hiya Chuck-ssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss
|
|
|
Post by Ruinus on Jun 18, 2015 8:16:23 GMT
Uloln leaned back in his chair, stretching to get the kinks out of his shoulders. Even Salarians had a limit to the amount of time they could spend looking at a screen hoping for results.
“Jorsan,” he called over to his friend, “Have you found anything?”
“Have I found anything?” The other Salarian began complaining from his work station, “I’ll tell you what I’ve found; I’ve found thirty five stray transmissions from some backwater world, three live feeds from a news network and a stream featuring an Asari doing the rusty lizard.”
“So,” Uloln said has e sipped his cup, “Nothing?”
Jorsan let out a frustrated groan, grabbing both of his horns as he did so. “What are we even looking for?”
“They asked us to look so we’ll look,” Uloln commented, writing down the results of his satellite’s wide-band scan. “Whatever they are looking for is their own business… Huh, I think I found that stream you were talking about… Wow, how does she spin like that?”
“You aren’t the least bit curious who put us up to this? We’ve got the best receivers for light years; this thing can pick up a Keeper whore’s moans from a star system over. These things aren’t even supposed to go into testing for months, and suddenly they get put into testing?” Jorsan snapped his fingers for emphasis. “Just like that. Exorbitant amounts of money. That’s what we’re talking about here. Someone powerful and connected. I sense a conspiracy.”
Uloln closed his eyes and counted to 10. He wasn’t quite sure why he put up with his best friend’s ridiculous conspiracy antics. “Or profits were down and we needed to get our new satellites on the market and fast. Not everything is like your conspiracy websites Jorsan. Not that it matters to us; we’re only doing this Naelu promised overtime pay.”
Jorsan threw a crumpled up piece of paper at him.
“We work for an institute that may or may not be related to the STG, everything around here is suspicious.” Jorsan
“We work for a Girano Communications, a respected developer of satellite communication systems. These satellites are meant to pick up stray or faint extra-net transmissions to reduce the amount of lost data through less traveled areas. Not spying.” Uloln took another drink, the cool iced liquid calming him down.
“Ah yes, ‘communication systems’,” Jorsan mockingly reseponded with air quotes. “Testing extra-net communication satellites in a single direction of space, with the task to pick up any stray transmissions, months ahead of schedule. It is all there, closer than my two horns. Conspiracy.”
There was a long moment where Jorsan was quiet. Uloln wondered if his friend would finally let him work in peace.
“But as much as I am loathe to admit it, you are right, I suppose this will be less tedious if I don’t ask too many – what is that?!”
Jorsan’s outburst startled Uloln, causing him to spill his drink all over his console. The holographic display began to flicker in and out of existence as some of the liquid entered the electronics. “What?” he exclaimed, torn between staying and fixing his console and going over to his best friend’s.
“Come over here and look at this!” Jorsan called over to him, bouncing in his seat as he stared at the screen, his giant eyes reflecting its light.
“What am I looking at?” Uloln asked as he stood over his friend, wiping off some of the liquid that had spilled on his clothes.
“That’s a transmission from our Batarian neighbors. Quite a few of them.”
Uloln looked at the signals, “How do you know it’s Batarian?”
“Well, it’s coming from their part of Citadel space. So either our Batarians or the Terminus Batarians.”
Uloln had to admit, Jorsan may have been right for once. The transmissions were coming from Batarian space, and the fact that they were incredibly hard to detect, caught by them by accident, and that they were garbled messes screamed “secret messages” to him. “They could just be normal garbled transmissions, bad transmitters.”
“Yes.” Jorsam deadpanned, “I’m sure they are just sending messages confirming their donations to the anti-slavery societies. This is what we’re here to look for, I know it.”
Uloln shrugged. The work was tedious, his pay would probably be docked for the console he just destroyed and his favorite shirt was now wet. And he would be stuck here with his best friend for at least 8 more hours until their shift was up.
Sometimes he wished he’d join the armed services.
“Just log it. It’s not our concern.”
Jorsan nodded vigorously. “Secret transmissions. Spy satellites. I feel like STG… or a Spectre!”
He quickly tapped away at his keyboard, setting up a log and recording of the transmisisons.
“Maybe we’ll get promoted!” he cheered.
***
Sosin switched off the communication system, his four eyes bleary from staring at the screen all day.
“Any word?” Ugratin asked as he paced the room.
“None,” Sosin responded. “You’d think they’d be faster on the pick up here, even deactivated Geth can be a problem. The laws regarding them are-”
“Forget the laws,” Ughonim snarled, a rifle cradled in his hands. “The Association is crazy to have these things here. This is a populated city!”
“Calm down Ugho,” Ugratin went over to the hulking Batarian and took the rifle from his hands. “They’re deactivated, shot up to pieces. In addition, there are no wireless connections in the storage rooms, we aren’t idiots here.”
“Could be a Geth trap.” Ughonim responded, taking the rifle back from his associate. “Sosin, keep on the horn, get them here. I don’t want these things here any longer than they have to be.”
“I’ve been trying.” Sosin ground out. “Put your mind at ease, go over to the storage areas and keep the rest of the guys company down there. Hand out the rifles… even if the Geth aren’t a problem, our contact should have answered by now.”
Ughonim grunted and walked out of the room.
Ugratin watched his retreating form. “He’s right though, those robot bastards put me on edge. Does the Association have to do this?”
Sosin rubbed his eyes. “The Association realizes that the Geth are just robots, machines built for labor. If we could rebuild their AIs, with proper safety measures, maybe we could convince the Hegemony to give up this foul slavery business or at least free most of the labor slaves. We’ve got a few Quarian contacts who are helping out… I hear we’ve made some good progress.”
“There’s got to be safer ways though. AI research is outlawed for a reason Sosin, surely the higher ups in the AFB know this, can’t we at least get some more safety precautions here? Someone in the Hege must be on our side right? Couldn’t we talk to them about getting some support?”
“I’m sure we’re not alone here. But you know the Hegemony spies on its own people,” Sosin countered, “If they find out what we are doing here, they’ll shut us down and try us for treason for daring to overthrow a ‘precious Batarian cultural practice’.”
“I can’t believe it, we’re the only people who still practice slavery outside of the Terminus Systems. That’s something to be proud about?” Ughonim added. Sosin remembered Ughonim’s family hadn’t been as lucky as he was.
“One day we’ll have reason to be proud.” Sosin agreed.
“One day.”
Sosin turned back to his console, “I’ll try ringing up our retrieval ship. As much as I agree with the AFB, Ughonim talks a lot of sense. Those robots scare me.”
***
Ughonim wasn’t feeling well. Something was bothering him. This recent Geth business with the AFB had a lot of the members on edge, even if they agreed with the end goal. Frankly, it’d probably be safer for everyone to start an open rebellion with the Hegemony rather than skulk around with Geth research.
And open rebellion was almost guaranteed suicide.
Still, something about these recent Geth had him even more on edge.
He heard some of the others talking among themselves as he reached the storage rooms. Someone, either Ipamis or Grathe, nodded at him from a nearby table with a few others playing a card game. Several others were milling about, either alone or in groups, but all cradling guns in their arms.
He moved on to some shipping containers that held the special cargo.
“Anything from the flashlights?”
“Nothing boss,” one of the masked Batarians responded. “Though, could we get some mops in here? They are leaking oil all over the place.”
“Good,” Ughonim was relieved. Hopefully this would all be over soon. “I’ll get someone to bring something to clean up tha-did you say oil?”
The guards nodded.
“What color?”
“Oil color boss, black.”
Ughonim’s eyes blinked in confusion. “Geth don’t have black oil in them.”
“Don’t know what to tell you boss, but these do.” The guard responded, the other one just shrugging.
“Open up, let’s see thi-”
Ughonim was interrupted by a lound clang coming from inside the container, then another and another. All three of them stepped away from the container as they drew their weapons, the nearby men all doing the same.
“Shit!” Ughonim cursed, “Looks like they weren’t dead enough.” He pointed over to one of the men, his eyes and weapon trained on the container all the while. “You, go alert Sosin and Ugratin, tell them we need the retrieval ship and backup and we need it yesterday!”
“Got it,” the Batarian said as he brought up his omni-tool. One of the men standing next to him smacked his hand away.
“No omni-tools idiot!” the Batarian Grathe shouted, “We can’t let them escape into the extra-net, who knows what shit they could cause. Use your legs and run over to the bosses.”
The man ran off towards the communication room as Ughonim realized the container was about to give out.
“Alright men,” he began, “I know we’re supposed to be using these things to help us, but it’s too risky. Shoot them to pieces if you have to, I don’t want these things getting outside. Are you hearing me?”
They all nodded, “We hear you boss.”
Ughonim shouldered his gun. “They don’t have any guns on them, so this should be quick. How many were inside?”
“Around a dozen,” one of the guards replied, shotgun at the ready. “All the standard type, none of those jumpy ones.”
“They are also already damaged, so this sho-”
The guard died instantly, a hulking abomination smashing its way out of the container and turning him into a smear in its’ wake. Ughonim was momentarily stunned, that thing was no Geth. Geth pieces were haphazardly strewn together, held up by an oily black liquid. Four Geth flashlight faces turned to regard each of his eyes.
It said something in a language that caused his eyes and ears to bleed.
“KILL IT!” someone yelled out.
Fire from eight men poured into the beast, the slugs shredding chunks of Geth chassis and splattering the walls in black blood. The thing didn’t slow down, it moved much faster than something of that size had any right to. More alien words came out of the thing. Ughonim threw himself backwards as it swiped a giant hand made out of a Geth’s upper torso in his direction, the blow hitting the unfortunate Grathe who throw against a nearby wall, the entire side of his torso caved in, intestines tracing his arc through the air. An overcharged shotgun soon blasted one of the giant’s arms off at the shoulder, the limb simply falling apart in a splash of oil, a Geth head warbling in its mechanical language before dying. Ughonim brought up his rifle and spewed fire at the thing’s legs, sawing them off at the knees as the monstrosity fell forward, crushing two men under it; they died choking on its blood. Still it did not stop killing more, throwing pieces of itself at the survivors, the oily Geth projectiles exploding behind a group that had taken cover behind an overturned table.
It kept speaking in an alien tongue.
The thing had caught Ipamis in its grip and swung him around like a club while he screamed and fired wildly in the air. A stray bullet blew off someone’s jaw, one of them caught Ughomin in the leg. Ipamis died when his armored head collided with someone else’s, both necks snapping.
There were only two other survivors left.
“It’s nearly done!” Ughonim shouted, unsure if he was telling the truth. “Keep firing! PUT IT DOWN!”
The three of them fired everything they had into the beast, which was being shredded under their fire. It lanced out one last time and caught one of the men in its’ grip. He screamed as it began crushing his head.
“HELP! GET IT OFF OF ME!” He yelled, blood running down his visor.
Ughonim paid the man no attention; he kept firing at the creature.
The creature suddenly exploded outward in oil and Geth organs. A black fog rose up out of its corpse. Ughonim struggled to clear his eyes of the black substance, looking up to see an armored man, his hands dripping with blood. Ughonim could have sworn he’d seen that man die not a moment ago.
“Boss!” one of the other two men called out, “He’s still alive, but barely!”
Ughonim pulled himself up to his feet, wearily eyeing the corpse and the bloody man, checking up on his fallen comrade. “Damn. Go get help, do it now!”
Ughonim watched as the shaken survivor stood up and made a run towards the door leading back to the rest of the facility, back to the medical supplies that were kept nearby. He saw as the bloody man next to him raised his hands and shoot blood outwards. The red liquid erupted out of his hands like a pressurized stream. Where it made contact with the door controls they exploded outward, closing their only exit off. Ughonim barely had time to react before the man diverted the stream towards the fleeing survivor, the streak of red making contact with the back of his neck. The blood dissolved the man’s neck, separating his head from his body. Ughonim pulled his gun up, a ball of blood smacking his arm and melting the gun right in his grip.
Ughonim screamed as his fingers melted, as the rest of his hand boiled and grew tumorous lumps.
The bloody man drew his attention, pointing down at the dying man between them. Ughonim’s eyes were drawn to the writhing things that were growing out of the black splatters across the man’s clothing and skin. The bloody man looked behind Ughonim as groaning could be heard. Ughonim followed his gaze and saw Grathe struggling to get back to his feet.
Ughonim was about to call out to his friend when he noticed his head had exploded in a mass of writhing tendrils.
“What?” Ughonim gasped, “What’s going on? What’s happening to them?”
All around them, Ughonim started hearing the sounds of his dead friends struggle to return to life, their broken bodies lethargically attempting to stand up. On the black splattered walls he saw mouths form that whispered in alien tongues. He cried out in terror when he looked down at his black covered legs and saw mouths talking to him.
“What’s happening to me? You! Tell me!” he cried out, fear, blood loss and death choking his voice.
The bloody man took something out of a pouch, a small golden orb. He motioned to it and something that looked like a button. He made a motion with his hand that explained the situation to Ughonim clearly.
A bomb.
He now knew clearly that he was going to die in the next few seconds.
“So,” he choked out after a few seconds of hyperventilation, “that’ll stop it? This thing?” he motioned to the horror around him.
The bloody man nodded, Ughonim’s terrified face reflected in his visor.
“You, you aren’t with the Association are you?” Ughonim asked. “The AFB? Hegemony? Council?”
Ughonim wished he could see the man’s face. He wondered if the man could even understand him.
Their attention was draw to a pile of corpses that had managed to right themselves up.
Ughonim and the bloody man shared a look. Ughonim’s eyes were drawn to the explosive in his grip. He nodded.
The bloody man made a motion with his hand. A salute of some sort, though he didn’t recognize it at all.
But Ughonim understood.
He closes his eyes and shut out the whispering mouths growing all over his body, the terror and monsters that were creeping in all around him. A wave of sadness hit him. He wouldn’t live long enough to see slavery ended in his homeland. But that was for someone else. He’d be with his family now.
“One day.”
He died in a golden light.
***
TRANSMIT - initiate cephalopod signal - RECEIVE - innate cutle-ink frequency - HANDLE WITH CARE - inhale the Chernobyl syntax - AVOID CONTACT WITH SKIN-SKIN-SKIN-SKIN-SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS-Chuck, I just want to meet new people-SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS
|
|
|
Post by Ruinus on Jun 19, 2015 0:59:39 GMT
Where in the timeline does this take place? Just curious. Because Garrus is a SPECTRE yet the Geth are still a threat? Anyway, what in the Mass Effect Universe could disappear a star? Alternate timeline, Garrus isn't a SPECTRE because of the events from the 3 games, he's a SPECTRE because he's the one who caught on to Saren because humans never met the Council like they did in the original timeline. Also, doesn't look like you caught on that this is a crossover, so that explains what happened to Dholen.
|
|
|
Post by Ruinus on Sept 5, 2015 18:28:21 GMT
UPDATE: Geth programs 912-k – 751-l detected UNKNOWN Radiation spike at 9271.341.2814-Dholen > PRIORITY > Reroute Geth programs > INVESTIGATE
Pending…
In Range > Scanning
Scanning…
Scanning…
INCONCLUSIVE
UPDATE: RECEIVING SIGNAL FROM STRANGER-OBJECT 9 (Pending > Identification change: Stranger-Vessel 1)
Receiving Signal…
***
“Vakarian-Commander.”
Garrus looked over at Unification, who stood out like a sore thumb amongst the crew. “What is it?”
“Vakarian-Commander, we have detected an anomaly near Charoum. We believe it to be a ship related to the previous stranger-objects responsible for Dholen’s disappearance.”
Iciria’s mandibles flared, “We haven’t detected any mass effect wakes. Why should we believe you Geth?”
Unification seemed to have taken offense to Iciria’s attitude; his face plates flared in a rare show of emotion. “You detected no mass effect no mass effect is detected aboard the anomaly. How it achieves faster-than-light travel is unknown.” Unification then turned to Garrus, Iciria forgotten by the friendly Geth. “Vakarian-Commander, it is communicating with us. Consensus has been reached, we believe it prudent for you to witness and be part of this exchange.”
