~’/|\’~
The warning sirens sounded, as Unit 02, sealed within a camouflaged transport container, was slowly moved into the decontamination bay. The 2501 training facility, designed for testing of units which could feasibly be deployed on the frontlines, was still considerably further back than any of the more forward bases, where the mainstay. The bay was cramped, designed for Engels, not their progenitor-project, and so the Evangelion only just fit. In the observation room, a man, his dark-red lab coat sealed all the way up to the high collar, pushed his old-fashioned, bulky argoggles up onto his forehead and pulled off a thick black control glove, to wipe his forehead. With a sigh, he removed the other glove, discarding them carelessly on the surface.
“What’s up, Dr Schauderhaft?” a lieutenant, his face damp with sweat, asked the head scientist for the Unit 02 team.
The man shook his head. “She’s so hard on it, Feucht,” he said, running a hand through his sandy-blond hair. “I’ve been looking over the internal status feeds... we’re going to have to replace the top few levels of mirrorgloss due to the fact that she chose to run
through an arcanochromatic blast cloud, and we’re going to have to go through all the breaches to check for contamination. That’s even before we get to actual battle damage.”
“Ah,” the younger man, Feucht, said, choosing not to say any more. He mopped at his forehead with a handkerchief.
Wilhelm Schauderhaft tapped his fingers against the diamond window. “Actually... it’s not really even that,” he admitted. “Captain Martello is pushing for increased deployment, and we can’t sustain it. He can’t get it into his head that the Evangelions are not ready for extended field deployment. They’re a sensitive arcanocyberxenobiological organism, which require constant check-ups, and simply don’t have the endurance of... of a frigate, say. Which is just armour plus D-Tech plus armaments plus a little bit of space for crew. You just can’t do that and he doesn’t
get it.”
“Ah.”
“I wonder if I could beat it into his head with a mallet,” the chief scientist continued, his voice turning speculative. There was a pause. “That was a joke, by the way,” he reassured the other man. “I don’t intent to commit violence against the Deputy Director of Operations.”
“I understand, sir.”
Wilhelm sighed, a weary note entering his voice as he glanced at the uniformed man. “I’m not a ‘sir’,” he said.
“Would you prefer ‘ma’am’?” the younger man said, in a deadpan.
There was a snort from the scientist. “Fair enough,” he said, sliding his argoggles back over his eyes. “Gehirn, accept the hibernation plug as soon as the docking port is in place,” he ordered the Evangelion’s LITAN.
“Understood,” the mechanical voice responded, the four green lights of its ARvatar bobbing slightly in acknowledgement.
Dr Schauderhaft had never understood why the Second Child had insisted on using such a crude, obviously non-human voice for her LITAN. There were plenty of other options she could have used. But, no, she insisted on using this slightly grating, synthetic one. He shrugged. Never mind.
“Dr Schauderhaft!” someone called from behind him. He knew
exactly who it was. “I need to talk to you!”
Come to think of it, she could be rather grating too. Maybe it was some kind of kinship.
Rather than turn to face her, he sat back down, and pulled his control gloves back on. “I’m listening,” he said, in a tone which he hoped might imply that he was busy right now, and she might be better advised to talk to the local Deputy Director of Operations, Captain Martello.
Not to be dissuaded, the girl stepped around him, standing in front of his desk, left hand on hip. She would always be a little girl to him; after all, he had first met her when she had only just turned nine, when he had been transferred from the Unit 00 team to replace the near-total losses from Berlin-2. She had certainly changed since then, though. Clad in a mid-red version of one of the jump-suits that any mecha pilot wore when not in one of the dedicated interface suits (in her case, a plug suit), she loomed over him when he sat. Her reddish-blond hair was darkened by the fact it was still wet from the decontamination, hanging limply from where it was bound by her A-10 clips. Two blue eyes, their shape one of the few obvious signs of her mixed heritage, stared down at him over a face paled, like so many others, from lack of sun. The gaze was steady, level, and more than a little impatient.
She was tapping her foot. Peeling off the gloves again, the doctor kept his face calm, even attentive, even as he sighed internally. She would not give up, and it would just be easier to deal with her now, even though it was probable that the issues she was about to raise would be covered when he had looked over the data that, even now, she was delaying his work on.
Still, at least she wasn’t the First Child.
Test Pilot Asuka Langley Soryu folded her arms in front of her, and nodded once. “The systems failed to adjust correctly to the loss of Torso-5’s D-Fridge,” she said in an accusatory tone. “Why, exactly, did it shut down T5’s D-Engine, when there were no heat issues? I still had all the other T-series functional and intact at that point; you don’t need to have it do that. It was only one DEV12 operating without a DDV13!”
“Asuka,” Wilhelm began, “it’s the precautionary principle. It’s good to have precautions set up so that if things do go wrong, there’s a margin for...”
