Darius
leaned closer to the terminal in his office at the Anubis Inc. headquarters
in Pator and frowned. Across the table, his younger brother Kordan could
sense a change in the air as Darius growled in the back of his throat.
"Something wrong bro?" he enquired with his usual silly grin on
his face. Darius did not even need to look up to know it was there. One
day he was going to have that grin surgically removed from Kordan's face,
just as soon as he could find a doctor that knows how.
"Nothing
" he replied curtly followed by a pause. "Well,
actually, yeah. Our resident agent for the security services has a tip off
about some kind of Angel Cartel scouting operation she wants me to gatecrash.
They suspect they are checking out the defences of a remote outpost on a
moon in Audensder and will be followed by a slaver fleet."
"Great, some action." Kordan paused when he could see his brother
did not share his enthusiasm.
"It's not even worth our time. It would take us a while to get there,
and there's not much bounty in it. Maybe a measly 20,000isk with not much
more as a reward. And the bonus is a couple of junk heap ships that won't
sell for much."
"Slashers?" asked Kordan
"Slashers? The Slasher is no junk heap brother. It's a fine and tough
ship. I'm talking about the Burst."
"Ahh, yeah those things a rather cruddy."
Darius tapped the panel and
closed the communication feed down. He leaned back in his chair and groaned
again.
"I take it you are not going to take that mission?"
"Hell no. Only problem is that we haven't made much today and the
tight bitch won't give us anything else for a while if we refuse."
"So you haven't officially declined it then?"
"I'm thinking about it." Kordan looked at Darius silently for
a moment. "Go on, what is it?" Asked Darius.
"I've completed my training in the Rifter." noted Kordan. Darius
sighed. He knew this was some time in coming. "Let me take the mission.
With a bounty that small I bet there are no cruisers right?"
"Right." Replied Darius wearily. "But there are several
Nomad class ships. You've never gone higher than Ruffian class Angels
before today." Darius looked back at his brother. For the first time
in many months Darius could see a serious look on his brothers face. All
most defiant. "What's that look supposed to mean?"
"I'm just wondering what's stopping me from seeing her myself and
accepting the mission." Darius stared blankly for the moment.
"I just don't want you to jump in with both feet." He replied,
raising his hand.
"Sure, more like you don't think I can do it. You never trust me
with anything!" Burst Kordan
"What the hell makes you think..?"
"You always talk down to me. I'm 22, not some damned kid."
"You sure act like it some times!"
"Don't come with that! I was the one who stood by you when you were
damn near alcoholic! The entire clan was hanging in the balance when Gol'dar
died. Can you honestly say that you would have gone through with accepting
the clan leadership?" Darius tried to think of a retort, but had
non. "It was me that came to give you moral support at the last minute
and stand the vigil with you. Would an immature kid do that?" Darius
shot out of his chair to his feet, his jaw tense with anger.
"And you think I don't remember that? Or that I am not grateful for
that?"
"If you are you don't show it much
"
"Hey, if you want to do this mission, then I won't stop you."
Kordan stopped and stared at his older brother with steel in his eyes.
"Get your Rifter fitted and loaded with ammo, and go see if you have
what it takes. If it will make you feel better then go do it." Kordan
quickly left the room, a loud bang in his wake as he slammed the office
door behind him.
Darius sat back down and took
a deep breath. He had never seen Kordan like that before. Was he really
that much of a bully to him? His only concern was to look after him. He
had done that all his life, since their mother died when Kordan was still
just a kid. But we was right. He was not a kid anymore. He had never really
thought too much about how he treated him in the past. Now the thought
had crossed his mind, he couldn't shake off the guilt.
Kordan began the final power
sequence on his Rifter, and double checked the weapons. Nomads are slow
and his 280mm howitzers would pack a punch to say the least. Especially
now as he had raided the corporation hangar and found some modified gyrostabilisers.
That was all he mounted to the lower slots to give extra punch to the
three howitzers he had installed along side the nosferatu. He had not
even installed a shield booster as he was confident that he could kill
the pirates quicker than they could shoot at him, and at a greater range
than they could attack from. Instead he used a tracking computer, to help
the heavy guns keep up with the speed differentia, and an afterburner
to keep at optimal range for the artillery.