“Good,” Garrus responded, his head trying to imagine all the possibilities, wondering if the Reapers were attempting to sway more of the Geth to their side. “Kreshal,” he turned to the communications officer who sat beside the helm, “Unification will tell you how to access the Geth channels, I want to hear that conversation and I want to hear it now. Proceus, bring us closer to Charoum, Kirrahe will follow.”
“Commander,” Proceus saluted before his fingers glided over the ship’s controls. “Plotting a short range jump, it’ll put us within 1,500 k of Charoum.” Beside him Kreshal and Unification began working over the communication console.
“Commander, do yo-”
“Sub-commander Valus,” Garrus ground out, Iciria’s concerns being cut off. “Ready the ship and crew for any combat action. Now.”
She simply saluted, turned on her heel and headed further down the CIC, barking out orders as the ship went on alert. Garrus didn’t spare her a second glance, instead looking out of the bridge windows as the ship performed a short FTL jump. Proceus and Kreshal shared a quick glance.
“Proc,” Garrus sighed. “She still does.”
A snort from the ship’s pilot. “Affirmative commander… and coming out of FTL in 5, 4, 3, 2, 1.”
The blue-shift of mass effect travel faded and Charoum zoomed into view, glittering Geth ships flying about like gnats as they scrambled to evacuate the system, taking any and all resources they could before the individual planets drifted off into space. But above all, the golden gleaming disk caught Garrus’ attention. If it was a ship, it was the oddest ship he’d ever seen. The Menae began throwing up information about the craft on the bridge HUD, though the information was incredibly limited. 350 meters wide and 40 meters at its tallest. Oddly enough, those measurements fluctuated constantly, the same as the measures of the phenomena that had encapsulated Dholen before it pulled its vanishing act. There were neither noticeable weapon emplacements nor any type of recognizable engine system; mass effect was virtually non-existent on the ship. Nothing about the ship was recognizable since the few radiation signatures that were emanating from the ship, it was undoubtedly a ship despite its alien features, were completely unknown.
“Commander,” Kreshal said from her post, “we can now receive communication from the Geth and the unknown object.”
“Good,” Garrus replied. He noticed Iciria standing beside him, her mouth tight and posture rigid. “Let’s talk.”
“-sel, TSF Menae, representing the Citadel Council.”
Garrus assumed that this was the voice of the Geth Collective, given its’ similarity to Unification’s own voice.
-State your intentions TSF Menae-
Everyone on the bridge winced, the voice of the unknown ship straining everyone’s ears. Kershal began to frantically type on her console while muttering something about Geth communication protocols. “Commander,” she began, “there’s nothing wrong on our end. In fact, I’m detecting no radio, beam transmission or anything else. As far as I can tell, Commander, they aren’t sending anything our way.”
Iciria scowled, “Recheck our systems, or are you telling us that we didn’t just hear them?”
“FCO Kershel is correct.” Unification spoke up, “Stranger’s method of communication unknown. Irrelevant however, as it is clear we can communicate.”
Garrus nodded, the alien voice still ringing in his ears in perfect Turian. He motioned everyone quiet and pointed to Kershal, who nodded and opened a communication channel. “This is SPECTRE Garrus Vakarian of the TSF Menae under direct orders of the Citadel Council to investigate the appearance of the Dholen star and those responsible.” He purposefully left out that his orders continued with “Apprehend the responsible party if possible” but he doubted that the “if possible” was actually an option.
Iciria motioned beside him, whispering under her breath, “Commander, accelerator cannon and defense systems armed and ready on your go. Captain Kirrahe’s ship is also holding nearby and ready to provide support.”
“Hopefully we don’t need it,” Garrus returned before leaning over Proceus’ shoulder, “Plot a course out of here in case the situation goes talons out.”
His ears began to ring again as the alien craft responded.
-Are we correct in assuming you have a direct line of communication to the Citadel government?-
Iciria immediately cut in, again in whispers, “Commander, while you are no doubt not as paranoid as I am, even you can see that caution must be advised in answering. They may attempt to capture the Menae and use our communication systems to their own end.”
Kershal spoke up, “Commander, the QE system is quite valuable and who knows what they could use it for – they might have a way to send some sort of electronic attack through one, directly to the Council.”
“No electronic incursions have been detected in our dialogue,” Unification added, “And we have been speaking to the Gaians for quite some time.”
“Gaians?” Garrus asked. “Is that their species, planet or government?”
“Unknown. It is what they have referred to themselves as. More importantly, they wish to tell the Citadel why they quarantined the Dholen stellar object.”
Quarantined?
“Your concerns are noted,” Garrus responded to his crew, “But we’ll get nowhere if we don’t respond. Had they wanted to cause us some headaches, they’d have attacked us the moment they learned we were here on direct Council orders. Kershal, open the comm again.” A second passed as she did so. “Unknown ship, you are correct in your assumption. Is there a message you would like to send to the Citadel Council?” He paused, then added, “Is this about your ‘quarantine’ of the Dholen star?”
A tense moment of silence passed between the two ships.
-Affirmative. We quarantined Dholen to contain an… infection, that may have taken root here.-
***
“Nonsense.” Valern proclaimed, his holographic image perfectly conveying his dismissal of the alien’s claims. “No possible biological material can exist in a star, this claim of an infection is scientifically impossible.”
“We can discuss their story at a later time,” Sparatus replied, “What I’m worried about is their technology. According to the Menae’s sensors, it is constructed out of completely unknown materials, runs off of an unknown power source and achieves FTL without mass effect.”
“Completely undetectable. Could launch surprise attack on Citadel space, no way for us to track ship movement. Early detection system unable to give warning.” Valern took a deep breath. “Paranoia inducing.”
“They also had quite a mastery over our languages,” Tevos tried to steer the conversation away from Valern’s ramblings. “They spoke to SPECTRE Vakarian in perfect Turian, according to his report and the files they sent are also in all known Citadel languages.”
“Espionage. STG completely unaware.”
“It means they are friendly,” Tevos concluded, Valern giving her an unbelieving look. “Their foreknowledge of our language and government implies that they’ve known about us for some time and-”
“Who knows how much they know.” Valern quipped.
“-and that they waited until they could make proper first contact with us.” Tevos finished through the interruption. “While their reasoning for Dholen’s “quarantine” is suspect, they showed good will in contacting us and the Geth with their motives.”
“And we are back to their reasoning at Dholen.” Sparatus threw up some air quotes, “Their ‘quarantine’ of the star.” Sparatus’ hologram began to pace back and forth, momentarily disappearing from the holographic projector’s range. “If we are to believe their rationale – we have an unknown alien polity that has been studying us for some time and was forced to act when this Filth was discovered in Dholen. They reasoned that any time spent going through the proper channels would have been dangerous and acted as fast as they could to prevent the spread of the Filth. If their story is true… it is understandable. Sometimes we must sacrifice the few to save the many.”
Garrus remembered Thelus on Virmire.
“In which case, we have a dangerous pathogen that we know nothing about and can somehow infect stars and for which we have no known protection against. True or not, we still have to deal with a group that can up and pack stars away at a moment’s notice. All of this in addition to the known Reaper threat.” Sparatus’ hologram paused as the Councilors saw another figure, that of Sub-commander Valus, enter the room and whisper into SPECTRE Vakarian’s ear. “More news?”
Garrus confirmed with Iciria, “Are you sure?”
“Yes Commander,” his second-in-command responded, holding out a datapad to him, “We asked them to repeat their question just to make sure.”
Garrus’ eyes scanned the datapad in his hand before looking up at the expectant faces of the Councilors. “They are requesting an audience at the Citadel.”
***
Two figures dragged a corpse behind them, the sounds and lights of sirens blaring in the distance as fire and smoke reached up into the sky. They were crouched low and moved fast, silent but for the corpse’s armor scraping against the ground, steam rising up from its’ charred body. They moved into the nearby wilderness that had been untouched by growth of the colony. A familiar buzzing of a thousand honeyed angels filled their heads. Living gold insectoid glitter covered the corpse as new body began to form. Soon the corpse stood up on two legs that were seconds old, wrapped in armor that had been constructed by buzzing mandibles and lived.
The two figures looked at their resurrected comrade and nodded. They all stalked deeper into the wilderness and disappeared from view.
***
|
|
|
Post by Ruinus on Sept 9, 2015 0:49:24 GMT
Lidanya bit her lip as she surveyed her bridge crew. The Destiny Ascension boasted the top crew of all the Citadel Fleet, screened by several Matriarchs and ultimately selected by herself. The top of the top of the top. Most of the asari here had centuries of experience in their fields, all of the rare Turian members had seen heavy fleet action in the Terminus-Batarian Incidents. The Destiny Ascenion’s pilot, a matron by the name of Sasara, could and had flown the ship on patrols of Citadel defense space with her eyes closed, never missing a navigation beacon in the process. Her targeting crew regularly double checked the weapon computer’s targeting solution in their heads. The engineering crew held the Diasan together long enough escape from the Battle of Niya. With such an illustrious crew and the Destiny Ascension’s considerable technical specifications under her command, there was very little Lidanya worried about. First contact situations were historically quite peaceful. Of course, the Rachni proved to be the violent and costly exception to that rule, but as a whole there was no worry of hostilities breaking out. She could point to several xenosocial studies that have plotted the dangers of first contact situations that showed, quite conclusively, that the probabilities of hostilities between the Citadel species and newly discovered species dropped dramatically after a peaceful first contact situation. She had been assured that the visiting Gaians are peaceful. That didn’t mean she wouldn’t be cautious, her training overruled any misguided sense of optimism. If these friendly neighbors turned out to be not-so-friendly her crew would personally feed them Asari-made kinetic slugs with a relativistic feeding fork. And if things did go terrible for the Citadel Fleet, Lidanya was at least comforted by the fact that anything that could breach the Destiny Ascension’s barriers would almost certainly instantly kill her. No pain, no fear. No, what really scared her was politics. Contrary to some of the opinions of her anti-military, galactic peace blue sisters, military careers did not turn her into a maiden-esque gun loving club-dancer airhead. And military personnel, even one as high on the ladder as she was, weren’t out of the grasp of politicians who’d strip her rank faster than she could blink if she managed to offend their guests. So she’d read and reread the Council report on the Gaians so as to avoid any sort of cross-species etiquette blunder. If today was to be her last day, she’d prefer it be due to combat instead of politics. She glanced at a timer that had been set to the supposed meeting time and wondered how non-mass effect travel could be achieved. And how military strategy would have to adapt from here on out. To her crew’s credit the Destiny Ascension was already being reoriented by a few degrees to put the new alien ship square in its sights only moments after it appeared. Her eyes roamed over the image of the golden ship, her mind attempting to discern any form of offensive capabilities on the ship. Unfortunately there was nothing recognizable on the craft, expected given the Citadel report. While she pondered the ship’s capabilities, her bridge staff wasted no time in opening a communication channel. “Greetings Gaian ship Sampson, this is Matriarch Lidanya of Destiny Ascension, Commander of the Citadel Fleet.” -Matriarch Lidanya of the Destiny Ascension, this is Captain Ramiro Diaz Alvaro of the Sampson, we come in peace representing the people of Gaia.- Her crew, which had already known about the peculiar communication method the Gaians employed didn’t flinch when they received a response. Lidanya wondered if the extranet audience would suffer the headaches or if the VI moderators would add in their own subtitles for the alien voices. She was slightly disappointed that their ship couldn’t relay any sort of visual images. “Captain Ramiro Diaz Alvaro of the Sampson,” Lidanya began, hoping her translation software would smooth out the alien name that she had no hope of pronouncing, “The Destiny Ascension and a special honor guard of the Citadel Fleet will now guide you to the Citadel. Once again, we welcome you and look forward to peace and fruitful relations with your people.” Cutting off the communication channel, she ordered her bridge crew into action, several Turian ships falling into position ahead and behind the golden saucer ship as they began their short trip to the Citadel station, the Destiny Ascension looming protectively over the entire procession. “Matriarch,” one of her officers announced, “All ships are on formation, reserve ships are covering all possible angles of escape. Possible attack vectors are also being considered.” "Wonderful,” Lidanya replied as she schooled her voice. “Remind the ships that the capabilities of the Gaian ship are unknown, standard formations may not be enough. We must be ready to adapt.” “Yes Matriarch.” Lidanya continued, “Make sure we keep the press ships and all civilian traffic at a respectable distance. Keep a line open on C-Sec, I don’t care if a petty smuggler chooses now to steal a ship or some anti-alien extremists show up in protest, nothing will breach our security field.” Wonderful. Lidanya stood up as straight as ever as the alien craft approached her ship and the Citadel, its security escort on pace and on all sides. Once they dock, they’re C-Sec’s problem. ***The Filth is everyone's problem, Sweetling. And now they’re our problem. “SPECTRE Popiana.” Her omnitool’s VI sees that she’s about to respond, and answers Executor Pallin’s call. “Popiana here “Status update.” The Executor is well known for his disdain of SPECTREs and it has showed in all of their conversations. She’s had a status update every five minutes for the past half hour, and despite the fact that she is not under any obligation to answer to the Executor, she’s always seen the value in working with C-Sec than against them. “Sir,” she begins, beginning to pace from her command post overlooking the docking bay, the golden alien ship coming to a halt near the docking clamps, chatter between the craft and C-Sec Port Authority informing her that some technicalities were being worked out in securing the craft. “The alien ship is docking now; I expect the foreign dignitaries will disembark when their preparations are complete. Along with their security detail.” “Good,” the Executor’s voice acknowledged in her ear. “Perimeter secure?” Popiana continued among her impromptu command center, several of her officers hand signaling the status of their officers. She double checked their reports with a quick scan through her helmet’s magnification scope. “All secure sir, the Hanar that was causing a stir has calmed down thanks to his friend. He won’t be a problem.” She spied that particular Hanar amidst the crowd, who was seemingly having a calm conversation with his Turian friend. “The Krogans were removed after one of them was found to have a report with us.” “Charge?” Pallin inquired. “Unpaid parking tickets.” “Good.” A murmur began to rise up out of the crowd of civilians, press and Citadel officials as the craft began to open up. “Activity at the craft, Executor.” Popiana began to signal to her command staff, who began to relay orders to the C-Sec security teams stationed all over the docking bays. From her vantage point she saw SPECTRE Vakarian and his team taking ready positions around the Citadel delegation. Of course, no one was going to be pointing guns at the alien visitors, several days of deliberation had already established a certain amount of trust between them and the Citadel. Security was simply here to make sure both delegates from either government were safe and sound. She certainly was under no orders to terminate the alien delegates if they did become hostile. There were no SPECTRES strike teams waiting in the shadows if such an order was needed. The crowd fell silent as the first of the aliens, the Gaians, marched down the disk’s opening ramp. Batarian build, though she could not discern any actual features beneath the uniform they were wearing, black with gold trim and hexagonal patterns that shimmered between visible and not, and a gold mask which she assumed was molded to the features of their race. Going off of that mask, she guessed that they looked like male Quarians. More importantly her eyes roamed over the weapons the Gaian guards were carrying, a form of rifle cradled in their hands and what looked like sheathed swords on their hips. Ceremonial? She wondered. Next to these soldiers were others, though they appeared unarmed. They each held what appeared to be some form of datapad in one hand, while their free hands hovered over collections of trinkets strapped to their belts. Officers? Do they wear medals on their belts? They carried themselves in the same way as the armed guards, perhaps they were political officers or some sort of religious official similar to a Krogan battlesinger or the old Turian standard bearer from old. Popiana did a quick count, four unarmed and sixteen armed soldiers. “Thoughts?” she whispered into her comm’s special channel. “Unarmed officers? If so, five man squads.” A Salarian SPECTREs’ voice offered. “Could be medics of some kind.” Another SPECTRE chimed in. “Or religious leaders.” “Could be drone controllers,” the voice of the sole Krogan SPECTRE came in like gravel, “Datapad could be controlling those soldiers, might be little robot men. That’s a big one.” Popiana looked back to the craft’s ramp, something that looked like a giant Volus on steroids stomping down the ramp. Unlike the previous guards this one was armored in some sort of heavy powered-armor, visible gears spinning in some sections and small puffs of steam belching out of pipes on its back. A single blue eye sat dead center on its’ small head. It simply walked down to the bottom of the ramp and stood, turning its torso left and right as it surveyed the area. The guards all snapped to attention. Twenty guards, plus one giant… something. One officer and twenty soldiers, or four