“Precautions?” Asuka’s nose wrinkled slightly in a sneer, as she leant forwards. “That’s funny, I was under the impression that my
laser defence grids were an important precaution when operating against the Migou! Given that they give me my anti-infantry, anti-light-power-armour, and anti-missile defences!”
Running a hand through his hair, Dr noted that Lieutenant Feucht had already retreated. He was a lucky man. “Asuka,” he began, “yes, I understand that a loss of an engine is going to be an inconvenience...”
“An inconvenience!” the girl snapped. She took a breath, composing herself, her tone turning icily polite. “Are you aware, Deputy Director of Science,” she continued, “of what the loss of ten percent of my continuous operating power... and that would be gross power, not net power, because the limb sets are basically committed... are you aware of what that does to combat performance in a hot zone where there are enemy capital grade units!” Her icy politeness thawed. “I need my primary and secondary integrated weapons for the heavier hostile combat units, I have finite ammo for the Babylon which is needed for my objectives, and so, in a dense urban environment, and against the Migou, I
need my LDGs!” She took a deep breath. “Now, I can understand the loss of an Engine to enemy action. But the Engine was fine!”
Wilhelm did not sigh, because that would not help the situation. And not only because the sixteen-year old before him would certainly be able to beat him up. “Yes. The Engine may have been fine. It would not have been had it
melted.”
“Then I suggest that you find a way to make use of the extra capacity of the DDV13 over the DDV12, then?” Asuka replied, a sudden smirk on her face, as she tucked a wet lock of hair back. The red jumpsuit was darker, where it had been in contact with the hair. “Given that you chose not to upgrade the DEV12s when you did the DDVs.”
The man with the dirty blond hair leant back in his chair, tapping the outside of one of his control gloves, idly. “We didn’t switch to the DEV13s,” he said, in a distracted tone, “because of the fact that we couldn’t fit the extra bulk into the Eva. Organs in the way.”
“Irrelevant,” Asuka said, putting her hands on his desk. “That’s wasted capacity in my Evangelion, Dr Schauderhaft. Wasted capacity that led to me getting,” she pointed at the diagram of Unit 02, and the doctor lowed his argoggles to look at it too, “there... look at that cluster of hits, section 44ZZ, just under the right shoulderblade.” The section was lit up red, craters dug into the armour, laser defence grid melted, the pale flesh of the Evangelion scabbed over by repair systems. “I took pretty much a Wasp squadron’s worth of missiles there, and because the LDG wasn’t working at 100%, some anti-corvette missiles got through.” Her eyes were narrow. “And one hit before I could shift my AT-Field enough. I can show you the sympathetic burns,” she added, turning slightly to show him the padding of bandages under her jumpsuit. “So deal with it.”
The doctor nodded. “Yes, Asuka,” he said, wincing slightly in empathic pain. No wonder she was in a bad mood. “I’m sorry, I was waiting for the black box and the data from Gehirn to get in. I didn’t know.”
“Okay,” the girl replied, obviously slightly mollified. “In that case, I have more issues to raise, especially to do with the sluggishness in the right arm... did you shift the armour distribution there, closer to the hand? It’s bad, and there’s a sympathetic twinge in my wrist when I rotate it too fast... I think you’re stressing my Eva too much. Not the same with the left, though, and you did the same there. So either there’s asymmetry, or...”
Wilhelm raised a hand. “Asuka,” he said, in a gentle, non-confrontational voice. “You should go eat. It’s going to take us a while to read the data properly, even with Gehirn and a feed to the MAGI... they’re busy with other things, too, so we’re lower priority than normal, and we’ll be able to understand your issues once we can sort out the battle damage from any other problems.” He paused. “You did very well,” he added. “But, right now,” he could see on the AR images floating around her, from her implants, “...right now, you’ve got low blood sugar. You need to get something in your stomach, too.”
Asuka smiled weakly, relaxing slightly. “I understand, Wilhelm,” she said, face softening. “Yes. I’ve been in LCL for over fourteen continuous hours today. Because of that, decontamination was Grade Three, which
isn’t fun. I took an anti-corvette missile bleedthrough to the back. Yes. I think I deserve some food, and,” she pulled a lock of hair, and squeezed it, water running down her fingers “yes, a shower which doesn’t involve UV washes.”
“We’ll probably be done with an initial report in about,” the man looked at the clock on his desk, “... two hours. Check with me, and I’ll tell you if you can come in. But... yes, food, relax,” he ordered.
“Technically, that comes under Operations, not Science,” the redhead pointed out. “I chose to comply because it is advantageous to me, not because you have the authority,” she added, with a twitch of the corner of her mouth.
“You do that,” Dr Schauderhaft said, his voice and face studiously neutral, before he smiled slightly, too. He pulled his control gloves back on, and, with a few gestures, checked how the auto-summary was doing.