When the checks showed that
his guns were all online and loaded he initiated the undock sequence.
He was eager to win this fight today. Not just so he could serve the republic,
but because he wanted to feel useful. His outburst to his older brother
was a long time in coming, and he didn't regret it. He wanted to start
to make a name for himself in the republic as his brother had. It was
not fair that he would get all the glory. And thwarting a scouting operation
for slavers would be a good start. The airlock doors slid open and Kordan
piloted the ship into the dark tunnel, ready to be greeted by the stars.
Despite the fact that there
were many jumps between him and the target system of Audensder, the journey
was swift in the fast and nimble Rifter. On arrival at Audensder, Kordan
instinctively activated his list of bookmarked co-ordinates and selected
the one that the agent had given him. His Rifter turned on the spot and,
within seconds, was travelling at full warp speed towards a small moon
on the other side of the system. Kordan afforded himself one last check
of the weapons and modules to make sure they were configured correctly
shortly before his ship began to pull out of the warp field. However,
when he dropped from warp the scene was slightly different than he had
imagined. There were no ships there, only several cargo containers floating
ahead of him surrounded by debris. Had he been beaten to it? Or were these
the remains of others who had tried what he was about to do, and failed?
As Kordan weighed up the possibilities, and shook off the disappointment
of not getting into some form of combat, he noticed his scanner was registering
a faint signal behind him, moving very fast. Kordan swung the Rifter around
to meet his prey, and before his nose came to bare on the intruder, he
was being orbited at insanely high speeds by the target. It was moving
so fast he was having a hard time keeping up with the camera drone. Suddenly,
his shields were being shredded as bright streams of light were bouncing
off them from the lasers. He did not need to catch view of the ship to
know it was most likely an Interceptor. He had heard of the pirates using
such ships in the past and suspected that the agent's information was
wrong. Though it did not matter now. He knew he would be no match for
this class of ship.
He immediately selected a point
in space and frantically engaged the warp engines. The ship vibrated slightly
as she always did while the warp engines spooled up. A violent shudder
reverberated through the entire structure as Kordan braced for the sudden
acceleration of warp. Except he was still being shot at by the Interceptor
when the shudder subsided. He had not moved. A warning sounded somewhere
in his senses as a blindingly bright message shot past his vision stating
his warp field was unstable and the drive was being shut down, obviously
the enemy craft was disrupting it. He had no choice but to fight. He kicked
in the full afterburners and attempted to get into a firing position on
the much faster craft. A glance at his shields told him all he needed
to know as he finally established a lock; this was going to be close.
He was unable to get into optimal range due to the superior speed of the
interceptor that he could now see as being the Amarrian designed Crusader.
In desperation as another chunk of shields disappeared, he began to fire
his artillery. His targeting computer registered each hit and displayed
it to Kordan who cringed as the damage was only minor due to the close
range. He activated his tracking computer to help them get a better lock,
now thankful he had installed it. He then attempted to activate the shield
booster, only to remind himself that it was not there. Suddenly, he felt
very naked.
His artillery continued to
boom into empty space behind the interceptor, rarely landing a blow of
any significance while the remaining shells lunged deep into the darkness
of space in the Crusaders wake. Suddenly, his Rifter shook violently as
a missile struck home against his shields tearing them apart. He turned
his attention back to the scanner and his heart sank as he realised that
two more ships had joined the fray, another Crusader and an Arbitrator.
As quickly as that, his ship was enveloped by an eerie blue aura as the
second Crusader locked on with a propulsion jammer of some sort. The Rifter
slowed quickly and was essentially dead in space. The enemy ships loomed
above, their guns now silent. Kordan could not help but wonder why they
were taking their time. He would be dead by now, that much he could admit
in spite of his pride. His com channel beeped to show he had an incoming
message. He hesitated to read it, he was sure it would contain some kind
of ransom notice or some evil gloating. He opened the message sent to
him:
"I prey to
god himself, everyday, that you would eventually be enlightened
as I am. This is the only way to ensure that you are brought into
the loving fold of God's will. I look forward to seeing you again
Darius.