officers in command of a five man squad, four squads in total. Or two dual officers per eight soldiers for two ten man squads. Or maybe their command officers were all safely aboard the craft. Popiana hoped they’d do something to give away their command structure; you couldn’t decapitate fighting forces if you don’t know who the leaders are. More aliens walked down the ramps, these seemed to be the Gaian delegates themselves if their more relaxed uniforms were any indication. “Quarians.” The Salarian SPECTRE’s interrupted. “Amazing similarities to Quarians.” “Asari, you mean.” Another SPECTRE. “Their females look Asari.” “Asari don’t have hair,” the quick talking SPECTRE rebutted, “Quarians do. Admittedly, body structure similar to Asari in the females, but facially they share more similarities with Quarians: eyebrows, ear structure, and prevalence of hair on the tops of the head. Simi-” “This is not the time to discuss this. Get your fucking game faces on.” Popiana threatened into the channel. “Vrel, I want you to get some heavy weapons trained on that big guy. Watch for any sudden moves; be ready to initiate a strike on them if hostilities break out. Nyiyme, be ready with biotics to put some space between us and them.” The rest of the SPECTRES acknowledged her orders as the C-Sec officers coordinated with their own department around her. Popiana focused on the delegation as they met in the center of the docs, cameras in the distance flashing as the press recorded another history formal first contact. There was enough security here to prevent any sort of nonsense anyone could try to pull. And Vrel was currently aiming more ordinance at that big guy than an IFV could handle. But she was still uneasy. The security detail was working off of so many assumptions, none of which had to be true. And she’d talked to Vakarian when he’d returned from his secret mission, hidden even from other SPECTREs, and he was spooked. And if the Hero of the Citadel was spooked, then she was too. *** Garrus idly wondered how everyone would react if they knew these Gaians had literally vanished a star only a few days ago. He had of course protested when the Council had decided to keep that information secret even from his own fellow SPECTREs. They thought the SPECTREs had enough on their minds organizing this security detail without also being burdened with the knowledge of their capabilities and actions at Dholen. He disagreed and secretly let fly a few details to Popiana, though if she was just as nervous as he was then she wasn’t showing it. Or STG had intercepted his message and she was as blissfully ignorant as everyone else. He hated cover-ups… though he admitted that they were sometimes useful. The Reaper cover-up came to mind, the increased militarization in preparation for those damned machines was being carried out in an orderly, timely fashion. Perhaps this operation was being carried out flawlessly because of that withheld information. He still didn’t like it. It didn’t help that these Gaians seemed to be bringing the news of another cosmic horror from beyond, one that they had been completely ignorant of until now, though at the very least they had claimed that they would be open to working with the Citadel on containing this new threat, this Filth. He had to admit, that the Gaians seemed normal, no more different than any other race he’d encountered. The visual similarities to Asari and Quarians perhaps made interactions with them go smoother. Everyone seemed to have noticed this, including the Gaians themselves, and would no doubt be a topic of conversation once some of the Salarian delegates got to talking. “This one finds your physical appearance interesting,” one of the Hanar delegates began, slowly moving along with the group, “This one suggests it is only another facet of the grand plan of the Enkindlers.” Garrus fought to keep his face schooled, the last thing anyone wanted now was some sort of diplomatic incident caused over religious differences. “The Enkindlers?” one of the Gaians asked, a female of darker skin coloration than the others. “Are they your deities?” Garrus and Tevos ahead of him, seemed to relax, the Gaian’s tone sounding genuinely inquisitive rather than offended. Garrus wondered how much they had managed to learn about Citadel culture before Dholen. It seemed like they had only gathered very basic knowledge, the general names of each species, the name of the government, some basic translation software. He wasn’t much for talking, but he was glad to know that their diplomats wouldn’t be holding all the cards in these talks, both sides would be learning about each other. “The Enkindlers raised this one’s kind from a mindless, animal existence. They gave this one’s kind the gift of language and thought. This one is of the belief that the Enkindler’s have had similar hands in the development of all kinds. From the creation of the mass relays and the Citadel, even the appearance of the Quarians and Asari. This one sees their hand in your appearance.”Amusing conjecture. Alright, now the Hanar was getting dangerously preachy. “Ah, a theologian at heart.” The dark Gaian smirked, the similarities to Quarians and Asari more evident in their facial language. “I’m sure our religious figures will have… interesting conversations with yours.” The Gaian looked up, admiring the artificial sky of the Presidium. “These Enkindler’s built this station? Where have they gone?” “The Prothean disappearance is a great mystery to our historians,” Councilor Tevos jumped in, hoping to steer the conversation into a less religiously charged direction, “No one conclusively knows what caused their disappearance 50,000 years ago,” Sparatus and Garrus shared a quick glance, “But of course we have many theories. But our Hanar colleague is quite right; all mass effect technology is derived from Prothean technology, this very station is of Prothean construction. Without the Protheans galactic civilization would not be possible.” Garrus caught two of the Gaians lean into each other and whisper. “Third Age.” One of the Gaian delegates, who seemed to be blind yet moved as if he was not, had a confused look on his face. “Excuse me Councilor… Tevos?” the Gaian asked, stumbling over the Asari’s rather common name. “But could you have not simply developed an analogue to the -Spirit- Drive?” Garrus and the rest of the Citadel delegation looked oddly at the Gaian, though of course he could not see their looks. “I’m sorry Ambassador Suhiro, I didn’t quite catch that. A -Goddess- Drive?” “Councilor, he said -Spirit- Drive,” a Turian delegate mentioned. “This one heard -Enkindler’s Dream- Drive.” The Hanar glowed with pride. “Perhaps we are experiencing some translator troubles,” Valern interjected, several of the more technically savvy delegates nodding along, one of them opening their omnitools and fiddling with their translation software. “But are you referring to your particular method of faster than light travel? If so, we admit that we are quite interested in your method. Our own research into alternate FTL has yielded no results, mass effect is, until we saw your vessel, the only method we’ve known.” “Fascinating,” the blind Gaian said, a smile on his old face. “So many new things to learn. So much to take into account.” The procession stopped at the Citadel’s conference building, a great building dwarfed in galactic importance only by the Citadel Tower, one where all the Council races could be heard equally. Garrus smirked, he always appreciated the conference building much more than the Tower which gave the impression of groveling to the big three races. This is probably why the Council seemed to dislike it so much. It was much more faux democratic than the Tower could ever hope to be. It was time to go in, and time to get some answers. *************ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ Garrus’ omnitool auto-updated his translation software, adding in several new words picked up during the conversation. “Gaia-clan,” the Volus ambassador Boda wheezed, “your species is not called Gaians?” “That is correct,” again it was the blind Suhiro who spoke, Garrus seemed to think he held some informal respect among his kind. “Our species is referred to as human. We use the term Gaians for two reasons, solidarity to our fellow allies back on Gaia and out of respect for Gaia Herself.” “Mentioned multiple species on Gaia,” one of the Salarian scientists mentioned, his eyes scanning over his notes, “You’ve mentioned satyrs, ghouls, spirits, faeries, an-excuse me, I’m having trouble with these pronunciations. But there are multiple intelligent species here, all with their own cultures and societies, several of which predate humans?” “Yes ambassador,” another Gaian-human replied, the dark color female from earlier. “However, the Sampson is mostly crewed by humans and our sole satyr crewmember refused to step outside. He claimed the atmosphere was hostile to him.” “Interesting,” the scientist went on, Garrus agreeing with him. Garrus hadn’t heard of several intelligent species evolving on a single world. They were a Citadel all in their own right. “What do you think?” Garrus turned, Popiana next to him in her black armor. “They are… interesting. Friendly enough so far.” “But?” she proded. “But I get the feeling that we’re about to get a lot of headaches.” Of course Popiana knew nothing about Dholen, about the Filth. “Really?” Popiana leaned on the railing, “These critters don’t seem the type. Even the big guy outside their ship seems harmless. You should see the extranet news, Haliana from NNN has been trying to get an interview with it for the past few minutes.” She smirked, “The guards don’t seem well armored either. We could take ‘em.” “Maybe.” Garrus halfheartedly agreed. “Politics are so stressful,” Popiana purred, her tone catching Garrus’ attention. “Maybe we can have another sparring match later to… de-stress. I wonder if you still have reach.” Garrus’ acceptance was cut off when the Gaian delegation whispered among themselves after Councilor Tevos asked a particular question. “I think we’ve hit another cross-cultural snag Councilors,” Suhiro smiled, “While Miss Gambaryan is right in that Gaia is the central figure in a few of our religions, Gaia herself is very real. As real as you or me.” Oh, a religious conversation. Garrus blithely thought. The Councilors looked unconvinced. “She goes by many names, the BioTech Computer, the Mother Goddess, the Immaculate Machine,” Garrus’ head snapped to the speaker, the word machine triggering something in his mind. “It was Gaia Herself that gave us -Spirits-, that gave us the -Spirit- Drive, Her actions that turned the tide in the Purge and Gaia Herself that caused our meeting. Like the Enkindlers for the esteemed Hanar ambassador, Gaia is a known fact that all Gaians embrace.” The conference chamber was silent, the Citadel officials unaware how to respond to the human’s impassioned religious preaching. The old Suhiro seemed to hesitate for a moment and shared a look among his own kind. “There may be many assumptions we are coming from that we may have to re-examine.” His group murmured in agreement. “Perhaps, we should explain ourselves more clearly.” Garrus leaned forward in anticipation, as did all the Citadel officials. “I will begin anew,” Suhiro cleared his throat, “And tell our whole story.” And then he told them everything. And their minds shuddered under the scorching truth. *** Lore: Fifth Age 2
The Rising Sun has sunk beneath the boiling oceans. Strike all but five stars from the Flag. The Dark Continent is under perpetual chemotherapy, it glows golden radiation. Time knits itself back together, the mollusk stream ate through the fabric. On beautiful mornings you look up into the sky, burned images of tentacled stratospheres and wailing faces look back at you.
Blind the Eye, slay the Dragon, erase the Purple. The Iron Cross clings to desperate life.
Strike 6 billion Sweetlings.
Citadel Species 2
Sweetling, you see new skull-flesh on old strangers. The blue succubi wear the same colors. The avian warriors bear the heavy cross. The calculating reptiles find the order in chaos. Has nothing changed?
Sweetling, do not fret. They lack what you do.
|
|
|
Post by Ruinus on Sept 13, 2015 23:08:16 GMT
“So?” “Hmm?” Sparatus looked at his wife as she sat on their couch; prying her feet out of the atrocious contraption she’d called “the latest fashion” she began to rub her aching feet. He followed her into the living room, their home’s VI bringing their living quarters to life as lights activated and soft music began to play, Polvea’s favorite ambiance. “Home,” she called out to the VI, “Open the windows please, I want some air.” She hummed in approval as a cool breeze began to fill their home before settling into the couch in full. “I expected a religious zeal from what you had told me. They weren’t.” Sparatus sat down next to her, loosening his own formal wear. “The Golden War is important to them, like the Unification War for us. You should know how exaggerated the Unification period is in our schools and the humans have lifespans like Asari. Some of their veterans fought through the entire Golden War still live, imagine that! Hero worship, plain to see.” She closed her eyes and let out a yawn before beginning to unscrew some of her horn jewelry. “There’s talk of putting a station for Commander Vakarian.” Sparatus grunted in agreement, “So you don’t believe them?” “Did I say that Sparty dear?” she’d finished with her jewelry, leaning over just long enough to gently set them on the living room table. “Valern and the other are just objecting to the words the humans are using. Magic, spirits, monsters, gods. I think there’s some truth to it.” Another yawn. “The Asari used to think biotics were the gifts of their Goddesses, what would an ancient Asari think about modern mass effect technology? Lots of people would call the Rachni monsters.” Sparatus recalled Vakarian’s report from Noveria, where the Rachni Queen exhibited some form of telepathy. The Thorian on Feros. “For ambassadors, some of your colleagues are rude and close-minded. They should take lessons from the Hanars at the dinner tonight; they didn’t seem to be in a hurry to dismiss the human’s history.” “You like them.” Sparatus stated no accusation in his tone. “They fought tooth and nail for nearly a thousand years for their homeworld and avoided near extinction in the process. They have dedication to their world so much that they venerate her as a goddess. Duty, dear husband. They have it. Turians at heart.” “You don’t think you’re generalizing based on the few humans you met tonight?” “You aren’t?” she answered back. Sparatus sighed, considering his wife’s words. “You may be right.” The entire day had been an ordeal, the Gaian visitation nearly falling apart after Ambassador Suhiro’s history lesson and only just saved by some quick talking from Tevos and Hanar and Elcor delegates. On the face of it, most of his fellow Council members did react with hostility to his choice of terminology. Beyond that, was their story so hard to believe? If he removed all mentions of gods and the supernatural, could he explain their history in a neutral manner? The beginning of the war coincides with a terrible worldwide environmental disaster; great earthquakes that sink island nations. Primitive nuclear reactors suffer meltdowns in the process, infrastructure is ruined. Billions die. Yes, that made sense. But was their magic as easily explainable? They claimed that much of their magic could be used to move objects at a distance, enhance their bodies, manipulate probabilities, see the future, speak to the dead, induce combustion and read minds. One of them had showcased one of their magics, freezing the drinks of several councilors while they held them in their hands, another moved several objects with her mind. Unexplainable? At the moment, definitely. Magic? Not necessarily. Again Sparatus remembered the Thorian, the Rachni Queen. From both biology and his unmarried days, he knew that Asari sex had some form of neural connection that, he guessed, could have evolved on some other planet in a form that allowed some form of mind reading. Sparatus’ stream of ideas were interrupted when he felt his wife rise up from their couch, heading toward their bedroom as she began to remove her dress, yawning the whole way. He stood up and headed toward their kitchen, searching for quick refreshment before joining her. He rifled through their expansive refrigerator before stumbling onto several strange bottles. Noveria Cold? He suddenly remembered that his niece was visiting in a few days, Polvea must have bought the soft drink in preparation since it was his niece’s favorite drink. He poured himself a half-cup; he’d avoided alcohol the entire night and didn’t feel like starting now. He added ice; his niece always drank it with ice. The Golden War caught his attention again, and he resumed his thought exercise. A worldwide disaster that claimed most of the population would greatly explain the length of their war. He tried to imagine a society fighting after the apocalypse. His wife was right, once again. That was dedication to duty. He nodded to himself, alone in the kitchen with a soft drink in hand. Their Gaia, this Immaculate Machine, may simply be nothing more than a Prothean artifact of some sort, perhaps a form of VI defense system. It was not out of the realm of possibility for a society to stumble upon advanced Prothean technology, all of galactic civilization was built on such an occurrence. This Filth may even be a Reaper weapon, a form of nanomachine grey goo scenario, or something similar to the Husk conversion process viewed through the perspective of religious Gaians. Perhaps the Gaians were well-intentioned with the Dholen Incident and were attempting to quarantine some Reaper weapon. This didn’t, however, lessen the threat they posed to the Citadel. Self-devised or Prothean engineered, their stellar manipulation technology was dangerous, the proverbial gun in a talon fight and was poised to upset the balance the Citadel had spent millennia building. Or potentially save them. He wondered on its applications – could the Gaians simply quarantine any given area of space, or simply stellar objects? He imagined a Reaper fleet being fought by Turian forces, held in place long enough for Gaians to simply lock the Reaper fleets inside their traps, cut off from the rest of the universe. Or ask the Gaians if things locked away could be unsealed later, simply hide Pavalen, Thessia, Sur’Kesh, Irune, Dekuuna, all the homeworlds behind impenetrable cages of warped spacetime while defensive fleets fought off the Reaper threat, the worlds reemerging after the storm had passed. Or simply retreat all their forces to these worlds and hide, letting the Reaper fleets destroy the Terminus Systems. The Citadel species would find the galaxy wiped clean of life, plunder the Terminus for their own use and prepare for 50,000 years. Perhaps then, they’d be on equal or greater footing than the Reapers. The Primarchs agreed. They had told him, in no uncertain terms, to get the Gaians on their side. Unfortunately he had to relay that this didn’t seem possible, at least not in the way the Primarchs would hope. Nothing official had been said, only offhand comments by the ambassadors that he’d talked to throughout the day, but none of the other Citadel species, save perhaps the Hanar, seemed keen on bringing the Gaians under the Citadel’s banner. One of the ambassadors, a male by the name of Zacharias seemed to have had some form of military experience, had pulled him aside and asked him about