With a shrug, lopsided from the presence of the bandages under her jumpsuit and the numbness in her rights side, Asuka strode out, on her way to the mess hall.
She wondered where Kaji was, what he was doing, and hoped that he had seen how good she had been today, and that, for his sake, he would have had a less painful day than she had.
Because, of course, she thought, smirking, this couldn’t really be a bad day. No day that she got to add another strategic vessel icon to Unit 02’s kill-count really could be. Sure, Drone Ships were less impressive than Swarm Ships, for all that they were larger, because they were merely heavily armoured transports, not capital ships, but still...
She threw a glance back at the grey-green, wounded shape of her precious Evangelion. Yes, another white marker for the black-painted hands of the Unit, those only bits of 02 that she was allowed to customise.
Her accomplishment.
~’/|\’~
Mass-produced N-Pop blared through the smoky bar. The computer-generated vocals were bland and uninspired, although, it should be noted, the harmonic synthesis of classical violins and the thin whistling of
gladisuharmoki did merge rather well with the lead singer’s voice, especially if one’s goal was to have problems hearing anyone saying anything at all, and possibly end up with a migraine. The dark-skinned man sat back in his seat, breathing out a long, draconic coil of smoke, before sucking in another breath through his cigarette. The man sitting on the other side of the table did not react, although the slight unconscious twitch in his nostrils possibly suggested that he did not appreciate this particular brand of cigarette. If that was true, it couldn’t be seen in his carefree smile.
“... and, so, I know he knows you. I was wondering if you’d seen him recently.”
The man with the cigarette snorted, coughing. “Yeah. ‘Cause, you know, I really look like a tourist guide. Just search for him on the Grid, you know.”
The blue-shirted man shook his head. “No Grid activity apart from some one-time pad encrypted pulses. No profile checks. No movement on transit networks.” He smiled slightly. “Enough that he might be dead, and yet there’s evidence that suggests he isn’t.”
“Oh, really?”
“Yes.” The man shrugged. “Of course, if you’re not going to be cooperative...”
The black man ran a hand over the top of his close-cropped head, and reached for the drink in front of him. Faster than he could do that, though, the man in the blue shirt leaned forwards, and covered the top of the drink with his palm.
“I know you saw him on the last day he appeared on any main Grid records, Alesandro,” the man said calmly, with even a faint hint of a grin. “I know he met with you in this bar. I know he was very, very worried. I know he was more than a little drunk, and had opiates in his system as well. I know he tried to get emergency transport away from here, and I know you turned him down.”
The man leaned back, and blew another cloud of smoke at the standing figure. “I know you know all these things, Mr Kaji. So, please, tell me why the GIA is interested in this man. After all, surely a vanishing like this is the affair of the FSB, or
maybe the OIS, if there’s something suspect about it, not the GIA.”
“Oh, I’m merely a concerned citizen,” Ryoji Kaji said, with a slight flick of his ponytail.
“Suuu~uuure, you are,” the cigarette-smoking man replied, with a role of his eyes. “Well, you know, I can’t help you. I’ve already... hells, you already know everything I know about Charles Habegger. Yes, he was sort of floating around the base. Yes, he came to me in a panic. But, beyond that...” the man shrugged.
The GIA agent, Kaji slumped down into his seat. “I understand,” he said, in a somewhat melancholy voice. “Damn.” He shook his head. “I’ll see myself out.”
The cigarette smoking man snorted. “Yeah. You do that.” He reached into his jacket, and Kaji froze, for just a moment, hand twitching. “Want one?” he asked, proffering the packet.
“You know my virtues, Alesandro,” Kaji said with a grin, hand swooping in to take one.
“It’s pronounced ‘vices’, Kaji,” the man said, coughing. “And... now, shoo!”
Sitting back, Alesandro watched as the blue-shirted man left the building, strolling out with almost insulting casualness. With a sigh, he shook his head, and stretched his arms forwards, lit cigarette dancing a trail of bluish smoke in the air. There was a burst of swearing, as he accidentally knocked over his glass of beer, the smash as it rolled off the table loud even against the music. Pulling himself to his feet, he went in search for a cloth to clean up the mess.
An outside observer might have noticed the beer-soaked credit chit, loaded with the equivalent of two month’s salary for a senior officer, tucked in the folded skin of his hand.
Alesandro hoped that Kaji would enjoy his cigarette
very much.
~’/|\’~
“She’s a prodigy; that cannot be doubted.” The man’s voice was clipped, precise, conveying information with no revelation of his personal feelings. Only the very faintest hint of his native Spanish accent crept through. “It isn’t exactly surprising; she has been in the Ashcroft ‘Children’ programme since its foundation, and was involved in its predecessor group, too, before that had to be bought to an end. That’s twelve years of active training. Even with her youth taken into account, she’s the most experienced ACXB combat pilot in NEG service currently... although heavy on the theory and simulator training, compared to an Engel pilot, who are, after all, actually front-line soldiers, and taken from the military before that. The fact remains, however, she’s been training since
before there were Engels.”