-Regards-
Ramar"
Kordan felt a shiver resonate
through his spine as he read that name. Ramar. Darius' long time friend
before he betrayed him in Ammatar space. This message was addressed to
Darius.
A bright light flashed across
the hull of the Arbitrator and streaked towards Kordan.
This was all a setup. He thought,
absently watching as the heavy missile gained on him.
It can't end like this
Kordan replayed the argument with his brother in his mind. He had said
that he didn't care for him. As the Crusaders orbiting above him opened
fire again, he wished he could take back those words. But now he would
not get that chance. Kordan took one last look with the camera drone as
the missile streaked silently towards his ship, then cut the video feed.
Kordan's ship was violently
torn apart by the lasers of the Interceptors, shards of frozen oxygen
crystals were hurled away from the ship as the escape pod broke free a
split second before the ship's engine core detonated, showering the tough
pod with chunks of burning metal and liquid fire from the ignited plasma.
The heavy missile tore through the explosion towards the centre of the
fireball and the proximity fuse detonated less than 10 metres from the
pod. In an instant, the pod was smashed open, exposing the inside to the
unforgiving vacuum of space. The protective gel burned instantly in the
fire leaving Kordan's dead, icy body floating through the wreckage.
"Sir," spoke the
young Gallente technician, "incoming data stream."
"Ok, what's the ID number?" asked the older Minmatar who was
obviously the senior technician.
"Urm
ID: KW-494-J, Name: Kordan Shakor." The man continued
to type into his terminal. "Ohh, a first timer." He said joyfully,
all most morbidly sickening.
"OK then," The supervisor replied. "Feed the data stream
to pod D-43 and pop the cork." The man continued to casually type
commands onto the panel in front of him.
"Done, the transfer was uninterrupted, zero percent cognitive degradation."
Both men got up and went through the door into the adjacent room.
Lining the walls around the
room were several hundred chambers, each one holding the registered clone
of a pilot kept on hold for the day when the inevitable would happen.
Each clone bank had a yellow light flashing on the diagnostic screen attached
to it, and a name displayed showing who this person was, or is for that
matter. Tavish, the senior cloning technician had long ago given up trying
to determine the proper way to address the identity of an inactive clone.
Both men made their way to the pod at the far end of the room, Tavish
picking up a robe on his way there from the many that were hanging from
the support pillar in the middle of the clone chamber. The light was flashing
green with the words "AWAITING ACTIVATION" along side,
and the name was illuminated.
"Everything checks out." spoke Deita, the other technician.
"Activate him."
Deita pressed the pad on the
front of the unit and stepped back. As the seal broke around the chamber,
shards of ice fell to the floor and braking into a fine powder around
the base of the unit. The door slid upwards and the cold air inside evaporated
into a delicate mist as the clone body opened his eyes and moved forwards.
Instantly, Tavish knew something was wrong. The body lurched forwards
and collapsed onto the floor with a sickening thud, followed by convulsions.
"De-fib!" shouted Tavish. Deita rushed towards the alarm button
on the wall and slapped it hard setting off a klaxon in the room and rushed
back towards Tavish who was now trying to lift the body onto the recovery
table behind them. Immediately afterwards, a team of medics dashed into
the room from the double doors at the opposite end, some holding medical
kit bags while others took hold of several trolleys with medical machinery
on them and pushed them to the table.
Tavish and Deita rested Kordan
onto the bench and quickly stepped back as the medics swarmed around.
Tavish looked at Deita who simply stared back in confusion. Both men quickly
returned to the control room to let the medics do their job and began
checking and double checking the transfer logs.
"He was alive!" shouted Deita. "He was fucking alive!"
"Deita! Check the logs." He ordered sternly. "Something
is wrong here." Tavish opened the transfer records while Deita checked
the backup logs for errors in the transfer stream.
"This shouldn't have happened." Remarked Deita. "The transmission
was complete."
"So was the neural reconstruction and transfer to the clone."
The chief medic entered the
room and looked at Tavish. Tavis was about to ask when the medic pre-empted
the question and shook his head before going back into the clone room
again.