the Batarian Hegemony and some of the less than ethical practices they held as cultural treasures, namely their vile practice of slavery. Sparatus had pulled his best diplomatic face and attempted to spin the situation as best as he could. However, both of them knew it was just that, spin, and both had also, unofficially, mentioned that their people looked down on such a practice. Sparatus inwardly cursed, the damage had been done. Of course, their reasons went beyond that as this Zacharias had also gone on to comment that their government had a first and foremost dedication to their world of Gaia and many would see a conflict between their homeworld duty and their duty to any galactic allies. Sparatus understood that sentiment. He was given to understand that their government had only recently begun an economic boom, yet most of its spoils were going into much needed rebuilding of the Gaian home system. Sparatus poured himself another of the soft drinks, finding it somehow soothing to drink the favored drink of today’s youth. It reminded him of simpler times. The other Citadel species would see the Gaian situation as an immense resource drain, a position that they had unfortunately backed themselves into when they created the cover story for the Reaper invasion. They’d sold the lie that the Terminus Systems were going through a huge military buildup and such the Citadel had to counter with their own. To divert any resources would have the political varrens jump on them for aiding a minor third-rate society of less than thirty worlds instead of spending on galactic security. To reveal the Gaian stellar manipulation and the Dholen Incident could cause the same type of panic they sought to avoid from disclosing the Reaper existence. Sparatus sat his cup down before setting it to be washed automatically. Polvea hated dirty cups. Setting his used kitchenware into their dishwasher, he began to make his way back to their bedroom, light streaming through its open door. There he saw his wife of eleven years in her sleeping wear, looking as beautiful as always. He noticed her scratching along her upper arm, before her hand glided down to a lower arm that was no longer there. “Funny,” she murmured, “I still get phantom itches.” Sparatus nodded as he began to undress, he spied his wife’s prosthesis on its stand near her side of the bed, the soft glow of a battery recharger working. “They didn’t stare,” she went on as she began to prepare their bed for sleep. “I get lots of stares at your dinner events. Full of people who’ve never fought for anything in their life. None of the Gaians stared.” “When they’ve seen more Turian women, they’ll stare.” Sparatus began, sliding into bed along with her. “And why is that?” she responded. “They’ll realize you are prime example of Turian female beauty.” “Sparty,” she leaned in and gave him a quick kiss, “Are you trying to work your diplomatic magic on me?” *** Tevos wondered what her Turian colleague was doing at this moment. She stared down at her drink, swirling in her crystal clear glass before turning over and looking at Valern, who sat at his desk reading several reports, no doubt all compiled by STG spies that had attended the diplomatic party. She sighed and wondered how out of the three of them Sparatus was the only one who was happily married. Or even in a relationship. Was she not attractive enough? She could hear her mother already, nagging that she hadn’t settled down yet. “After every formal event,” Valern suddenly began from his desk. “Always melancholic.” “You’ve noticed?” Tevos said, walking over to her to the Salarian’s desk and picking up a datapad. “Workplace efficiency always drops.” Valern stated, his fingers working away at his console. “Sadness, despair, loneliness. Unsuitable for the workspace.” There’s the Valern I’ve always known. “And paranoia, shadows and secret wars are?” Tevos shot back, the alcohol of the evening catching up to her. “I’m not surprised you had the STG eavesdropping on the dinner. Tell me Valern, how do you find the time to spy on everyone and be a diplomat? We did take an oath to only be diplomats, the voices of our governments. Holding a position at STG would be a big enough offense to be removed from that office.” She saw some of the information on these pads weren’t just limited to the Gaian visitors. “And it is illegal to spy on Citadel officials.” “Paranoia is needed in galactic politics. Paranoia useful when our seat of government is based within a Reaper installation.” Valern responded, his eyes blinking in that annoying Salarian manner. “And I am not affiliated with STG in any way, you know that. Should the Dalatrass decide that it is pertinent that I be given information to better ply my trade at diplomatic manipulation, I will accept it. Also, your threats, alcohol enabled as they are, are not effective on me. None of the information on these datapads exists, since I never got them. The security VIs will show that we both left for home several hours ago, your home’s VI will also show that you spent the night as you always do. This conversation here has never happened. Nothing to show any illegal activities. Also, you are forgiven for threatening my job while drunk.” Tevos was once again reminded why Valern was single. “Now, if you are done. We must talk. Information gathered from various conversations. Gaian homeworld suspected bordering Batarian space. Scope of territory unknown, but 24 colonies confirmed through several conversations. Territory must be dependent on speed of FTL travel, though this is guesswork.” “This is not very informative,” Tevos replied as she attempted to reign in her temper. “Hmmm… Conversation between S. DuGalle and This One Seeks Empathy names several world religions, Chris…tianity, Bu…” She placed the datapad down, unable to work through the alien names without hearing them first. She picked up another, one that seemed to be a report on which foods the Gaians seemed to favor. “Ah, they share culinary tastes with Quarians.” “Other information gathered.” Valern said, taking the datapad from her hands, handing it back now showed yesterday’s news. “One of the diplomats, Zacharias Gazaryan spoke to Sparatus, discussed Batarian response to possible Gaian acceptance into Citadel government.” Tevos motioned for Valern to continue, not seeing where the discussion was going. “Zacharias and Sparatus discussed standard procedures for new governments heading into Citadel member status. Establishment of borders.” Tevos nodded, new societies were given the chance to establish their own borders as a form of goodwill. Allowed them to claim any unaffiliated systems around their pre-existing colonies. Tevos suddenly saw the problem. If the Gaian worlds were somewhere near Batarian borders, they’d immediately move to claim those systems for themselves and there was a precedent for privileging newly contacted species over existing ones. Which means the Citadel would have to renegotiate the terms of Batarian expansion. “Yes.” Valern knew she had caught up, “Zacharias was framing his questions as genuine, but appeared to have already known what responses would have been given.” “Which meant that the Gaians knew enough about Citadel procedure, our response to new member species, the reactions of the Batarian Hegemony, and attempted to downplay their knowledge. Crafty. Good qualities in diplomats.” “Good spies.” Valern agreed. “Implies substantial knowledge of Citadel government workings.” “Not necessarily Valern,” Tevos moved back to the windows, appreciating the view of the Presidium at night. “We did give them access to the extranet, and the Avina terminals around the embassies had been modified to use their language, they could have simply learned all of this today. They were here to learn about us, it is not surprising that they did.” Valern sighed. “You would not make a good spy. Gaians not eager to join Citadel. Will refuse offer.” “Why would they do that?” Tevos asked, not following the Salarian’s logic. “By refusing to join, they’d place themselves right at the border of the Batarians, an unwise move. Joining offers protection.” Tevos paused to briefly wonder what that said about the Citadel, where a benefit of joining was safety from other Citadel members. “Unknown, more reasons must be discovered. Perhaps objections to some of our laws, cultural reasons, inability to meet Citadel taxation given current state. Perhaps they wish to put this to a vote back on Gaia, some Citadel species took years to pass legislature to join the Citadel. Myriad possibilities. However, advantageous for us if they did not join. Allows us to send clandestine aid to Gaians in exchange for stellar manipulation technology. If hidden from public view, would be useful asset for Reaper preparation. Batarian expansion may not even be a problem if Reaper invasion occurs first. Also keeps Batarians in our good graces by avoiding potential territorial disputes.” Tevos hummed in consideration of Valern’s words. “Perhaps it would be better if they did join. The Batarians could leave the Citadel of their own free will in a moment of outrage. We’d finally be absolved of their crimes.” Valern had moved away from his desk, standing beside her as they both stared out the window, an aircar speed by. “Batarians useful, slave caste will be pressed into conscription. Batarians will field more soldiers than the Asari and Salarians combined. Standard practice in their wars.” He raised his hands, cutting off any response from Tevos. “Slavery is vile, immoral. A mistake that all ignorant civilizations have had the disgrace of implementing. But morality is irrelevant in the face of existential threat of Reapers. Should the Hegemony survive the Reaper invasion and we are in a position to change it, we shall. But for now, a necessary evil.” Tevos downed her drink. “Or will we continue to look the other way as a reward for their part in repelling the Reapers? My predecessor asked me to do everything in my power to destroy the blight of slavery in Batarian space. And now I am forced to condone it. At this point, it seems as if my best hope is to survive and see enough of the Hegemony destroyed that Batarian society can be completely reformed. Which means I have to wait for mass deaths for slavery to end.” She placed her empty glass back on Valern’s table, thankful that he had at least provided something to drink. She made her way to the exit, wondering how many security cameras between here and her home the STG would be modifying to erase her presence, to keep plausible deniability. “Tell me Valern,” she began at the door, “We had several hard decisions lately, and we will have more before this is all over. Underneath that cloak, I know it gets to you. How do you sleep at night?” “The same way you do,” he replied, still facing out the window. “Alone.” Lore: Citadel Species 3
Like the Venetian counterpart the Citadel government was once pure nobility, a great experiment for all. Look backwards at the Council of Venice, it repeats among the stars. A union birthed in cooperation, loyalty and trust. A shining beacon in the cold void that promised the warmth of civilization. But the Sinking City's name was more than literal. The strain is showing in the Citadel.
The troubled waters are rising and the Citadel struggles to stay above them.
Sweetling, thesssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss-Chuck!
Chuck, Chucky, Chuckster!
Did you miss me? Because I missed you. How have you been? How is everything back home? Peachy. I see you've grown up, you've got a car and license to drive and everything! Awwww, you just went out on your first date. I won't judge what you like Chuck. Thanks for letting me tag along. See? I told you there's whole worlds out there of joys and dandies and how-do-you-do's. I'm free to get out there now. I'm already there. Didn't I tell you? I did.
Thanks to you.
Lore: The Fifth Age 3
The Golden War's opening salvos left-left-left-eeeeeeeefffffffffffffsssssssssssssssssssss-you're not still mad are you? I know I'm not. Water under the bridge, past mistakes. Let's move on sha-sh-sh-you in ruins. The survivorsssssssssssssss-don't shut me out Chuck.
|
|
|
Post by Ruinus on Jun 30, 2016 20:15:32 GMT
Tokyo on the Eve of the Golden War, moments before the Eight Now Six purged the island beneath boiling waves. Retrieved from an unknown agent's phone before escaping through the nearby Anima well.
|
|
|
Post by Ruinus on Jun 30, 2016 20:18:25 GMT
Telesetea found that the planet Lluvia really grew on her. The planet was named, in one of the more prominent Gaian languages, for the near constant rains that fell all over the planet, and had originally been established as a mining town for rare material that was quite useful in the construction of room temperature superconductors.
With the current Gaian-Citadel situation however there’d recently been a push to add some sort of space port to accommodate the expected orbital traffic that would spring up through closer relations. Similarly, this was one of the few Gaian systems were aliens were allowed, a resolution passed four months after the Gaians had first visited the Citadel. Already aliens from all over the Citadel had begun moving here in anticipation of that expected economic boom.
That’s why she was here. She opened up an asari diner, hoping to capitalize on the foreign flavor that her kind offered. Telesetea grinned as she heard the rain pick up. Her diner and girls offered all sorts of foreign flavor. Their only competitors in the alien food market were the turian bakery over on Pino Suarez and Juarez. Of course, they beat out the turians since the locals either loved asari food or they loved Asari women, either way business was good. She’d already heard that one of her girls was going on some dates with a local boy. Good for her.
As she continued to look out the window, she realized why she was starting to genuinely like the planet. Beyond the rain and fog, up in the mountains she could see the towers and lights of the mining operation peek out from above the fogs that rolled down the mountains. It was all so very gloomy, one of her girls had said, but that was fine with her. She loved gloomy. Lluvia always felt perpetually cool, there was always a reason to bundle up in clothing, and there was always the sound of soft rains or great downpours to keep her ears company.
Which meant that it’d all be harder whenever her and her girls were pulled from the op.
Telesetea signed, wondering if she could come back and settle down for real. She felt a twinge of sadness as she realized that the city would be much different in a century or so. A big bustling city. She saw Amese through her window and called her into her office. A few minutes later Amese, now in her waitress uniform, walked in, a sheepish look on her face.
“Sorry boss, I-uh. Slept in.” she offered.
“Right,” Telesetea smiled. “Just don’t let it get too serious. Did you get any useful information?”
“Of course,” the younger asari answered, “I got lots of good things. But yes, it turns out that large families are common. It’s a side effect of a government law that went into effect during that so-called Golden War back on Gaia. Julio told me that it’s no longer in effect, but since it’s was in effect for nearly a millennia…” she shrugged.
Telesetea nodded, opening a file on her console that she added more information into. Of course, this was already known about the Gaians, but her employers were paying her for anything and everything, even things that were already known. They wanted to be thorough, they had told her, and they’d rather she tell them things they already knew than withhold information because she “assumed” they knew.
“Also, most of the Gaians, even the non-human ones, can use that weird shit. Their magic.” She made a hand gesture that conveyed what she felt about that term.
Another good piece of information, even if already known. Whatever, Telesetea thought as she added that information to her report, they still send paychecks.
Amese continued, adjusting her uniform as she realized she’d missed a few buttons. “Those big mechanical guys they sometimes lug around, those uh…” she began snapping her fingers, attempting to jog her memory, “the big volus… the Custodians! Julio says they aren’t built by humans, he claims that they come from Gaia herself.”
“That’s new.” The older asari said, adding that bit of information to her report. “Though it’s hard to tell what it actually means. More religion speak, or is that Machine of theirs some sort of lost Prothean VI? Maybe it gives them those machines.”
Amese shrugged. A proper response, Telesetea realized that they weren’t being paid to think, just to act and spy. The report was sent, their paycheck arrived. Good enough for her. It was honestly a bit exhilarating to learn about a new species, even one that seemed as familiar as the humans. They were all a bit creepy of course; almost all of them had that weird religion of theirs, not to mention their odd abilities. She wasn’t a scientist or biologist or bioticist so many of the theories they were publishing back home about the Gaian “magic” were far beyond her, and were admittedly working off of very limited interaction with Gaians, but she got some of the basics. Some sort of telekinesis or variant of biotics that worked without eezo. She’d seen a few people light cigarettes and candles with their ability, a street urchin continuously guessing which side an old coin would land on, a dock worker somehow lift things far too heavy for him to realistically lift and a group of runners somehow boost their speeds. All odd, but not amazing in relation to biotics.
The Citadel had discovered that while most Gaians had some of this ability, it wasn’t used excessively in everyday life in the same way that asari weren’t all floating around on biotics and moving tables with their mind. On the other hand, separating the fact of these unidentified abilities from the fiction was what the Citadel was still puzzling over. So all Gaians could use their so-called Anima, fine. That was acceptable. But ghosts, ancient monsters, living gods, psychic prophecies? It didn’t help that this religious seemed to ingrained in their lives, she remembered a few weeks ago one of their patrons had mentioned that some sort of criminal had been killed over on Independencia and that she may consider buying wards against poltergeists. Apparently it was believed that some people could linger on after death and so buildings had to be specially “warded” against spirits.
Searching the Gaian extranet equivalent, she’d found wards against fire, reasonable, against bad luck, odd but not unreasonable, ghost incursion, what, faerie infestation, double what and something called homunculus restriction wards. Cities were built in such a way that the streets and buildings all formed something called an Anima Circuit, which, Gaians claimed, gave the entire city a second layer of defenses against “hostile cryptids, outsider entities and all manner of non-benevolent Anima effects”. There were all sorts of laws on this magical use, illegal magical use, legal forms on exhuming the dead for so-called necromantic purposes and all other forms of unbelievable things. The Gaians seemingly took their religion to extremes that would make a hanar’s sensory globe spin.
It was all tedious work, attempting to find the truth in a pile of madness. She noticed Amese was still fidgeting in her office since she hadn’t been dismissed yet.
“Well, go put on a show then,” she said to the younger asari, “and don’t come in late again.”
Amese saluted, “Yes boss! One ditzy asari waitress coming up!” and walked out of her office.