The room was dark, hollow; the presence of still air could be felt above and around, even though the edges of the room could not be seen. The glowing figures of men and women, sat or standing, were not Augmented Reality projections, but were instead holographic. The speaker did not know why they chose to do that, but it was not his place to argue. The arglasses perched on his olive-coloured nose were lit in green, relevant data for his presentation which nevertheless gave him a slightly sickly cast to his features.
“... which would be why she has lasted this long,” interjected a
nazzady, in a neat, pale blue suit, a hint of cynicism entering her voice. “Active field combat cannot be compared to long term training. The difference in conditions alone...”
“That is true,” the bland-looking man admitted. “I should note, however, that she has been systematically and frequently exposed to extra-normal entities under controlled circumstances throughout her life, as a part of her desensitisation training. The stress induced by such exposures was suitably mitigated, after the events.”
“And?” asked a blond man, leaning forwards, hands resting on the back of his neck. “What were the results of desensitisation?”
The first speaker nodded, instinctively tucking back a lock of black hair. “As covered, she has been an exceptional success in those regards. As it currently stands, her Instinctual Fear Responses to all the common ENEs are in the bottom two percentiles, and her Conscious Fear Responses are, although higher... as is common for the methods used on her... are eminently satisfactory. Moreover, she is nearly completely desensitised to actions against Loyalists or Blanks; her Bladdiov Empathy Value against targets identified as hostile is 0.11, plus or minus 0.03 points.”
The blond man leant back. “That is... exceptional,” he said softly. “Although... the impact on her long term psychological health?”
“Acceptable, by the standards which Ethics has set. The combination of neural plasticity, due to the youth at which the training started, along with the detachment which comes from the EFCS-2 ANW-interface, means that... well, may I speak freely, sir?”
“Yes. All the people here are cleared for whatever you know.”
“Well, in that case, Project Ngoubou has been around since the old New United Nations. And that’s before you get to our predecessor groups, because a lot of people have always been interested in how the human mind works, and why it responds to extra-normal things as it does. Herkunft, Moneta, the Army Psychological Counselling Department... they’ve all adopted some of our practices. Quite simply, the exposure to the ENEs, combined with the other practices, are repeatable, reproducible, and provide that all-important reduction in IFR scores across the board. With clearance, I can provide the proper papers, rather than have to explain it here. We know what we’re doing, and with so long to work on someone, any errors can be corrected in a way that the standard Army six month Desensitisation Programmes simply cannot.”
“Thank you,” said the
nazzady. “We will take that offer up. Although,” she added, as if the idea was only just striking her, “is it not true that Project Ngoubou started as a NUN Project, from A-War 1, specifically set up to extract information from captured hostiles? Should such a group really be...”
“No, ma’am,” the bland man said, shaking his head. “The Project was merely repurposed in wartime. Specialists in extranormal, and thus, inevitably, xenobiological psychology were needed, after all, and one of the major pre-A-War tasks of the Project was building a psychological parallel to Professor Fuyutsuki’s work on ghoul physiology. When there is an ‘alien’,” the click of the inverted commas around the word was palpably audible, “species, it is inevitable that anyone of any use is called upon.”
The red-eyed woman nodded. “I see. That makes sense. I was merely curious about what I had heard about your group.”
The man shifted slightly, smart grey jacket tight against his body. “No, ma’am; we are a Project, not a Group,” he said.
She sighed. “Small ‘G’.”
“Oh, I apologise. Is there anything else, or is that all?”
“For the moment, yes,” the blond man said, his hologram vanishing, along with the others, leaving only those who were really there. The bland man who had been speaking, and a woman in her mid-twenties, shaven-headed and pale skinned, a barcode obvious against her scalp.
And as she took a few steps towards the man, there was something obviously
wrong about how she moved. Maybe a stroke, maybe something else, but she stuttered and jolted, the flow of human movement inconstant and broken. A sudden burst of speed moved a leg, and then it coasted; her entire gait held by pulses of muscular motion. Her face was sweaty, and now that she got closer, the paleness did not seem to come solely from her natural appearance, but instead from some kind of nausea or sickness.
“Ma’am. I... I did not expect you to be watching. Was that deemed satisfactory?” the man asked, suddenly looking worried. “Was I not my best?”
Red spoke.
“Y-y-yessss. It... was s-s-satisfactory. I was on-ly here in a... m-m-monitoring capacity, after all. J-j-just to check that our... trust in you wasssss well pla-ced.”
