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Chapter 8 – Discovery

  Chapter 8

  Discovery

  DATE:

  7088.03.07,

  RECON

  ERA

  “Query,”

  Forty-Five began, pushing aside a floating piece of metal scrap out

  of his way, crouching

  on the wreck exterior.

  “Pilot possesses

  a latent desire for termination? More efficient methods exist that

  excludes boarding a

  Hazard 4

  Severed Wreck.”

  “Oh, live

  a little,” I muttered, a manic smile on my face as my plasma cutter

  did its job on the exposed door. “No

  life-forms, no heat signatures. It’s fine!”

  Hazard-4

  meant kinetic dangers. Asteroids, spinning debris, shifting plates.

  It meant the ship wasn't just dead; it was being actively chewed up

  by the asteroid belt. But to me, it meant the scavengers hadn't been

  able to dock long enough to strip the good stuff.

  And…maybe

  the jump scare scrambled my brain, or maybe there was something in

  the water. But the minute that Forty-Five

  identified the ‘woman’

  as

  a Severance era

  robot
, I put all my

  effort into winning the

  argument to explore

  the rest wreck.

  taking

  the deactivated robot

  on board.

  ‘Query.

  Travel time,’

  
he

  complained.

  ‘Warning.

  Danger level extreme.


  ‘

  I told him. ‘Extreme

  is my middle name. Let’s go! Find of the century! Imagine all the

  original, functioning parts!’


  He

  had paused at that. The mention of ‘parts’ seemed to

  short-circuit his protests, but

  with a caveat:

  “Report.

  Countdown 20

  minutes 23 seconds remaining.”

  I

  heard the grumpy, robotic stuttered

  voice through the headset. I let out a dry chuckle. Forty-Five wasn’t

  happy but we compromised: if I couldn’t do it in 30

  minutes, we would leave everything

  behind.

  I made sure that he

  didn’t start the counter till we

  were

  out the airlock.

  I had parked the ship as close as I could near the

  bulk of the wreck, extending out the magnetic clamps to keep us from

  drifting. The scanners showed there were still some sections sealed

  from the void, but everything lacked atmosphere.

  So

  here I was, my

  plasma cutter almost finished its journey to make a hole large enough

  for Forty-Five to fit through. I

  made a mental note of

  the pitting I could see on the exposed metal, a special type of alloy

  I’d seen in ships older than four centuries. Its

  manufacturing process lost. But the damage from space exposure… it

  was recent. The micro-meteoroid

  pitting was shallow, sharp-edged. It hadn’t been drifting for

  centuries; this wreck was fresh. Maybe twenty, thirty years max. It

  had been flying for hundreds of years before something killed it…

  and only recently.

  But

  before I could punch the way clear, Forty-Five grabbed my upper arm,

  the grip gentle but firm through the spacesuit. He

  spun me so I could see his visor.

  “Repeating.

  Rules.

  Do

  deviate from instructions.” He

  let me go, watching me nod before continuing. “Query.

  Scavenging experience?”

  My mouth was still stuck in that deranged grin,

  and I blinked at him for a second before I shoved my cutter back in

  my belt. “Of I’ve explored spaceship wrecks

  before! I’m an archaeologist!”

  Forty-Five nodded slowly as if accepting my

  answer. He pushed the door, the metal soundlessly popping free from

  the plasma cuts I made. The large metal hunk now floated into the

  corridor.

  I

  grabbed both sides of the entrance and pulled myself in, laughing

  a little,

  “I

  just haven’t done it in

  outer

  space before!”

  I heard a quiet burst of static over the headset.

  It sounded suspiciously like a groan of deep, digital consternation.

  Our mag-boots carried us along, slowly at first,

  before I got into the rhythm of it. Forty-Five was ahead of me,

  checking corners and clearing the way before waving me forward. He

  had a torch built into his chest, where I’d approximate a clavicle

  on a human. He’d turn it off and on periodically, as if preserving

  the energy. I suspected he didn’t charge to full during his ‘nap’.

  I rolled my eyes, with a guilty wince, reaching

  down and investigating every single little object I could in the

  desolate corridor. He seemed to know where he was going, confidently

  turning at each junction after he confirmed the all clear.

  Each

  object I inspected told me a different story. A broken datapad, the

  type used for ship manifests, definitely a hauler. I stuffed it

  in

  my knapsack.