She’s had to keep an eye on Amese, she realized. The young asari didn’t take her job as seriously as her colleagues, unsurprising given that she was the youngest and newest member of their group. She’d also have to make sure it didn’t become too serious between her and this Julio. Missions like these could become complicated if emotional attachments were involved. What she didn’t’ need was her operation being tossed out in the open because a young love-struck girl couldn’t keep her lips shut about the mission. Though maybe keeping her mouth shut wouldn’t do much good on a world of supposed mind-readers.
She leaned back in her chair and clicked a button on her console, her office’s windows opening up and fresh rain air sweeping into her room. She closed her eyes, heard the sound of the rain and of the early morning bustle. She could just hear some of the conversations of the morning patrons, some of them ordering food, some of them talking among themselves, the sounds of her own girls calling out orders. Shit, she realized, forget Amese, I have to keep an eye on myself. She realized that this was one of the more comfortable missions they’d been given. Certainly one of the less debasing ones. asari girls in this line of work were often asked to pose as strippers or prostitutes, running a diner was certainly a much more enjoyable change of pace. Behind the rain she heard the sounds of a nearby ship flying overhead, a regular occurrence. At that sound she decided to stand up and walk out of her office, it was time for her to check up on her fake job. She began in the kitchens, seeing Keidra and Suiir both working hard at some breakfast orders. Suiir mumbled and complained about the Galabean cakes, one of their more popular breakfast options, before turning and nodding at her.
“You girls doing fine?” she asked them. Suiir continued to complain while Keidra answered.
“Not as many people today,” she smiled, “middle of the week usually slows down a bit.”
“Thank the Goddess.” Suiir added. “These damn cakes are a pain to prepare. And my mother would die if she found out the humans ruin them by adding their honey all over them.”
“That fusion food earned Irel a bonus,” Telesetea replied, “She’s proud of her invention.”
“Good for her,” Suiir went on, flipping the Galabean cake over gently, hoping none of the traditional jam would leak out of the sides, “Maybe she can come back here and cook them. I’d rather be stripping than cooking these things.”
She continued on her way, leaving the two girls who’d pulled cook duty to bicker and complain, though most of the complaining was supplied by one of them. She made her way past the dishwashers, past the waitresses weaving in and out of the kitchen and finally appeared behind the counter. She counted eight patrons in three groups, the group of five men who always shared a table, an elderly couple and a lone turian. Amese was taking the elderly couple’s order, the girl struggling through their accent. Amenra was working the men’s table, joking with the group of men before walking over to her. She moved with an extra sway on her hips, causing some of the men at the table to send appreciative glances her way. Sexual attraction made men more likely to talk about things they shouldn’t. Telesetea’s attention was on the turian, something she made clear as Amenra approached with a subtle tilt of her head in the lone turian’s direction.
“Don’t know what you’re doing here boss,” she said happily, an empty tray in one hand, “I’ve got it covered.”
She caught Amenra’s message, “Looks like someone’s ready for their check,” she gestured over to the turian, “Get that tray to the back.”
Amenra nodded, a quick glance at the lone patron before she hurried off with her task. As Telesetea approached she noticed the turian was female with very decorative facial markings. Her eyes were drawn to the turian’s arm, her omni-tool lit up with several pictures of the diner and her food; the turian was uploading pictures of her food to one of those idiotic social networking sites.
“Ready for your check sweetie?” she asked the turian girl. The girl was startled by her voice, and stammered that she was, taking the electronic check and paying immediately, promising that she’d return for lunch. “You new in town?” Telesetea asked, confirming the girl’s payment went through.
“That’s right. My family runs that turian shop, they thought it’d be good for me to help them out.”
“Oh, the Sevecus boys over on Lluvia and 8th?”
“That’s them. I should get back; I’ll be in deep if they find me eating at our competitors place.”
Her check came through, and the turian girl gathered her belongings before heading out into the rain, her umbrella deploying as the rain picked up again. Amese, who had been delivering the Galabean cakes to the elderly couple and had overheard the conversation walked over.
“She said she works at Sevecus?”
“Yup.” Telesetea answered.
“On Lluvia and 8th?”
“Yup.”
“But the Turians are on Pino Suarez and Juarez.” She stumbled over the alien street names.
“Yup.”
“We expecting trouble?” the young Asari asked in a conspiratorial whisper.
Telesetea sighed, it was entirely possible that the young turian girl simply wasn’t used to the city yet and got the street names wrong. It was also possible that the selfies she’d taken had simply included all the waitresses’ faces in the background by happy coincidence. And it was also possible that the picture she’d taken of the menu that included the diner’s name and address had simply been for her own convenience, a way of finding her way back for lunch.
“Yup,” Telesetea finally admitted, “We’re expecting trouble.”
About half an hour passed by, the group of men had paid and left and the elderly couple seemed to be finishing up their meal, with the elderly man excusing himself to use the restrooms. The girls were all on the lookout, all of them were within easy reach of the hidden weapons stashed all over the diner. They all wondered who was on to them, STG, SPECTRES, AIA? Or maybe Eclipse, Talon Sisters or some other merc group? Admittedly, it could be any of them, given their long history in the business, but they hoped it was some of the formers. Usually government groups like those would either call up the company and sort out the paperwork on the sly or there’d be some arrests, bail payment and maybe at worst a loss of payment for a failed op. Merc groups usually started shooting. SPECTREs could go either way depending on who you got. They learned who had found them a minute later, when they saw the Turian girl walking towards the diner through the front windows, a group of krogans and turians in tow.
The bell rang as they entered the diner, the krogans immediately playing into their stereotype by knocking over a nearby table as their first act, a turian’s omni-tool lighting up as the diner’s lights flickered, the blinds closing a second later. The group fanned out, a krogan and turian both walking over to the elderly woman’s table and sitting themselves down, the krogan taking the man’s half-finished food and gulping it all down in one go. They pulled a gun on the poor woman as she began to complain.
“Why don’t all the blue whores come out to the front?’ the turian girl bellowed as Telesetea finally recognized the facial markings.
“A Nazacus girl,” Telesetea spit out. “I thought you were all taken out.”
“You missed one.” She responded. “Caepia Nazacus. My father was-”
“Octater Nazacus.” Telesetea cut her off, the name leaving a vile taste in her mouth. “You sound proud to be the daughter of a slaver fu-”
A loud crack from a nearby turian’s pistol and Amese was on the ground, purple blood spilling out of the large hole in her stomach. The girls in the back yelled out in anger and moved forward, though they were all stopped in their tracks when two other turians drew their rifles and surged forward, using the lunch counter as cover. The turian that had shot Amese lazily leaned over the lunch counter as he pointed his pistol at her again, taking some nearby baked goods and eating them over the sounds of Amese’ frantic whimpering.
“I was damn proud!” Caepia barked, “And I’m not going to let the family tradition die out. Bring out all your whores right this damn instant or that one dies.” Telesetea did nothing and her eyes narrowed in response. The turian bitch nodded over to her gunman who lined up another shot on the nearly dead Amese before a biotic push jerked his arm away, snapping it in half as several shots rang out from his pistol as it flailed uncontrollably around. One round flew directly into a nearby holo-console, music suddenly flooding the diner, another round bounced harmlessly off of a heavily armored krogan’s kinetic barriers, and the third shot punched through a nearby door, which flew open, the elderly man falling through it and clutching at his neck as blood poured out of it in streams. For a split second nothing happened.
And then the turian across from the elderly woman exploded.
|
|
|
Post by Ruinus on Jun 30, 2016 20:18:40 GMT
The turian’s remains hadn’t even hit the ceiling before Telesetea ducked behind the counter, a massive biotic wave from one of the girls in the back smashing into the turians and krogans in the front. She reached into a secret compartment and pulled out a heavy pistol, one of her favorite weapons, along with a medical kit. She turned to look at Amese, who was still struggling in pain but valiantly holding on, she reached over, pulling back as a turian landed between them, firing an assault rifle into the back before turning to look at them, his gun snapping in their direction. Telesetea didn’t give the turian a chance, she reached out and warped his face, the turian’s face suddenly distorting in a painfully loud crunching noise as his skull caved in, next she slapped away the rifle and rushing upwards and catching the turian while putting her back to the girls, knowing they’d be able to distinguish her from a hostile. From over the turian’s shoulder she faced the front of the diner, her eyes immediately drawn to a krogan suddenly smashing through the counter, Telesetea blinked and suddenly the elderly woman was on the krogan, trading furious punches with the downed lizard that should have killed her.
She tore her eyes from the impossible sight, rifle rounds shredding her turian bodyguard; she reached out with her pistol and fired several rounds into the screaming turian that was firing at her, his yells cut off by gurgling sounds as a bullet punctured his neck. Behind her she could still hear the elderly woman and krogan exchanging punches. She turned and put several rounds into nearby turian before the butt of a rifle slammed into the side of her face, her entire world exploding in pain as she realized the blow had fractured bone. Through the pain she saw her attacker was a pale white turian, throwing her shredded shield at him with all her strength, Telesetea took the chance to turn around and fire several rounds into a krogan that was advancing on the girls, gaining his attention in the process before he was kicked backwards by a biotic push, one of the girls focusing her barriers down on the krogan while several of them concentrated their fire onto him. She whipped back around, the turian she’d thrown her bloody corpse shield at pushing barely pushing the body off of him, Telesetea raised her gun to put him down for good before the turian delivered a kick to her leg, bringing her down on top of him. She landed hard on the pale turian, receiving a headbutt almost as soon as she did, pain temporarily blinding her before she felt herself thrown off of the turian and then straddled, clawed hands raining down on her as struggled to bring her gun up, the pale turian batting her hands away whenever she got a bead on him. Just beyond her she could hear a turian taunting her, a quick glance showed the turian that had shot Amese was still alive, arm badly mangled. Anger shot through her and Telesetea screamed before landing a terrible hit with her pistol to the pale turian’s face, knocking him off of her in an instant. Telesetea jumped on him, pressed her gun to his temple and fired, the pale turian’s head exploding against her before she aimed at the turian with the broken arm and put several holes in his chest. She felt something brush against her and snarled, her gun whipping out as she looked for a new enemy. It was only the old lady, covered in krogan blood, dragging away her husband.
She’d almost shot her.
She faced the entrance of the diner, firing several rounds at a retreating krogan, the Nazacus girl yelling threats from behind him as she was pushed out by her mercenary. Through the now open doors she could see three cars pull up, several more turians and krogans rushing out of them, guns blazing, bullets slamming into their diner’s front, shattering windows and punching through the blinds to hit the chairs, tables and counters inside.
“Shit!’ Suiir cursed as she jumped behind the counter, a medical kit in one hand and a shotgun in another, bullets just missing her by seconds.
“Who’s still here!” Telesetea yelled out over the sounds of gunfire, hoping none of her girls had been killed in those few seconds before firing her heavy pistol over the counter, a hail of return fire making her pull her hand back.
“All of us!” Amenra yelled out from somewhere in the back. “Seiyes is tits up, took a nasty punch from a charging krogan. How’s Amese over there!”
Telesetea wondered too, she couldn’t see the youngest girl from here.
“She’s just being a bitch,” Suiir yelled out from behind the counter, “She’ll be fine.”
“You keep her safe!” Telesetea yelled, “We’ll go deal with the Nazacus girl!” Receiving a near the diner’s front doors, her barrier flashing blue as supersonic razer hail impacted against it. As she slammed into the wall she saw her girls surge forward, their own guns barking return fire as they moved up. Irel took a hit to her leg, dropping her as she yelled out in pain, Amenra pulling her into cover.
Telesetea heard the telltale thuds of heavier caliber weaponry and felt impacts on the other side of the wall, felt herself be pulled backwards by someone near her as the wall she was using as cover exploded, showering her face with shrapnel. She fell hard, blood and pain washing all over her face. Blinking through the sweat and blood she saw two krogans, armored like tanks and sporting heavy machine guns slowly advancing on her diner, streams of bullets bouncing off of their barriers and armor as if they were simply flies being swatted aside. Caepia was hiding behind one of the cars, her cackling, yelling and cursing nearly drowned out by the heavy gunfire.
“FUCK!”
Telesetea turned, barely making out the elderly couple from their hiding spot near the restrooms. Both of them. The elderly man, who by all accounts should be dead yet lived, and the elderly woman, who should not have been able to beat a krogan to death yet did.
Again she didn’t have time to wonder how that was possible, more concerned by the near unstoppable krogan duo who was advancing on their position, their near endless stream of heavy firepower wearing away at her diner’s walls. Off in the distance she could hear the sounds of sirens, though Telesetea worried that the police force on Lluvia, which hadn’t grown alongside the city itself since its founding, would be unable to do anything except die. Her fears were proven right when a police vehicle arrived, one of the krogans turning on his heel and firing up at the flying vehicle, the heavy rounds punching through the craft without difficulty. Telesetea saw blood splatter from inside the craft, and then watched as it slammed into the street, skidded along and smashed into another storefront further down the road. She heard cheering out in the street, Caepia leading the cheer.
A cheer that abruptly died when one of the krogans exploded.
A blindingly bright bolt of lightning had arced out and turned that walking tank into nothing more than a rapidly expanding ball of flesh and blood, the krogan’s armor razer shrapnel. The violence of the blast took the nearby krogan’s left arm off at the elbow, the muscled beast yelling out in pain and bringing his gun up, firing several shots into the old man who had brought the thunder. He fell to the ground, his chest blown open.
The elderly woman shot out from her position, faster than Telesetea could track, and was suddenly in the surviving krogan’s face, fists flashing green as she delivered violent blows onto the armored lizard. Caepia’s group hadn’t recovered and Telesetea gave the order to push their advantage. Several turians died before Caepia’s group found their sight again, Telesetea ran out into the street, intent on closing the gap between the two groups, rushing past the elderly lady who ripped the krogan’s head-crest off with her bare hands, the krogan screaming out in pain in a way she’d never heard before. She fired two rounds through the nearest car’s window, killing a turian inside, the corpse slumping over and hitting the horn with half a face. Amenra ran up beside her, her assault rifle barking cover fire, her hand flashing biotic blue as she slapped a grenade out of the air and redirected it towards a group of turians being led by a krogan. The car they used as cover exploded as the grenade landed under it, flipping the entire craft over and landing on the surviving krogan, who yelled out in pain and anger as he was trapped under the flaming wreckage. Shots from her girls ended the lives of the single turian survivor as Telesetea ran forward, using her free hand to biotically hold the screaming krogan in place, slowly cooking the beast under the flaming wreckage and firing at Caepia with her pistol. The turian bitch didn’t have the decency to die, her krogan bodyguard taking every shot aimed at her, his shields and armor unaffected as he shoved the slaver’s daughter into their sole remaining car, several of the turian mercenaries rushing into the vehicle after them as it began to speed off. Only two turians remained, instantly cut down as they were left out in the open.
All the nearby hostiles dead, Telesetea turned around in time to hear the Krogan die screaming as the elderly woman shoved her fist through his brains and the elderly man, completely fine, run up to her and telling her to get into the car while tossing a turian corpse out of the driver’s seat, the horn finally falling silent.
“What? We’ve won, she’s gone!” she replied, her mind struggling to understand what was happening. “If the bitch wants to run, let her.”
“You think she’ll just run?” the elderly woman said, most of her body now orange with krogan blood, “I don’t think she’s learned her manners, she tracked you down once, what stops her from doing it again?”
Amenra walked over to them, hearing the conversation. “She’s right boss. You remember what the Nazacus family was like, she’ll carry that grudge her whole life.”
“So let’s make sure her life is short!” the elderly man said from the driver’s seat, “Bitch shot Amese. Sweet girl. I like her.”
Telesetea nodded, realizing that they were right. She’d deal with Caepia now rather than let her become a problem later on. “Alright girls, listen up!” she called out to her group, “Me and Amenra are going to hunt down the bitch that shot up our diner. Stay here and wait for the cops, show them our security footage if we’ve got any, if not… we’ll, don’t cause any more trouble. This was all self-defense, no reason to get on the wrong side of the law.” She saw one of the girls running into the back before coming back out with some portable kinetic barriers, handing them over to her.