~’/|\’~
“Please roll up your sleeve,” the white-clad medical orderly said. Xuan complied, wincing slightly as she looked away from the needle descending towards her arm.
The orderly smiled, his teeth sparkling white. “Don’t like the sight of your own blood, eh?” he asked, the blue light of harcontacts overlaid on his eyes as the small camera on his headgear fed him the location of her veins.
Xuan winced. “Not really,” she admitted. “I don’t like needles much. Why can’t you just use the standard scrapers for the check?”
“Because this isn’t a DNA check, Corporal. We’ve already checked that you are who you claim to be, and you haven’t picked up any gene-carried taint. This is a medical procedure, to check for other forms of contamination... also,” he added, checking the files superimposed on his eyes, “you did have a suit puncture. Can’t be too careful. After that, we’ve just got the ANI map, the nervous system tests, and the CAT scan for the neurological Blank structures, before we can send you off to Mental, for a psychological analysis.” He shook his head. “Okay, just relax and look away... it’s just a small amount of blood...”
The woman groaned, turning away. She still winced, as the needle went into her arm.
“There,” the man said, a few moments later, as he stepped over to the machinery . “That wasn’t so bad.”
Xuan merely grunted at him.
“It’s funny how people react differently,” the man said, as he drummed his fingers on the side, watching as the test sample was lowered into the bulk of the machine.
The woman swallowed. “I think it hasn’t really sunk in yet,” she said, her voice slightly muffled. “I mean... I keep on expecting to see them again.”
The man paused. “I was actually talking about people and blood tests,” he said, hastily. “I mean, there are some people who don’t mind having needles stuck into them, but go green at the thought of seeing someone else, and the opposite, and then the other mixes.”
“Oh.” Xuan forced a smile onto her face. “So... heh... what are you?”
“Me? I don’t really care. Go through med school, and any dislike of needles will be gone, you know,” the man said. “I was... well, not terrified of them, but I didn’t
like them before...”
That was when the alarm sounded, the raucous squawking accompanied by red lights illuminating the white of the lab in scarlet. At the exact same moment, something rocked the seat Xuan was sitting on, an all-too-familiar thump which pulsed through her backside.
Immediately, she was down onto the ground, rolling under the bed with muscle memory which overrode consciousness. She could recognise an explosion, after all.
“What the hell!” the orderly yelled, flinching back.
Code Amber Alert! All personnel report to their stations. Evacuate Hangars 012, 013, 014, 015, 016, immediately. All personnel in proximity to those locations should ensure that they are wearing full ANaMiNBC protective gear.
And interspersed with the announcement was the emergence of a crackle of distant gunfire.
“What the fuck!” the man added, hysteria entering his tone. Pulling himself back up to a fully standing position, he rushed over to one of the green-painted cabinets in the room, and stuck his hand against the memomorph lock, fingers twitching as the skin samples were taken. The machine was evidently satisfied, as the front of the cabinet flowed away, to reveal a standard emergency cache. The man grabbed one LAR-18 carbine for himself, and, after a moment’s hesitation, tossed one of the light weapons to Xuan, who caught it smoothly.
Technically, he shouldn’t have been doing that at all. She hadn’t passed the checks run on any solider who had experienced a combat incident with Migou forces, so she wasn’t allowed to carry a weapon on base. But... hells, she wasn’t going to raise it, if he was going to throw her a gun. It would make things a lot easier if she were armed.
“I need ammo to actually use this,” she pointed out; two magazines were passed, to make it an actually-useable weapon. She could see that he was looking at her with slightly dubious eyes, weapon clutched close to him in a position such that it could be raised if it was needed, as she checked the weapon, before sliding in one of the two magazines, and prepping it.
“You know what you’re doing, yes?”
She nodded, and he could be seen to relax slightly. That didn’t comfort her much.
Xuan swallowed. “Alright... erm. Oh God, I can’t even remember your name.”
The man flashed his sparkling white teeth at her in the dimmed lighting. “Corporal Janckowski. Marek Janckowsk, Medical Corps.”
That was more information than I really needed, Xuan thought, a hint of irritation in her voice, which was quickly removed by the scream which sounded just outside the room. She clutched the rifle tighter, and internally let off a cluster of curses at the fact that this was both lacking a smartlink, and chronically underpowered, by the standards she was used to. Infantry in semi-powered armour carried weapons which would probably leave a person firing them normally with hideously bruised shoulders, if they were lucky. This... this one, a 5mm carbine, was the kind of thing that the Dagonite fish-fuckers used, and got rightfully slaughtered by a modern military force for doing so; something combat and small and which probably wouldn’t even stagger a Loyalist Papa-Alpha, even with a direct joint hit.
She could only hope that this was only an Infiltrator Blank, rather than one built for combat, or anything worse. Because if it was anywhere above baseline, or had any integral Migou weapons, then things were going to go badly for her.