  But

  out of everything I found, what I

  find was equally puzzling. No human bodies. No pieces of fabric or

  clothing. No blood on the walls. No

  evidence

  of a

  human

  crew.

  My

  gaze fell back on Forty-Five’s

  back as he worked, taking

  another turn without even checking the other side (it was a

  dead-end), wondering

  if he had been here before. Or another

  ship

  like it.

  It wasn’t long before we walked past a door,

  cracked open to show crates.

  “Wait!” I gasped, peering into the crack.

  “Crates! Sealed! This must be… a storage room.”

  I

  looked around the door. Eventually, my eyes fell

  on words

  etched in cursive above me,

  underlined with a deep

  scratch

  as if to punctuate what it was.

  ‘MAINTENANCE STORES’

  “Ah,” I

  uttered, both of us staring at the words. I

  pulled out my Slab, taking a picture of the sign. I muttered quietly,

  “Hand-etched cursive.”

  Reminiscent of

  the Aureate Age in the 5th

  Millennium,

  when many of the Garden Worlds built their ships for luxury and

  everything was ‘art’. But this ship was

  between eight and six centuries old, considering the metals used in

  the outer hull… Did someone try to emulate the ‘Aureate Age’?

  Putting such font on a .

  Which company or world had

  the resources to put this

  much effort in their ships?

  Forty-Five moved

  forward, pushing me back, catching

  me unawares as I was lost in thought.

  “Hey!”

  My magnetic lock

  broke with a snap, and I drifted backward, arms windmilling in slow

  motion until my back hit the

  opposing wall. Forty-Five

  ignored me, using his superior strength to wrench the door fully

  open.

  Movement in my peripheral caught my attention. I

  looked down the hallway where we were heading. Empty, save for a

  couple of broken panels, ripped free from the walls during the crash.

  “Hmm,” I hummed, curious. “That was odd.”

  “Query.” Forty-Five turned his head to look at

  me over his shoulder, on edge and apparently on high alert status.

  “I thought I saw something move. Might have been

  the panels.”

  He stared at me

  for a second before coming to join me back in the corridor. His head

  on a swivel, pausing a moment before gesturing me in the room,

  “Status. Room

  clear.”

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  He didn’t look

  at me though. He

  kept staring down the hallway where the movement occurred. His

  chest

  light flashed

  irregularly, spluttering in

  short and long bursts as if

  it

  were

  glitching before it

  evened out.

  “Countdown

  revised. Recommendation. Move with urgency.”

  “Ah, no!” I protested, already halfway into

  the room. “I want to get to the bridge and get any navigational

  data we can. This is a pre-Severance era freighter!”

  “Recommendation.

  .”

  Forty-Five repeated, staring

  me down with his

  twin lights flashing red. His

  headlights were turned off.

  “OK,

  OK,” I gulped nervously. Looking around the room, I

  counted four crates secured in the middle of the room.

  The

  walls were

  lined

  with closed panels. It

  reminded

  me of the panels on the .

  I had a suspicion that if I opened those panels, I would

  find… tools. Components, parts.

  I experimented and opened one.

  “!”

  I

  jumped back screaming

  in

  shock, floating free as my boots left the surface of the floor.

  A

  human-shaped

  lump was

  curled up tightly

  inside the recess behind the panel.

  The thick linen robes and pants hid most of their

  body.

  A shroud over their face, goggles hanging around

  their neck.

  But

  the exposed

  hands

  were… not husks or skeleton. They were metal-plated. Cybernetic.

  A finger twitched.

  I screamed louder.

  Forty-Five

  was already pulling me down behind him. Slamming the panel

  closed.

  “Query.”

  I gripped his armour plated arm, the solid surface

  reassuring me a little. "It moved! It twitched! I think it was

  human? With uh, cybernetic hands!"

  Forty-Five faced the panel, his head tilted

  slightly. I waited for him to respond or finish his scan.

  One. Two. Three.

  "Affirmative,"

  Forty-Five spoke quickly, the

  monotone voice smoother than before.

  "Human

  remains.

  Heavily

  augmented Scavenger. Deceased.”

  “But it moved!”

  "Vacuum

  spasm," he continued, turning back to me, glancing

  down at my grip on his arm.