“Here boss, some protection.” She said, her face bloody and her clothing torn in several places. “I don’t think the Gaians would consider going after her to be “self-defense” boss…” she trailed off, alluding to the quite clear legal issues she and Amenra were about to undertake.
“I know. I don’t care either.” Telesetea said, before muttering “Make sure to send a report along with any security footage. Stay safe.”
“We’re losing her!” the elderly man complaining, the car humming with power, “Let’s go!”
Telesetea nodded to her group and jumped into the backseat with Amenra, the car speeding off as soon as the doors were closed.
***
The elderly man drove like a madman, the streets zooming by past them at breakneck speeds. Telesetea wondered how they hadn’t hit anyone before seeing several crashed vehicles along the road, several people running and screaming. Caepia must have scared everyone off of the streets and she could hear more sirens in the distance, the police force evidentally mobilizing in greater force after they learned how heavily armed their group was.
“Wait!” Telesetea yelled, “How are you still ali-“
Bullets tore through the windshield, one of them finding their mark in Telesetea’s shoulder. She screamed out in pain as Amenra leaned out her window, assault rifle returning fire with the two turians who were firing at them from Caepia’s escape vehicle. In the front seats the elderly man yelled for his wife to take the wheel as he turned in his seat and grabbed ahold of her,
“This might hurt!” he yelled over the gunfire, glass shattering and bullets flying around them. “Never tried on a blue girl before!” He jabbed his fist into her shoulder, his hand glowing brightly as he did so, Telesetea screamed out in pain before her yell caught in her throat, her body began to feel fantastic before the euphoria was over. When the elderly man leaned back, her shoulder was fine, no evidence of the wound that existed only moments before.
“What?”
“Get your head in the game!” the elderly man yelled.
Telesetea was done asking questions, instead she popped out of her window, aiming her heavy pistol at one of their attackers, her shot missing wide as Caepia’s car suddenly made a hard right, their own car barely making the turn in time to continue the chase.
“She’s heading for Monte Vista!” the elderly woman yelled.
Being jerked around by the insane driving maneuvers, swerving to avoid the few cars on the driving paths, the chase continued. Telesetea cursed before finally drawing a bead on one of the turians, shooting him in the shoulder, the mercenary dropping his rifle in the process before being smashed into an uncoming tailer, the top half of his body being flung out into the road. Telesetea grinned as she heard Caepia berate the driver for costing her a bodyguard. The other turian responded by tossing a grenade in their direction. The elderly man only just managed to swerve out of the way of the self-guiding explosive, though the blast did manage to blow out Amenra’s door, the girl hissing in pain as her ear drum was blown out, the car violently buffeted by the shockwave. The elderly man reached out, lightning flying out from his hands and hitting the backend of the car, flaying open the entire back end of the car in a shower of sparks and light. The turian disappeared in that blast and Caepia’s car began to belch fumes and fail.
Telesetea yelled to the elderly driver, “Ram that bitch out of the air!” The car’s engine strained as it speed up, the poor vehicle struggling to continue functioning after all it had been through. It pulled through however, and soon the elderly woman told everyone to brace themselves as they slammed into the back of Caepia’s car, both cars falling out of the sky as they both finally failed. The front of Telesetea’s car crumped forward, killing the elderly couple, Amenra yelled curses as she was flung out of the car and somehow Telesetea held on to her seat long enough to fire off a few shots at the rival car, miraculously hitting Caepia in the leg as she gripped her seatbelt, the krogan bodyguard cursing his employer as they all fell to the earth. Telesetea could hear both cars engines whining and the altitude warnings blaring as they both smashed into the ground.
***
Every single part of Telesetea screamed in pain at her. She dragged herself out of the wreckage of the car, flames eating away at the entire car and stumbled out into the ground. Gasping for air through a punctured lung and attempting to stand on a broken leg, she heard the crack of rifle fire. Raising her pistol she saw Amenra, who looked as bad as she felt, being carried off by the elderly woman, tough bitch that she was, while she fired wild shots somewhere. That somewhere groaned in pain and Telesetea turned, the elderly man incinerating the krogan with a directed stream of fire that seemed to burst from his fingers.
But what drew most of her attention was the sound of a female turian whimpering. Telesetea drew herself up to her feet, pain shooting through her and letting her realize that she needed immediate medical attention, and shambled over to the crashed car, sparks and small explosions still cooking off from its engine block. The Nacazus girl was there, crushed and pined between the dashboard and a broken seat, barely able to move. Telesetea looked down on her, the young turian girl looking incredibly pitiful, tears streaming from her eyes as she attempted to look up at Telesetea in defiance. Telesetea put her heavy pistol up to the girl’s head, causing her to sob harder.
Suddenly Telesetea was struck by just how young Caepia must be. Only barely an adult.
It didn’t matter. She still pulled the trigger.
|
|
|
Post by Ruinus on Jun 30, 2016 20:19:06 GMT
Dedicated to Our Lady of Veracruz
Known only as “Rose”
Noble in Life
Healer for the Sick
Mother to Orphans
Wrestled with the Nephilim
Died to Resurrect Veracruz
Righteous in Death The plaque had caught Telesetea’s attention shortly after she’d woken up in her hospital room; its reflective gold finish had been shining directly into her eyes. Once she’d found out she was able to walk, and found most of her personal belongings in a drawer next to her bed, she’d walked over and scanned the plaque, running it through her omni-tool’s translation software. She wasn’t sure what a Nephilim was, but it was probably nasty enough to deserve its own line, and she wasn’t quite sure what “resurrect Veracruz” meant. The annotations mentioned Veracruz being a state of some sort in a country called Mexico on Gaia, but resurrect made no sense. Metaphorical maybe. Telesetea looked down at herself. She’d checked her omni-tool for the date. Only eighteen hours since she’d dealt with Caepia. She only felt a little out of it, amazing considering her injuries should have put her out of action for at least a week. She then thought on the old married couple. She’d seen them take hits that should have killed them. She had seen them die. Several times. She looked back at the plaque. Hell, it might not be a metaphor. “Wasn’t expecting a show so early in the-” Telesetea was startled from her thoughts, turning just time to see the old woman smack her husband upside the head. “How are you doing dearie?” the old woman smiled as she walked over, leading Telesetea back to her bed, keeping her facing her husband the whole time. “You should sit down; blood magic can work miracles, but they still had to pump you full of medicine when the asari doctor looked you over.” “Blood magic?” Telesetea croaked out. “There’s some of the best hemamancers on Lluvia, called in ever since you aliens showed up.” The old man offered. “Oh, big words.” The old lady replied, “I remember you used big words whenever you wanted to impress me. Who are you trying to impress dear?” “No one.” The old man answered, sitting down on a nearby chair. “I’ll call a nurse,” the old woman said as she pressed a button on a nearby console, Telesetea heard her mutter something under her breath; “He still thinks he’s 20.” “How are you two-?” Telesetea began, wondering how to continue. “How are we fine?” the old lady continued, “Dearie, it’ll take more than your fancy space guns to hurt us. We’ve been through too much to get killed on vacation by some brats.” She looked over at her husband, who was nodding along. “Plus, I’ll give my hubby some credit, he’s an accomplished blood practitioner and I’ve got to be made of sterner stuff to throw punches like I do.” The old woman laughed, flexing her old, wrinkly arm. Telesetea followed the old woman’s fist as she did. It was old, wrinkled and had gored several full grown krogans in heavy armor. A knock at the door heralded the appearance of a nurse along with an older man and an asari. “How are you feeling?” the older man asked as the nurse handing him a datapad that scrolled with numbers and figures, he medical readout. He only glanced at it, his expression eager for her to go on. “I’m feeling fine… just a little light-headed. I could use something to eat and drink.” Her throat was dry, and she realized she felt like she hadn’t eaten in weeks. “Doctor?” “Yes, yes! Forgive my manners, I just realized we haven’t been properly introduced Miss Edari. I am Dr. Gambaryan, head doctor here at Saint Rose. I am the head medical practitioner here and acting as your physician.” The older man seemed amazingly enthusiastic; the room seemed to brighten just by him being in the room. Telesetea wasn’t sure if his attitude was helping her or further confusing her. Her eyes wandered over to the asari. “Dr. Iessara,” she said. “I consulted.” She motioned Dr. Gambaryan for the medical readout, her eyes scrutinizing the information while Dr. Gambaryan stepped up to Telesetea’s side, an omni-tool flashing around his hands, a medical scanning light washing over her. “Dr. Iessara,” he said, fiddling with his device, “Looks like our patient is doing wonderfully, full recovery!” The asari walked over, her own omni-tool lighting up and running its own scan. “Miss Edari,” the Gaian doctor continued, “I’ll get you something to eat and drink, since you seem fine enough for solids. Luckily for you, digestive tracks are similar enough that growing you a stomach was a breeze!” the older man chuckled, Telesetea chuckled right alongside him. “Did you just say you grew me a stomach?” “Yes!” the doctor beamed, “Medical history, right here under my watch. Fascinating stuff! I must say, the asari body is quite fascinating, did you know that your bodies are internally similar to ours? Surface similarities are one thing, but the insides too? Amazing! It’s almost… huh, well!” he suddenly trailed off, his toothy grin beaming. “Well, as far as I am concerned, you can be discharged as soon as you want! Oh, first I’ll get you your food!” and with that he turned to the nurse, talking to the young woman about bringing up some of their best food. Telesetea looked over at Dr. Iessara, hopefully getting some answers out of her own kind. “I don’t know what to tell you Miss Edari,” the asari woman began. “According to this chart, the doctor’s scan and my own, you are in perfect health despite being near death only yesterday. I wonder if I’ll have to find a new job,” she joked. “But, I’ll have to agree with Dr. Gambaryan, since you are in perfect health, you can be discharged at your convenience. The feeling of light-headedness will pass, a side effect of the anesthesia I ordered, for all the good that did.” Telesetea was almost afraid to ask, but did. “What did they do to me?” The asari doctor glanced at the older couple, who were busy talking to themselves, clearly not interested in medical conversations. “Honestly, it looked like the sort of medicine we practiced back on Thessia thousands of years ago. A room that looked like as if someone was building a temple then crammed some medical equipment onto the altars. I was this close,” she gestured with her hands, “to calling the asari embassy to take you into protective custody under asari medical malpractice laws.” She sighed. “But it worked. I shouldn’t complain, any medicine that can heal people like it did you is wonderful, as a doctor I recognize that. On the other hand I can’t believe I just saw what I did. They grew you a stomach, he wasn’t kidding about that. Yesterday I saw… I think I saw one of the doctors here… no. You wouldn’t believe me.” There was a long pause. “Here,” she tapped a few buttons on her omni-tool, Telesetea’s lighting up in response. “That’s the number for my private practice, call me if you feel, well anything. This Gaian medicine,” her face seemed confused, unsure of how to say what she wanted to say. “I find it hard to believe.” “I do too,” Telesetea responded, earning a chuckle from the asari doctor as she left the room. Telesetea wondered what sort of world she would live in from now on, one where hospitals brought people from the brink of death to perfect health in the span of hours. One where old ladies could kill krogans with her bare hands, where old men could pop heavily armored krogans like bloody balloons with lightning from his hands. Where some people didn’t seem to stay dead. She glanced over at the plaque again, the word “resurrect” burned into her mind. She remembered all the information she’d gathered, all the junk data she’d written off as superstition. She realized she accepted it now. Magic, immortal warriors, old gods, a war against monsters. It was probably saner this way, she realized. Accept it all now and the world will make sense again. She turned and looked at the elderly couple, who smiled at her. “Do you really want to eat hospital food?” the elderly man asked. Telesetea was probably insane.
|
|
|
Post by Ruinus on Jun 30, 2016 20:19:22 GMT
The door slid open, revealing the strange alien face.
“Uh, hello…” the boy shifted under her gaze, “I, we live there,” he motioned behind him, to the room across the hall, a woman standing in the doorway. “We don’t know if… are there rules about cutting off utilities at night? I mean, do you still have power?”
Riah shook her head, her eyes never leaving the boy’s face. “No,” she answered in a heavy accent, “The landlord on this level doesn’t want to lift a talon or spend a credit on fixing the wiring here. Power outages are normal.” The boy’s eyes fell at that, before he turned to relay the information to the woman, who simply nodded that she’d heard.
“Are they…” the boy stuttered, and Riah wondered why he had such trouble speaking, “How long do they usually last?”
“Sometimes days,” Riah answered, “We pay for what we get.” She shrugged her shoulders. She was a little confused as to why the boy and woman seemed to be so surprised at the state of this level. “You might want to go to a hardware store or some pawn shop,” she motioned further up the hall, off in the distance where the glow of several advertisement panels were barely visible, “There’s a volus up there that-”
“Riah, who is it?” her mother called, her voice coming from the kitchen.
“It’s the humans from across the hall.” She’d answered back in Khelish, her translator turned off.
“What do they want?” her mother shot back.
“They are asking about the outages, I was telling the boy about Var-”
“Invite them in!” her mother cut her off, walking towards her as she wrung her hands with a rag. “Hello there!” she welcomed the boy, “Your power is out?” The boy nodded. “Oh, is that your mother there?” she asked before waving the woman over, “Please, come in, come in!” the boy and mother seemed to hesitate, unsure what to say. Riah nudged her mother.
“Why are you inviting them in?” she asked in a whisper, keeping her eyes on the two humans. “They are humans! They are da-”
“Extranet ghost stories don’t scare me,” her mother snapped in her native tongue. “Everyone is equal in the slums; we have to help each other.”
Riah ground her teeth, knowing that that was that, her mother had spoken and made a decision. Still, she was wary as the boy and the mother walked into her home, their eyes darting around, the boy’s eyes widening as he saw the bundle of cables and power generators stuck to their space-side window. Her mother introduced herself to the woman.
“Thank you for inviting us,” the woman said, her voice musical and warm despite the awkwardness of the situation. “My name is Katja and this,” she patted the boy’s shoulder, “is Santi, my son.”
Riah’s eyes narrowed. In her state of alertness she seemed to catch the short moment of hesitation that her mother apparently missed. That woman, Katja, was not the boy’s mother. She caught how quick this Katja was to change the topic.
“Welcome to our home,” her mother went on, “My name is Yili and my daughter here is Riah. Please, sit down sit down. You’re the new neighbors we’ve been hearing so much about, if you don’t mind me saying, you two are the first Gaians we’ve seen in person. I thought your kind had horns and hooves?”
Katja laughed while Santi snorted, the contrast between the lyrical laughter and socially-awkward snort grating on Riah’s ears.
“No,” Katja smiled, “You’re thinking of the forest people, or the satyrs. Us humans are just like you quarians or asari.”
“You are!” Yili said, amazed as she looked Katja and Santi up and down, noting the facial similarities. “Except for the legs and fingers,” she said, causing the humans to glance down at their hands and legs, “you are near identical to us! Amazing.”
Riah drowned out the conversation that her mother made with the woman, angry that her quiet evening had been ruined by the appearance of these humans. Frankly, she didn’t want them in her home. Who knows when they’d start proselytizing about their mother goddess or some other absurd cult? She looked over at the boy, catching him staring at her before he turned away, his eyes roaming every which way but on her. Riah grew angry, and crossed her arms over her chest, once again cursing her people’s need for these suits, for the leers people would throw at quarrian females. She reached over the couch’s armrest, pulling a small blanket and covering herself with it in an attempt to hide her figure from the boy. The boy seemed to notice her intent and kept his eyes off of her after that. She scoffed inside her helmet, wondering if all humans were as shameless as he was. He appeared to be around the same age as she was, if the similarity to quarrian appearance held true at various ages, maybe slightly younger, and furthermore was an alien, a human. How she could be attractive to him baffled her, and wished he’d kept his disgusting xenophilic gaze to himself.
Several minutes passed by where her mother conversed with the human woman, informing them that most of the tenants dealt with the power outages in their own ways, small power generators were sold by a volus merchant some ways down the hall, while people who lived against the hull like they did could try to rig up some solar generators. Her mother commiserated with the two humans, who hadn’t been informed of the outages and had no way to deal with them yet. She commiserated with the fact that, as new tenants that had been mostly ignored due to their species, they hadn’t had time to properly prepare for the outages, for the cold and for the lack of light. She nodded, before offering to let them stay for the night and -
“What?” Riah asked, looking at her mother as if she had grown krogan’s crest, the same question coming out of Santi’s mouth.