Raising one hand, she gestured for Marek to wait. Reaching out with one hand, muscles aching with deliberate slowness, she rested her bare palm against the door handle. Then, taking a breath, she eased it down, pushing slightly, just enough to have it swinging freely. She gestured at Marek to cut the lights in the infirmary; it wouldn’t be a good idea to be silhouetted here, and every little advantage would count.
I wish I had my FO-cable with me, she thought, anger in her mental voice.
I hate going in blind.
And with that thought, she gave the door a hard shove with her foot, keeping her back against the doorframe. Trying to expose herself as little as possible, she flowed into the room, clearing the danger of the open doorway door as fast as she could. Carbine raised, her gaze flipped between the persons decorating the interior of the antechamber, the corpses sprawled around, unarmoured figures mutilated by the ferocity of the assault, and the flickering from the cracked light above, the ceiling indented, as if something had been thrown into it. No one, no
thing was standing upright in the room.
Slowly, leading her way forwards, step-by-step, Jancowski behind her, Xuan kept her gun trained on the door opposite to her. To be more precise, she kept her aim trained on where it had been, because the attack had left it splintered and shattered on the floor.
“Check them!” she ordered the man, gaze not shifting. “See for survivors.”
“Too recent for thermals,” Jancowski muttered, “don’t have heartbeat sensor with me. Triage, triage, triage.” He swallowed, the air coppery in the mess. “You... you have the doorway covered?”
“Do it!” she barked, gaze still not moving. “We might be able to save some of them.”
There was the sound of metal hitting wet meat behind her, and something thudded on the ground.
We didn’t check the bodies, Xuan thought, as she swirled, gun raised, pointed at the Blank who had its hands around the medical orderly’s throat. It was a female body, and Heavy Combat Infantry, too, but that didn’t matter now. It was a Blank. Except in the fact that the underskin armour and enhanced musculature of a HCI soldier would make things harder, and would also explain how a Blank got so far in. The rifle chattered, and she fought to keep it level, bullets punching through the unarmoured man it held as a shield and into the Blank. The desensitisation training, among other things, tried to teach you to ignore the “human hostage” reflex.
Who remained intact enough to throw Jancowski at her, the slam of his bulk bowling her to the ground and the rest of the shots spraying wide. Up above, the light shattered, casting the anteroom into the dimly-lit red of emergency lighting.
Not that it affected either of the combatants overly; both had NEG-construction Eyes, and whatever the Blank had on top of that.
Xuan groaned, and, gritting her teeth, tried to stop the world from spinning.
Fuck, fuck, fuck! she thought, as she rolled out from under the bleeding corpse, and scrabbled for her empty carbine.
It’s an HCI, I’m just a combat engineer. It’s faster, stronger, and more armoured than me. Any plan than involves me having to fight something like that unarmed is a bad plan. What to... urk.
Her chain of thought was suddenly interrupted, as the Blank, bleeding from multiple impacts, her skin a strangely smooth texture from the subdermal plating of a HCI, reached down, and grabbed her neck. The thing hoisted Xuan up to thrash and kick, her attempts to get. The woman could
feel her spine creak and grate, agonising spikes shooting up and down her neck. Little black dots started to dance in front of her Eyes, and Xuan was suddenly aware of how little time she had.
A left heel, swung back into where she guessed the kneecap of the Blank was, managed to connect, and the reprogrammed woman staggered backwards. HCI implants didn’t have the solid plating around the joints, and so a military boot could still harm. And the combination of the mass of all the Blank’s plating, and the fact that she was trying to snap Xuan’s neck meant that they went down together. Furniture splintered as the Blank crashed down, its head impacting with a solid noise not entirely unlike a dropped bowling ball, and the Lance Corporal screamed in pain, as her ankle was crushed by the mass.
Still, she still had the empty carbine close to hand. No bullets, but any leverage was good, she thought, as she pulled herself out from under the heavy body, stress-given strength enough to push it off. Forcing the pain from her ankle away, teeth forced together in a screaming grin, she slammed the butt of the weapon into the right Eye of the Blank, rupturing the hard surface and tearing a chunk of flesh off the woman’s face, as it ricocheted off the hardened plates. The thing thrashed and writhed, so the second blow went into windpipe; armoured, yes, but still vulnerable to sufficient force. It wasn’t striking back now, just lying there, taking each blow.
Screaming, swearing, sweating, Xuan Do smashed the light carbine into the throat again and again, the lightweight plastics splintering, smeared in crimson, which suddenly went bright red when a major artery was ruptured, gushing forth from one of the flexible joints.
Xuan didn’t stop. If asked later, she would have claimed that she couldn’t be sure that this was just an Infiltrator, that it might have been a Combat Blank of some form, and thus not merely a mentally-rewired human, and so she needed to do as much damage as possible. But, to be frank, that was not what was passing through her mind.