"Damn it!" Shouted Deita again, the emotion clear in his voice
and on his face. "What went wrong."
"Do we have a backup?" Deita did not answer. Tavish turned around
to see him leaning over his console, eyes clenched shut. "Deita!"
he reiterated firmly. Deita looked up. His eyes were sad-looking, and
red around the sides. Tavish walked over to him and put a hand on his
shoulder.
"I've never
" Deita swallowed hard. "I mean
"
"Look, these things happen. You can't blame yourself, I'm sure this
wasn't your fault. But I need you to concentrate." Deita nodded.
"Now, was there a backup?" Deita tapped through the menu and
found the last transmission file.
"Yes." He croaked.
"Transfer it to my console." Deita initiated the transfer. "Got
it. Go get a drink or something. Take the rest of the day off." Deita
looked almost like he didn't want to. "I can make it an order. Don't
worry, I will call the evening shift guy to come in if I need help."
Deita walked to the door, then
stopped as he opened it.
"Would you
"
"I'll call you as soon as I find out what happened." Replied
Tavish. "But first I have to call his next of kin."
Darius swallowed hard to clear
his throat as he listened to the man on the other side of the screen.
The man was a Vherokior, in his mid fifties, with greying hair shaved
short round the side of his head. When he stopped talking, Darius could
say nothing as the tears welled in his eyes. He fought the impulse to
break into tears by taking in a deep breath.
"I'm truly sorry Mr Shakor." Stated the man, obviously a cloning
technician.
Darius quietly spoke in a gravely voice. "How
how did this
happen?" He swallowed hard again, trying to maintain his composure.
"We received the clone activation signal from your late brother's
escape pod followed by a data stream containing his brain wave patterns.
According to the initial diagnostic run by the system automatically, the
stream was complete and we began to transfer the pattern to your brother's
clone. When we took him off life support he was awake, but unresponsive
and immediately stopped breathing." Tears began to flow from Darius'
eyes as he heard the details spoken so plainly. The technician paused
for a second and diverted his eyes in sorrow before continuing. "I
have personally examined the data stream. To put it as simply as I can,
it was empty. Simply a series of neural patterns and synaptic instructions
repeated over and over. This would be classed as brain death. The mind
did not have the basic instructions needed to sustain the body when he
was taken off life support and the medical staff could do nothing to change
this."
The conversation grew silent
as Darius struggled to muster the words to respond.
"Again Mr Shakor, we are all deeply sorry about your loss. I can
offer no other explanation except to speculate, based on my own experience,
that there was a malfunction in the pod firmware that records the synaptic
patterns. Some how it only compiled a series of random data and transmitted
that. We are making arrangements to have the body sent to a medical facility
on Matar. Is there anywhere specific you would like us to arrange for
your brother's body to be taken to?"
Darius was about to speak, but simply transmitted the address of the Hospital
on their home island. The same hospital where his father, and mother had
died. The same hospital where he and his brother were born. The same hospital
where he had been taken with a broken arm after he fell through the roof
of the tribal hall while trying to impress an old romantic interest, and
where he spent a week recovering from his ordeal in Ammatar space at the
hands of his former friend, turned blood enemy.
"Thank you sir." Tavish did not know how to end such a conversation,
he never did. The transmission curtly terminated, leaving Darius alone
in his office.
Through a small porthole window,
the dark hallways beyond the bright metal door let little sign as to what
lay beyond. The room was in near blackness, save for the occasional dim
blue and green neon lights emanating from the control panels. Quietly,
a solemn figure moved from the shadows in the room for what seemed like
the twentieth time, leaning towards the window in the door. His right
hand clutched the hilt of a small metal case sealed with a combination
lock. His face grew impatient within the shadows as he awaited a signal.
As he was about to duck back into the shadows, his eye caught sight of
movement. A silhouette in a lab coat stepped from round the corner in
the hallway beyond the door and waved him forward. Rapidly, the dark figure
made his way through the metal door and trotted down the passageway, quickly
engulfed by the darkness. In less than a minute, all trace of the stranger
was gone and the hall returned to its eerie quiet.
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