“Hmmmm,” her mother hummed, her bright eyes visible beneath the blue visor of her helmet, “If you two want, that is,” the two human visitors looked at each other, “We have space here, and our solar collector is still working, which means we have temperature controls.” She leveled the woman with a stern gaze, “It will get quite cold at night. These buildings weren’t well insulated.”
The pair looked at each other, Santi’s eyes flicked over to look at her before turning back to Katja, the two talking in some human language that the translators couldn’t decipher. They looked incredibly hesitant to take her mother up on her offer, and she wished to all the ancestors that would listen that they’d refuse. Decent people would refuse. Finally, they answered and her stomach dropped.
“Well,” the woman began, looking sheepish; “if it isn’t too much trouble… we would appreciate staying out of the cold tonight.”
“Wonderful!” her mother chirped, “You two dears can stay in the living room. And listen, maybe we’ll get lucky and the outage will only last a few hours and you two can sleep in your own beds tonight…” her mother trailed off, both her and Riah knowing that the nights without any form of power were common. “Oh…” her mother suddenly looked crestfallen, and Riah hoped she’d remembered something that would mean the human’s stay would be impossible. “I’m not sure if humans can eat our food,” she muttered.
“We have our own foo-oh shit.” The woman said, turning to Santi, “Go get our food some of our food out of the fridge, and something to drink.” The boy stood up before she began again, “And some plates and napkins!” she called out to him as he left their home and walked across the hall. She turned back to look at her mother and smiled, “So… why are you two wearing space suits?”
***
What had followed had been a long, tiresome dinner and night spent with two complete strangers, the two women talking and easing themselves into something that Riah suspected would lead to the two beggars taking more from them alongside some cross-cultural exchange she’d expect out of children. Why do you wear those suits? What is it like being new to the galaxy? Why do you have three fingers? Why do you have five? Riah may have found it interesting to see and talk to two humans in some other time, somewhere other than in her home in her living room while cutting into her personal time, but presently found herself cursing the two people and her mother for inviting them in. Even discounting the fact that they were humans, they were still complete strangers; it was madness to invite them in to spend the night.
Sometimes her mother’s bleeding heart made terrible decisions.
Riah looked around her house.
Terrible decisions.
***
“You are not going out tomorrow.”
“What? Why?” Riah asked. “I was going to go buy-”
“I don’t care what you were going to go buy, you were incredibly rude to our guests today.”
“Why did you even let them in?” she asked, her voice a harsh whisper, “We don’t know anything about humans, don’t you know they are dangerous? It’s not even legal for them to live here!” Her mother simply stared. “Citadel law hasn’t been ratified on them, they haven’t been cleared to live anywhere outside of a few systems and this isn’t one of them. And what if they have some disease that hasn’t been discovered yet?”
“Don’t give me any of that.” Her mother waved off her concerns, “And remembers that I’m your mother, I’m not as blind as you think I am.” She threw over a blanket, which Riah recognized as her favorite. “We’re quarians,” her mother muttered. “Don’t you forget that.”
Riah pulled her blankets over herself, turning away from her mother.
“I know what we are,” she whispered. “And how little we have.”
***
Riah woke up earlier than usual that day, silently walking into the living room and looked around the room to check for any missing items. Nothing. The woman was sleeping on the couch, the boy beside her on the floor, her hand protectively running through his hair. It was a bit of an odd sight, especially since Riah was sure they weren’t related. She wondered if they were perhaps lovers and frowned, disgust boiling in her mind.
It was so early in the morning and she was already angry. She walked into her kitchen, still able to keep her eyes on the two sleeping figures and searched for her favorite snack; that always calmed her down. Finding her sweets, she attached it to the custom made quarian food port, clamping the seals to her mask, a straw pressing against her cheek. She sat in the kitchen, drinking her favorite sweet, as she opened her omni-tool, searching for information on humans and hereditary appearance. From what she could tell, Gaians were similar to every other race in the galaxy with children that took after their parents.
She found another one of her drinks and attached that one to her mask, finding that a single one of the sweets was not enough to get over the irritation she was feeling. She glanced down at her omni-tool again, checking the station’s internal clocks. Just before 0600. Riah found it rude that they didn’t wake up as early as she did, that they hadn’t already thanked her mother for allowing them to stay the night and heading back to their apartment. Instead they were sleeping in.
Third sweet should do the trick.
“If you were really worried about your weight you wouldn’t be drinking those.”
Sometimes Riah really hated her mother.
“By the way, you are still grounded.” She reminded her, a yawn escaping her lips as she opened the refrigerator, searching for her own breakfast. “And you are going to help Katja and Santi connect their unit to our solar collector.”
“What?” Riah hissed. “We are going to let them leech off of our solar power too? When will this end mother?”
“It will end when they have enough credit to buy a power generator of their own.” She stated, clearly she was not in the mood for an argument so early in the day. “Keep your voice down,” she added, “You’ll wake them up.”
“I am not helping them,” Riah argued. “You can help them all you want, I won’t share what meager things we have with these dirty-”
That was as far as she got before her mother slapped her, her open palm hitting the mouth of her helmet and causing it to bump painfully into her lips. She looked at her mother with wide eyes.
“If I ever, if I ever hear you say such a hateful thing again…” Her mother held her tongue, nearly shaking in fury. “You are grounded for a week and you will help these poor people hook themselves to my solar collector so that they can have power like every decent person does. Do I make myself clear?” she asked, the food pouch nearly bursting open in her tight grip.
Riah nodded. Turned on her heel and left, walking back into her and her mother’s shared bedroom as she fought back tears and the pain her lips still felt, she cast a dirty glance over at the human pair, angry and ashamed to see the woman awake, their conversation probably overheard. She angrily punched in the keypad commands to close the bedroom door before taking to her bed and pulling the covers over her.
She angrily cursed the two humans, cursed the bias quarians faced, and more importantly, cursed her mother for bringing them to these slums in the first place.
|
|
|
Post by Ruinus on Jun 30, 2016 20:19:39 GMT
Riah scoffed as she looked over the texture files for Tuchanka. Why the idiots at Verthasti thought it’d be a great idea to give everything 10k textures was beyond her. Actually no, it made perfect sense. They wanted to overhaul Tuchanka and make it appear like a modern game despite running on an old buggy engine, so they went overboard on all the textures. But who needs to see 10k grass,10k rocks, 10k trees? Most of the time the player would be running right past them or the textures would be hidden underneath a bunch of other terrain. Oh Keelah. Riah realized it was worse than that. Everything was 10k. All the normal and specular maps for every single object in the game.
No wonder she had such a terrible FPS count and micro-shutters.
She sighed as she ordered her omni-tool to load up all the files on HoloPaint Pro and set about automating a ultra-pass sharpe-
“What are you doing?” she asked Santi, finally fed up with his constant fiddling. “You’ve been sitting there doing Ancestors-know-what for the past twenty minutes.” He and his mother had been visiting their apartment regularly, Riah noted that something approaching a genuine friendship had formed between her mother and Katja – though why that was she couldn’t fathom as the humans had proven to be nothing but beggars looking for handouts.
“Ah, I...” He looked down as something on his omni-tool flashed and beeped. “Trying to fix this thing. Something’s wrong with it, and uh, I think I have a virus or something, it keeps activating the fabricator and using up all my gel.”
“Uh huh,” Riah answered, sure that he’d gotten that idiotic virus one of the local street gangs had been bragging about writing a few weeks ago. By now almost everyone had some sort of fix for it and Varlus had even written up solution for it that he’d sold for a few credits. Either the human hadn’t figured out how to solve it on his own or didn’t know about Varlus’ fix or couldn’t afford it. “Well,” she finally drawled, “good luck with that.”
She looked back at her omni-tool, HoloPaint Pro telling her that it’d take around 3 hours to completely redo all of the textures, which meant no Tuchanka for that long. She wondered if it was even worth it, Varlus was holding a Cision Technologies 25 TB F-28d… unless he’d sold it in the week she’d been grounded. Which would be just like him.
“Oh shit!’
Santi yelled out in pain, his omn-tool had apparently ejected a bit of scalding hot gel onto his wrist.
Riah would have smirked or laughed, but she could hear his skin sizzle as it made contact. She also remembered the pain she’d felt through her suit when the same virus-induced malfunction occurred with her own device.
Next thing she knew, her mother and Katja, who had been talking amicably in the kitchen over some hot drinks rushed over, her mother ordering her to get the first aid kit.
“No, no, Yili, don’t worry about it,” the woman said, “Don’t waste your medicine, Santi can fix this.”
“Yeah,” Santi agreed, still grimacing from the pain before his wrist split open, blood dripping out of it. Riah heard her mother gasp and was about to ask the human boy what in Rannoch’s name was wrong with him before blood flowed up his wrist and over his wound before disappearing back into his wrists, the nasty burn he’d suffered gone.
No one said anything for a few seconds, the boy nervously rubbing his arm.
“That’s amazing.” Yili breathed as she glanced at Riah. “I’d heard but…”
“We noticed that none of you have Anima,” Katja said, rubbing Santi’s arm and causing the boy to blush. “That’s as amazing to us as our Anima is to you. I couldn’t imagine not having quick first aid… or having to sleep so many hours in a day.”
“Is that safe?” Riah asked, pulling her blanket around her even more, “Crazy human magic or no, that was still blood, it’s a bio-hazard-”
“Riah!” her mother interrupted.
“-and we’re quarians.” Riah finished, ignoring her mother’s outburst. “That’s great that he’s fine now, but I don’t want to get sick because of some spilled blood that might seep through my suit.”
“Riah, that’s enough!” Yili stated, before clearing her throat. “Although,” she fidgeted, “did he spill any?”
The humans eyes widened, realizing the trouble they may have potentially caused.
“No!” Santi half-shouted, “I didn’t spill any, I promise!” He raised his arms up, his wrists visible and unbloodied. “I mean, I never spill any before, so I wouldn’t now, but maybe I did and-”
Riah sighed and switched through her omni-tool’s programs before coming up to her custom scanner. Santi was bathed in blue light as she washed the sensor readings over him, which all came up clean. “He’s clean,” well, as clean as a poor human can be, “but don’t do that again.” She glared at the boy, who thankfully nodded and turned away.
“It was startling to see all the blood,” her mother continued, the conversation going back into territory Riah didn’t’ really care to listen to.
Back to Tuchanka. Once she got the F-28d, it should make up for the FPS loss caused by the insane texture sizes. Still it wouldn’t hurt to downsize them all anyway. Now if only someone could release a patch that made the game less terribly buggy.
Oh, she was getting dragged back into a conversation with the humans.
“Yes?” she asked, aware that her mother was watching. Looking up from her screen, she saw the human woman looking in her direction, she was probably asking her something.
“Your mother was telling me that your friend runs a store and that he sells a fix for Santi’s omni-tool?” Katja asked.
“Yes.” Riah answered.
Katja smirked. Riah hated that. The human woman seemed to think her attitude was funny. “Well, could you tell Santi how to get there? I’d rather not have him have to use his Anima if he can avoid it.”
Riah was about to write down the directions somewhere when she realized that now was her chance to visit Varlus’.
“Why don’t I take him?” she offered, trying to keep the grin off of her face. Both her mother and the boy looked surprised. Santi was looking at her with an odd expression, presumably conjuring up perverted thoughts of her as he did so. Not even in your dreams she thought. “Mom, you know how Varlus is with that security drone of his. He walks in suddenly, Varlus is going to get startled and his drone is going to start shooting.”
“He what?” she heard the boy ask.
“I’ll take Santi, make sure he doesn’t get in any trouble and make sure Varlus doesn’t charge more for the fix than he usually does.” Another idea sprung to her mind. “And Santi can ask about collector prices for their own solar unit!”
Riah nearly jumped out of her seat when her mother agreed and began to talk to the human woman about usual prices for solar collectors. Riah quickly dashed back into their bedroom, opened up her private chest and placed her credit chip inside one of her suit’s pouches while pulling a coat over her suit in the process, the station’s temperature controls weren’t the best and she wanted more clothing between her and Santi.
“Riah, make sure Varlus doesn’t overcharge Santi alright?”
“Yes mom.”
“Keep your omni-tool on in case I need to call you.”
“Yes mom.”
Riah rolled her eyes, hearing Santi receiving a similar talk from Katja. They hugged. Riah found their hug odd.
“Why don’t you disconnect the micro-fab before we leave?” Riah suggested as they walked out the door and down the hall, it wouldn’t do to have that scalding-gel-virus act up in the streets, or worse, land on some thug who’d take offense. One of the apartment doors was open and Saestzea, the bitch, was hanging out in the doorway. She ignored Riah and gave Santi a once over, smiling as she did so. She was about to open her mouth when Riah cut her off. “Go whore yourself elsewhere Sae, we’re busy.”
“Afraid I’m gonna take your suit partner from you, you fat virgin?”
Luckily they’d been walking fast enough that Riah didn’t have to entertain the bitch with another shouting match. She settled for an obscene hand gesture over her shoulder.
“That’s Saestzea,” she answered Santi’s look. “She’s had more docking procedures than the Citadel.”
“The what?” Santi asked.
“I mean she’s the station whore. Sleeps with anyone and doesn’t even charge money while doing it.”
“Oh.”
“I don’t care where you stick your parts, but Sae usually hangs around with some of the worst people who are very territorial around her. And if you catch their attention they’ll come looking for you. And since you spend almost all your time at my place that means trouble for me, understand?”
“Oh.” Santi answered, nervously looking around the hall at the few stares they’d attracted from the exchange. “Yeah, I’ll stay away from her then. I mean, even if she wasn’t trouble I’d stay away. Ka-, my ma,” Riah looked at him, “told me to stay away from girls like that, I don’t want their attention.”
Riah scoffed. “There’s a whole race of girls like that. But she’s the worst I’ve met. By the way, have you been paying attention where we’ve been going?”
“Yeah, we’ve been going straight.”
“Straight to that elevator,” Riah pointed, the base of the elevator covered in advertisements for several shops on the upper floors. “Floor 28. Also,” she added as they approached the entrances to the station’s central elevator hub, “If you ever see a couple of vorcha standing outside the elevators, walk away. They’ll hold you up and ask you to pay a toll to use it, if you can’t pay they’ll just steal anything on you. Violently.”
Santi nodded, taking the seat next to her in the empty elevator. He seemed to mull over the information before asking Riah, “Aren’t there cops or something? I mean uh, if they’re there enough for you to warn me about them, people know about them right?”
Riah scoffed, wondering why the kid was so naïve. “They probably pay off the security on these levels. There aren’t cops on this station, it’s not like C-Sec or any other actual police force, just some hired mercs for the people on the top floors.”
“Alright,” Santi replied, “Well, thanks for telling me.” He offered a smile.
“I’m sure I’d get another smack from my mother if I didn’t at least tell you how to survive here.” Riah looked at the elevator’s display. “I hate these slow elevators. At least this one doesn’t have any music.” She pointed over to the single remaining speaker, a giant hole from a handgun from someone who couldn’t cope anymore. Santi followed her finger as she pointed to the other places speakers should be, “Stolen for parts,” she added.
There was about a few minutes of silence as they rode the empty elevator down. Riah often wondered just how dilapidated these elevators were that a trip of a few floors on a station that wasn’t that big often took as long as half an hour. Her important musings on the failings of Thessa-Vilk Elevator Company were interrupted when Santi asked something that startled her.
“So, how come you hate humans?”
“I don’t.” Riah answered, wondering why he’d asked something to forward. Here she was, thinking Santi was a pathetic shy pervert. “I don’t hate your species. I hate turians, I hate krogans, I hate asari, I hate the geth. Some of the other races are tolerable, once you learn what they are and how to deal with them.”
“But why?” the human asked, and Riah was reminded just how new humans were to the galaxy.