There was a noise behind her, followed by the sharp pain of a stun baton thrust into her back. People were shouting, and the pain in her ankle was even worse. It was standard protocol; they couldn’t be sure that she wasn’t compromised, that this wasn’t some kind of Migou false-flag operation, to get them to trust one Blank for taking down another, to allow them to accomplish their objective. She was going straight for a neural scan, to see if she was a Blank. It made sense.
But as she convulsed on the floor, muscles spasming, her only rational, as opposed to pain-induced, thought was that she needed to damn well get a medal for this to be all worth it.
~’/|\’~
“Asuka?”
The reddish-blond girl, her now-dry hair swept back with the two A10 superconducting QUI Devices holding it in place, stiffened, standing to attention. “Colonel,” she said in response, turning to face the older woman. Actually, technically, she was looking down at her, but only in a physical sense; quite the opposite was true in a social sense.
Colonel Kristos followed where the girl had been looking, before her interruption. Already, the hordes of red-exosuited workers and car-sized drones which swarmed around Unit 02 had stripped away the contaminated upper layers of armour. Now, the titan stood in the chamber, almost perfectly reflective, as the layers of mirrorgloss, designed to minimise damage from the ubiquitous laser weapons of the strange aeon, were exposed to the air. In the white of the chamber, the workers were strange, distorted red shapes reflected in the war machine, the only distinction on the smooth surface being the bubbled and warped sections where the upper layers had been damaged by the action.
It was a mundane sight to anyone experienced with the necessities of maintenance.
Oxanna permitted herself a short, mono-shouldered shrug, and turned her attention back to the girl. “How are you feeling?” she asked.
“A little annoyed,” Asuka admitted, after a calculating glance at the black-uniformed woman. “I made some stupid mistakes out there.”
The blond woman raised her eyebrows at that. “I was actually talking about your back... but I don’t believe you did.”
“The fact that I have,” she reached over her shoulder, to point at the region around her right shoulder blade, “
this is a sign that I made a mistake. I should have done better.” She shook her head, hair flicking in a tight controlled arc. “That was too close to the entry plug. And the pilot is the primary point of failure in an Evangelion.”
“Asuka,” Oxanna said, with a small smile in her voice, “you personally took down two Drone Ships, and a capital-grade charge beam and its attached lander today. Errors are inevitable on actual battlefields, and you made few enough that they can be fixed.” She watched as the girl relaxed slightly. “Less than your opponents made, certainly,” she added.
“That doesn’t mean what I said wasn’t true,” Asuka said, blinking once, those blue Eyes staring at the Colonel. “I know I’m the best pilot there is, but the fact is, compared to the Evangelion organism or the cybernetics in the machine, anyone is weak... prone to failure.”
Colonel Kistos restrained a sigh, running a hand down the sleeve of her black uniform. “Asuka... is this about the adrenal system or neurachem modifications again?”
The girl just stared at her, a look in her eyes which seemed far too old for her sixteen-year old body.
“Those are alterations which neither the NEGA Biomorality Board, nor the Ashcroft Representative for Ethics, will sanction. You know this. You’re still maturing, and we can’t risk the endocrinal or neurological damage that might result.” She held Asuka’s gaze. “You are too valuable as a pilot now to risk that.”
“I wasn’t fast enough today,” Asuka said, flatly. “I didn’t notice the second squadron of Wasps flanking me, so I got hit. I
did notice the launch, but if I’d been faster, I’d have been able to switch LDG priority back. And because of that, the Eva got damaged, I got hurt, and I lost several secondary weapons systems. My body just can’t live up to what my mind wants to do, so I need it to be better.” She put her hands on her hips. “You don’t understand. I am the best Evangelion pilot that you can get. And it still isn’t enough.”
The older woman did sigh then, adjusting her black beret. “Listen to me, Asuka,” she said. “I think you are forgetting just how exceptional your achievements are, and just how much more time you have. We... that’s the Army speaking here... don’t intend to deploy you as a proper field unit until you have a proper commission, and that won’t be until you can legally get one. Today was an emergency; I had you pulled forwards, because it was that, or risk a breakthrough at Nova Kakhovka. And,” her face softened slightly, “I know there have been emergencies in the past as well, and live fire combat tests, but you are not a field-active pilot at the moment. You are a Test Pilot for the first Mass Production model of a series of experimental arcanocyberxenobiological combat units. And you are
amazing at it.”
She could see the girl’s jawline tighten slightly, before loosening again, breaking into a confident smile. “I can be sure you mean that, Oxanna,” Asuka said. “I know you’d tell me if I wasn’t good enough.”
“... and have, in the past,” the older woman said.