  "Displacement from the door opening caused it to move. It is

  inert."

  I blinked, my heart rate slowing as his words sank

  in. Just a dead guy. Just gases and physics.

  “Oh,” I breathed, my body shaking. “Right.

  Vacuum spasm. Okay.”

  “Status. 5 minutes remaining.”

  I

  shook my head, snapping out of the horror. “Wait! We said thirty

  minutes not fifteen!

  Where’s my other ten

  minutes?!”

  “Countdown

  revised.” He reminded me, leaning forward towards my face.

  “”

  I placed my hands on the crates behind me,

  grounding myself. “No! Do you realize what this is? This is as old

  as the Severance! This could tell us why the network went dark. I

  need to get to the bridge!”

  “Client once again not listening to

  instructions! We. Need. To. Leave.”

  “I’m

  not here on holidays, Forty-Five,”

  I

  snapped, my voice hardening. This was more than just about exploring

  an old wreck, I was seeking the truth. That search the only thing

  keeping me going. “This ship could tell me where it came from!

  Where it was going! It’s centuries old, who knows where it went!”

  “Deviating

  from rules!” He moved closer, towering over me. His servos whined,

  a sound of strained restraint.

  “Rules revised,” I said, crossing my arms. I

  forced myself to hold his gaze, remembering the contradictory ratings

  I'd seen in his code, needing to know which ones were true. If I was

  off the mark, he could snap my neck before I blinked. But I had to

  know who was really in charge. I channelled every ounce of authority

  I used to wield in the boardrooms back home. “My primary objective

  is the Flight Data Recorder. I am not leaving without it. If you want

  to protect me, you’ll help me get there faster.”

  His

  twin ring lights flashed red, then orange, then red again. He seemed

  to calculate the odds of physically carrying me versus the time lost

  arguing with a stubborn roboticist-turned-archaeologist.

  I bet I would only need ten seconds

  to truly figure out where his off button was.

  I

  stiffened,

  an

  ice-cold fear clawing my insides,

  Why didn’t

  I look for his off button
before

  He might be


  death machine!


  He

  didn’t see my posture change, but

  he didn’t snap my neck either. He made an odd movement with his

  head, before turning

  around to

  roughly pull a

  magnetically

  assisted trolley off

  the wall.

  “Actions will hasten with two pairs of hands,”

  he grumbled, his voice a low, unhappy monotone.

  My mouth pulled into a shaky grin.

  We

  left the crates near the entrance, moving through the corridors once

  more, this time taking a different route. I was convinced that

  Forty-Five

  been here before. Or something like this. This made me extra curious

  about his origins.

  “Have

  you been here before?” I couldn’t help but ask.

  He

  paused at an intersection, looking around as if… he was checking

  where to go. He eventually spoke, “Negative. Standardised

  Freight-Class internal grid. Layout is derivative.”

  hat

  sure was convincing.


  
I

  thought with an eye roll, but…

  robots can’t lie. Right?
So

  he has been on a ship like this before? Does he have schematics in

  his drives?


  I

  had to shelve the thoughts as we turned a final corner. Coming

  face-to-face with

  a fully sealed door, cursive writing on top barely legible from

  deep

  gouges.

  Looked

  like metal shrapnel cut into the wall. A part of my brain thought it

  looked like claw marks, but there was nothing biological in the

  galaxy that had paws that big.

  “’Bridge’,

  bingo,” I read out loud, pulling out my plasma cutter once more.

  I was half-way done when I felt… vibrations

  under my feet.

  “What is

  that?”

  “The wreck is

  occupied. And they are aware of our location,”

  Forty-Five said quietly,

  squaring up and filling almost the entire hallway. Blocking me from

  whatever was coming towards us.

  “Who

  is ‘they’?!” I

  squeaked, forcing my plasma cutter on its max setting and…

  expediting.

  

  “Countdown

  reaching end.”

  I was

  infinitely glad that Forty-Five had an emergency speech mode that

  truncated its speech, though the urgency of its new tone did little

  to quell the rising panic in my gut.

  I

  gritted my teeth and did what he

  asked. Concentrating on cutting through the seams of the thick

  bulkhead door.

  The final

  seal gave way.

  I stepped

  inside quickly, Forty-Five following my six.