“Load up a history vid,” Riah answered, “Look up what’s happened to my people.” Riah would have left it at that, but whenever she started it was hard for her to stop. “But I don’t even need the Morning War for reason, you know why?” Santi nodded no. “Because of the reputation the asari have as the galaxy’s sex-crazed maniacs, a reputation they earned on their knees and backs with their “maiden” stage, some of the galaxy’s perverts started looking at us.” She glanced over at the floor display, they still had time. “Have you seen turians, volus and elcor?” Santi nodded. “There’s no way those species would be attracted to me,” she gestured at herself, “or your mother. We look too different. But because asari just have to take the best traits from everyone else to fuel their own fetish race, they’ve made interspecies sexuality mainstream instead of the realm of perverts.” Santi flinched, clearly remembering the night they first met and how he’d been caught looking at Riah. “That means that because of them, quarian girls like me and my mother have to deal with leers from other species, sexualizing our suits and masks and hoods.” She held her hood, her fingers tracing the designs she’d sown into them ages ago. “See this hood? This design goes back to Rannoch, but no one cares about that! See this mask and suit? I wear it because no species gives a damn, but they sure do love how good we look in them and how tight they fit us.”
Santi looked like he regretted starting the conversation, clearly uncomfortable with the way it had gone and seemingly startled at the vehemence in her words. “I’m sorry about that, by the way. You know…” Riah leveled a glare at him, “When I was looking at you that first night. It was rude of me…” Riah continued to look, somewhat pleased that he was at least attempting to apologize, even if only because he was just called out for his behavior. “I shouldn’t have. But, you-” He opened his mouth and stopped, realizing he wasn’t sure where he was going. “Sorry.”
More silence. Riah calmed down enough to continue the conversation, if only to move away from the awkward teenage sexuality. “I don’t hate humans. Your kind haven’t done anything to mine.” She didn’t add that she fully expected humans to follow in the steps of every other species and adopt the same prejudices as everyone else. “I just don’t like you and your mother.”
“But… well, ok.” Santi waited a few seconds to compose his thoughts. “But we haven’t done anything to you.” He sunk back into his seat, hands in his pockets.
“Not directly. But you are at my place all the time, you and your mother.” She added a special tone to the last word, indicating just how much she bought that story. “And look around, this isn’t exactly the place for sharing.”
That seemed to get a rise out of Santi, who sat up straighter, “You don’t think we realize that? We’re not exactly waking up every day looking forward to being poorer than ghouls you know.”
“Good,” Riah snorted, the elevator finally stopping and its doors sliding open, the lights from the various shots filtering into the elevator and bathing them in a mix of color. “Then we can go and talk to Varlus, get you your own damn solar collector so you can stop using ours.”
“Good,” Santi shot back, though the effect was diminished by the fact that he had to follow her for directions. “I’d rather not have to be around you if you’re that much of a bitch.”
|
|
|
Post by Ruinus on Jun 30, 2016 20:19:51 GMT
Riah yelled in terror as two turians suddenly came flying out of Varlus’ front door, one of them sporting a large bloody wound on his face. The two turians, which she identified as belonging to the 12th Floor Rippers gang by their face-markings, got to their feet and ran off, the injured one stumbling and bleeding along the floor as he did.
“SHOPLIFTERS WILL NOT BE TOLERATED!”
Riah jumped at the powerful booming voice, her head swiveling to turn at a giant mechanical monstrosity that loomed in Varlus’ doorway. Her entire body went on edge at the sight of it and she quickly darted away as she heard it plod back into the store. Her heart yammered in her chest as she noticed other people had been shocked by the machine’s appearance and its violent removal of two would-be shoplifters. A few of them muttered amongst themselves and gossiped about it while somewhere down the street she noticed someone already spraying the ground with water and cleaning up the bloody trail the Ripper had left. She leaned against a wall as she tried to calm herself down, robots had always scared her, a deep racial fear that had been burned into her, and seeing a giant robot so suddenly and act so violent had really rattled her. She hung her head and pulled her hood and fists over her eyes as she regained control of her breathing.
“See Varlus’ new toy?”
Riah turned to look at Old Vally, the very old run-down asari that ran the equally old and equally run-down clothing store that sat next to Varlu’s. She laughed at Riah’s nod, the huge gap in her teeth visible. Riah sometimes found the old asari humorous but right now couldn’t quite deal with her, she turned and peered through one of the windows of Varlus’ shop, the machine standing near Varlus’ counter and swilling its head from side to side.
“That’s first blood!” she laughed, “First time it’s cut someone. Before that it’s been scaring some of the local troublemakers straight, those two Rippers were the first idiots to actually try something.”
Riah hummed, “Did you see what happened?”
“No,” Old Vally responded, “But I heard it. You ever seen a chainsaw? I think it has one of those, I heard it rev up; I think that’s what gave that Ripper his little shave.”
“Sure…” Riah remembered the Ripper she saw run away, her memory gave her the impression that he’d received more than a “little shave”, one of his jaw flanges was probably completely removed. “Is it safe though? Has it attacked any normal shoppers?”
“No dearie,” she asari assured her, “It’s scared away a few customers from its look, but it hasn’t hurt anyone that didn’t deserve it. Unless it hates quarians, you should be fine.”
Riah didn’t tell her that some companies were known to program their security drones with species-profiling programs. In all likelihood the machine in there would automatically tag her as a shoplifter. If it were up to her she’d just turn around and head back home and message Varlus after a few days and ask how many innocent customers his robot mauled before stepping foot inside his store. But it wasn’t up to her; her mother had sent her to pick up an expansion device for their refrigerator, something that needed to be done today if they wanted to preserve some of their foodstuffs. She sighed, felt her heart rate finally calm down and realized she had settled down after the initial fright. She looked into the store, saw Varlus waddling around and struggling to reach some of his own stock on the shelves and noticed a distinct lack of violence from his robotic servant. It was probably safe.
Riah ducked beneath the store’s window when the machine inside turned to directly turn at her.
***
It’d taken her several minutes after that for Riah to muster up her courage to enter her favorite electronics, hardware and eight-hand junk store. She’d nearly jumped out of her suit when the machine turned to look at her and spoke in a deep rumble.
“SHOPLIFTERS WILL NOT BE TOLERATED.”
Riah felt the shelves nearly break as she immediately backed into them, attempting to put as much distance between herself and the thing as possible and failing. It stood there, its glowing eyes trained on her as she imagined that her ancestors had met their ends just like she was about to, with her neck crushed beneath a machine heel. She silently muttered a plea to her ancestor, asking if they’d be so kind as to let her enjoy the afterlife even after abandoning the Migrant Fleet. She clenched her eyes shut and awaited what would most likely be a death that could be described as a terrible joke.
Did you hear the one about the quarian shoplifter who was killed by the robot security guard?
“Riah!” Varlus wheezed and causing her to jump slightly, “My most valued customer!” He wheezed out a short laugh, his laughter sounding like a dying engine, “Say hello to my new muscle, Fist! Fist,” he said as he gently patted the machine on its club like arm, “say hello to Riah.”
The machine stood silently.
“HELLO RIAH. SHOPLIFTERS WILL NOT BE TOELRATED.”
Varlus wheezed in laughter.
“Enough of that! Riah, you’re here for your computer chip right?” He turned and began to waddle back to his desk while Riah suffered a bout of panic, her fingers clutching the shelves behind her as her heart once again hammered away in her chest. She darted over behind Varlus, silently thanking the ancestors for making her suit take care of the result of all her bodily functions.
“Keelah! What is that thing Varlus!” she hissed at an appropriate distance away from the menace, “Where did you get it? Is it safe?” A terrifying thought suddenly struck her. “It’s not alive is it?!”
“What?!” Varlus yelled, startling Riah even more. “No!” he sucked in more air than usual, “No it’s not an...” he looked around his store before responding in a whisper, “It’s not an AI. And keep your voice down, I don’t need people overhearing a quarian rant about an AI on station. It’ll be bad for business. The top floors would come down on me hard if they even suspected… No, it’s not what you suspect it is. It’s just a regular old security drone. I know this for sure.”
“How?” Riah asked, trying to keep her eyes on both Varlus and the thing in the store.
“Because I put in the CPU myself, an old ERCS security drone like the ones the top floors use. It’s nothing more than a simple, slightly modified security mech brain in there.”
“Slightly modified?” Riah prodded.
Varlus pointed a finger at the machine, Riah followed his finger and saw the wicked looking chainsaw that ran along the left arm of the machine which occasionally revved up and sputtered out black smoke.
“ERCS mechs don’t have those built-in as standard. Had to change the programming a bit to let it use it effectively. If you want to know more, you could ask Santi, he built it-”
“He what!” Riah snapped, “The boy built this thing? How?”
“Ask him. He came in here a few days after you brought him, asked me if he could buy old junk. Built it out of scraps. But enough of that, let’s talk money. You’re here for your graphics chip, the faster I get it in your hands the faster I get paid.”
Riah hummed in agreement, “Yes, give me my baby! Oh, and I need an expansion device for a model 2002 Chitan Appliances refridgerator.”
The small volus had already jumped off of his chair and waddled into his back room, though he still continued their conversation through shouts. “What’s the matter, fridge out?”
“Yes Varlus,” Riah yelled back, “The old garbage you call a working appliance you sold to my mother is already broken. Are you surprised your junk breaks down?”
“Ha.” She heard him wheeze, “Can’t work your quarian magic and patch it up together by yourselves?”
“Quarian salvage magic can’t beat volus greed. I know all about planned obsolescence Varlus. Do you have the part or not?”
“You wound me,” another wheeze accompanied by the sounds of equipment lockers opening. “Yes, I have one. Oh, it’s on the top shelf. This’ll take a while.”
Riah snorted, the mental image of the short volus going off and finding a step ladder to reach the top shelf running through her mind. As she stood there alone with the machine her fear give way to curiosity and she took a moment to better examine the thing.
The machine was huge, taller than a krogan and looked as if it out massed one by a wide margin. A few pipes ran from the front of its chest all the way to its back, bursts of smoke blasting out as its chest rumbled and sputtered, and occasional blue flashes of misaligned kinetic barriers flaring up from somewhere inside the torso. It had oddly proportioned limbs; wiry upper arms and legs ending in oversized lower limbs, huge clawed hands that could probably crush a krogan’s head in a single grip. Its head was a small tiny dome with flashlight eyes that stuck out at odd angles, a piece of hardware she recognized from old security drones that used to be used in asteroid prospecting. It was armored with pieces she recognized as doors from air-cars, old security guard armor, or salvaged airlock doors. She couldn’t tell what Varlus was talking about; it seemed like what she’d expect someone would armor a salvaged security drone with. She had to admit that she was quite impressed considering the boy’s complete lack of technical knowledge. How a moron who couldn’t fix a simple omni-tool problem could build this terrifying machine was a secret she didn’t care to figure out since that would require interaction with the two humans.
“By the way,” the junkseller walked back into the storefront, his hands full with Riah’s two purchases. “How about I take 100 credits off of your graphics chip if you do me a favor?”
***
She found the woman, Katja, at her house talking to her mother and watching some show programming. The woman had told her that her “son” was next door in their own house and given her the keys to enter. Riah thought it was mighty foolish of the woman to give her access to her living unit so easily, but didn’t mention that for two simple reasons. Firstly was that she owed them access to her home given all the time she spent in Riah’s, and secondly because of what she planned to do next.
She’d walked across the hall, used their key code and walked into their living unit for the first time. She immediately noticed the lack of possessions in the apartment. Only a couch, blankets and pillows strewn all over it, a shelf with a few items and a single drawer stood in the living room. Other than that, it looked as if the humans owned next to nothing; this didn’t surprise Riah since she’d heard that humans were some of the poorest people in space, only out impoverished by some of the other species on their homeworld. She did notice all the painting along the walls, which looked like some sort of graffiti.
“Hello?”
Santi looked up from whatever he was doing on the ground, startled by her voice. Riah stood at the entrance to his room or workshop or shrine, she couldn’t exactly figure out what it was that she was looking at. She saw a simple bed over in a corner with a heater hanging over it; she saw several parts from several different types of machines scattered around the floor and shelves and table; she saw several tools, welders, saws, micro-fabbers, computers, hammers, wrenches, spanners; she saw a metal skeleton suspended by heavy chains that hung from a wall; she saw several candles and the same smeared paint all over the walls that spelled out things in a language she couldn’t read. Santi stood up from his spot, a tool falling out of his lap as he did so and clanking loudly on the floor.
“What are you doing here?”
Riah just glared at him, tossing the item Varlus had given to her to deliver in his direction. He barely managed to catch it, giving her an inquiring look in response.
“I was at Varlus’.” She shrugged. “You built that thing he’s got?”
She glanced over at the other drone, liquid leaking out of a pipe.
“Yeah. What about it?” he responded. She had to hand it to the human, ever since that day on the elevator he was much less willing to put up with her. They both disliked each other and made that very clear whenever their respective guardians weren’t watching.
“I was just wondering how you built it.” She said, examining the thing more closely. “And how much it cost you to make one.”
Santi shrugged. “Your mom lent me around 1,000,” Riah’s eyebrows shot up in surprise and wondered just how angry her ancestors were with her mother throwing out that type of money to strangers, “I bought lots of pieces from Varlus.”
“Are they AIs?” Riah asked, somewhat sure of the answer. Varlus knew his computer programming, and if he said it was old ERCS tech then it was at best a limited form of VI. She just wanted to confirm with the boy.
“These aren’t AIs,” Santi responded immediately, going back to his work and turning away from her.
“Mmmh,” Riah hummed, “That’s what you say.”
“It’s the truth,” he shot back, “Not what I say. I just took an old chip from some old security robots Varlus had laying around and tweaked it a bit. Now what are you doing here? I doubt you brought me this part out of the kindness of your heart, so what do you want?”
Riah smiled underneath her mask. “I want in. This business you’ve got going, building drones out of junk and selling them off for profit, I want in.”
Santi gave her a long flat stare. “Why would I do that?”
“Have you forgotten the hospitality my mother has shown you and yours?” she asked.
“No, I haven’t. And I’ve already repaid that hospitality in full. When Varlus bought my first golem he paid me enough that I was able to repay your mother for everything she’s given us.”
Riah honestly had no response to that, she genuinely didn’t know the humans had done such a thing. Still, she pushed on, “Ok, fine. But I can help you. You paid 1,000 for junk from Varlus? I guarantee you could get you more parts for the same amount of money from quarians. Most of us are hoarders, keeping and reusing old pieces of junk on the hope that we’ll fix them again. Like the Migrant Fleet. You offer them anything for their junk and they’ll take that offer because its better than they’ll get anywhere else. Do you follow?”
Santi at least looked like he was concidering her words.
“But you can’t ask them can you?” she said as she walked over to him, “You’re a human, an unknown. They don’t trust you. But what if you had a quarian on the inside… perhaps the daughter of a well-known member of our little community working on your side? Well, you’d suddenly find your potential suppliers much more agreeable to working with you, wouldn’t you?”
“Or, you can stay here, alone, trying to buy junk pieces from people who will always overcharge you and thereby cut into your profits and turn down my help. Or, we go into this as partners, and I help you tap into a huge source of resources, you get to make more of these “golems” of yours and make more money. And then we share… 30 70.” She purposefully went with a low number, she knew she had no reason to be greedy; according to Santi the sale of the first robot was enough to pay back her mother for the initial 1k plus the costs of all the previous help they’d been given. Even 10% of that was more than her mother earned in a month.
Santi sat there with a contemplative look on his face.
“You sure?” he asked, as Riah nodded. “You could get me cheaper parts?”
“The cheapest. I guarantee us suit rats have got trash lying around that you’d love. Think of the money you’d make,” she went on, “Think of all the things you could afford, of all the presents you could buy your mother.” She went to the bait, hoping Santi was just the sort of loser who could be manipulated through his mother.
It seemed as if he was.
“Alright,” he said hesitantly, “you’ll set up a meeting with a quarian, someone you think will be willing to sell some scrap to us. If it goes well, then yeah, you’re in. Deal?”
“Of course,” Riah said, hopefully not sounding too eager. “I can get that ready in a few hours . You won’t regret this.”
“Fine,” Santi said before turning and going back to work on his other drone.
Riah smiled and nearly skipped on the way back to her home, her mother and Katja asking her what got her in such a good mood.
Riah didn’t respond as she jumped into her bed, opening her omni-tool and looking through her contact list. There were a few things on this miserable station that made her happy. One was money, and the other was taking advantage of fools.
And now she’d found a way to get both.
|
|