  I expected

  stale air or darkness. Instead, I was staring at the universe. The

  entire starboard wall of the bridge had been sheared off. The

  captain’s chair was gone, lost to the void decades ago.

  What

  remained of the consoles glittered with frost, lit only by the

  uncaring starlight and the distant rotation of the asteroid field.

  My stomach

  dropped. I clicked my mag-boots to maximum, terrified that one wrong

  step would send me drifting forever.

  "Don't

  look out," I whispered to myself. "Look at the prize.

  Look for the orange box."

  I scrambled

  over the tilted deck plates.

  The

  main console was a wreck, but the raised

  floor plates underneath - where

  the Flight Data Recorder lived - were

  intact. I spotted the tell-tale hazard orange hatch.

  "Gotcha.”

  A

  smile crossed my face,

  palming

  a short

  pry-bar

  from my toolbelt

  to use

  to

  snap

  the frozen clamps, the

  lid opening and revealing the orange sphere suspended in a clear,

  thick-walled box.

  It

  was heavy, shielded against nuclear fire, but I shoved

  it in the knapsack. I made room for the bulky cube moving things

  aside, and that’s

  when I saw it.

  Tucked

  into a recessed compartment that should have held emergency flares

  was a small, flat box.

  It wasn’t industrial plasteel. It looked like... polished wood? Or

  a synthetic mimic of it. It was elegantly

  decorated, the paper labelling long bleached and worn away.

  Someone had hidden this.

  Curiosity

  kills the cat
,

  Mel, I thought, shoving it into my knapsack too,

  the thing fit to burst.

  But

  satisfaction brings it back.


  I turned around to signal Forty-Five that I was

  done.

  But he was struggling with something, his arms

  bent as if he was trying to push something back.

  He twisted. He was grappling another robot. It was

  built similarly to him. The interlocking plates, the shape of the

  visor. But its twin lights where eyes would be were larger, and were

  a solid red, compared to the multi-coloured rings Forty-Five would

  cycle through.

  Two more droids, one with a missing leg, were

  crawling like insects on the walls.

  My throat went dry, my eyes wide open.

  “Forty-Five?”

  “Report?”

  “Umm, done?”

  “Acknowledged.”

  With that, Forty-Five pushed back the droid he was

  currently fighting, freeing a hand and driving a palm-strike into its

  head. It didn’t just dent; the metal crumpled like paper, the

  violence unfolding in uncanny, absolute silence. It bent backwards at

  the knees, while its magnetic feet glued it to the floor.

  The visor shattered, revealing the naked circuitry

  of those two large sensors, one flickering while the other went dark.

  Its

  limbs weren’t operating smoothly like any

  civilian or security units I knew.

  They twitched, jerking in a chaotic, glitching rhythm that made my

  skin crawl.

  Forty-Five moved.

  But I didn’t see the strike. I only felt

  vibrations through my feet.

  Because another

  droid, the one with the

  missing leg, launched

  from the ceiling straight at me, filling

  my field of view.

  An explosion of

  metal shrapnel erupted far behind it.

  I took one step

  backwards. My

  arms were frozen; my mouth uncooperative.

  A static whine.

  A whisper, layered with a dozen distorted voices.

  “

  The droid’s head jerked backwards, its fingers

  centimetres from grazing my suit.

  Forty-Five had pulled it by its remaining leg.

  With a torque that should have stripped his gears, he roughly pulled

  it back before catching it by the back of the head and smashing it

  into the floor. The vibrations of the impact travelled through the

  floor panels to my boots.

  The first armoured droid was already in pieces,

  its head and arm missing.

  The third droid tried to flank him to get to me.

  Forty-Five didn’t even turn to look at it. He lashed out with a

  side-kick, the sole of his boot connecting with the droid’s side.

  The impact lifted the twitching humanoid off the floor, breaking its

  boots’ magnetic lock, and sent it spinning silently out the broken

  wall… and into the deep dark.

  Five seconds. It took him five seconds to

  neutralise the three targets. He stood amidst the wreckage of the

  first two, his armour spattered with their leaking fluids, droplets

  of which were still floating weightlessly between us.

  He’d been staring at me since the second droid

  tried to get to me.

  The red halo lights of his visor burning bright.

  “Status. Enemies neutralised. We are leaving.

  Now.”

  He reached out a hand, the metal fingers

  glistening with black coolant.

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