“Which is why I can trust you with these things,” Asuka agreed. “Not like that idiot Malvolio,” she added, in a darker voice. “Always telling me that I’m ‘good enough’. No one can ever be ‘good enough’; you always,
always can do better. I can’t tell if he’s someone’s sycophant, or just an idiot.”
There was a pause, as they watched the teams strip away one of the empty seeker launchers, its rails utterly warped and melted by an impact from a Migou plasma weapon.
“Could be both,” Oxanna suggested.
“Good point,” Asuka said, with a smirk.
“She’s right, you know,” a voice said from behind the pair, making them both jump slightly. “Not about Captain Martello, because as a neutral observer I cannot...” and that was about as far he got, before he had to save his breath for dodging a ballistic sixteen-year old, and her guided hug. Deploying countermeasures such as a worried look proved to be eminently ineffectual, and he was finally forced to mitigate the damage by keeping the embrace chaste, and brief. It would be rude to try to dodge it with his full capacities, after all; the girl would be offended, and that would just be unnecessarily mean.
“Didn’t you see what I did today!” Asuka asked the newcomer, her voice suddenly a lot more girlish. “Wasn’t I amazing?”
Ryoji Kaji smiled, and stepped back, disentangling one of her limbs as he did. “I’ve only looked over the reports, but, yes, Asuka, you did very well.” The man from the Global Intelligence Agency turned, and smiled at the Colonel. “Debriefing her, are you, Oxanna?”
“That’s largely been done already, Ryoji,” Colonel Kristos said back, matching his smile.
The man frowned. “I have to say, I just thought it was going to be a training exercise today,” he admitted, raising his eyebrows at the military woman.
“So did I,” admitted Oxanna. “And that was what it was meant to be. I had to move Unit 02 up from 2501 to Nova Kakhovka because otherwise we’d have had a line collapse. The bugs managed to take out one of the anti-cap lasers there, and... well, you know the rest.”
He knew the rest.
“So, did you do anything exciting, today?” Asuka asked him, still holding onto one of his hands. “Hunt down and kill a horde of Dagonite cultists, or maybe thwart the evil goals of a traitor to humanity? Did you use any good one-liners as you shot anyone?” Her eyes were sparkling.
Kaji sighed. “Honestly, no. I’m not a field agent anymore, as I
have told you. Most of my job involves paperwork. Although...” he stroked his unshaven chin, “perhaps you would be interested in my valiant bravery against a most dreadful foe.”
“Sure!”
Oxanna rolled her eyes. “Why not? Although, if this turns out to be the story of the black-and-white-armoured pilot in the black-and-white Blizzard... well, I do have a loaded gun.”
The man’s face fell, in a comic overreaction. “Well, looks like the nice lady from the Army has just
de facto classified my work,” he said.
“Oh, well,” said Asuka, a sly smile creeping onto her face. “Well, that’s a shame. I suppose we should go home now, because I’ve done pretty much everything I need to, haven’t I, Oxanna?”
The Colonel nodded. “I think that’s fine,” she said, Eyes flicking for a moment, as she checked her PCPU. “Yes. Be careful with her,” she told Kaji, in a warning tone, “she took sympathetic burns from ordinance to the back of Unit 02. The medichines managed to stabilise them in-plug, and they’ve been treated, but...”
Kaji nodded, face momentarily serious, before he smiled again. “I’ve got the car outside, Asuka,” he said. “We can leave now, if you want?”
The girl considered it. “Can we get something to eat on the way home?” she asked. “I needed a Level 3 Decontamination, and so... well, I’ve eaten since then, but there’s a lot of eating to make up for.” She rolled her eyes. “I’ll never end up fat, if that keeps on happening.”
“Yeah.” The man paused. “Actually,” he admitted, “I’m kinda hungry too. I had to skip lunch. Where do you want to go...”
~’/|\’~
The table in the apartment was heaped with plastic containers. Within these mounds could be seen rice, noodles, and all sorts of protein and woven vegetable substitute floating in various sauces. The iridescent colours of this alchemical mess would have driven ancient peoples into awe, at such wonder and light in the world. Also, there were prawn crackers.
They were having Chinese.
“Don’t take all the egg-fried rice,” Kaji warned Asuka, who was shovelling it from the container to her plate in vast amounts.
Her eyes momentarily narrowed, before returning wide and innocent. “But, Kaa~aaji,” she said, flicking her head slightly, “I was piloting today, and had to go through decontamination. You know that always makes me feel like I haven’t eaten in
ages. I’m actually really, really hungry... and, yes, I know I’ve already eaten, but one meal isn’t enough.”
“I know,” the man said, “but, just try not to take it all. I like it, too. I mean, no one’s touched the chicken chow mein yet.”
She screwed up her face. “Not in the mood for that.”
“You normally like it.” That was said in a joking tone.
A shrug, followed by a wince, as a jolt of pain came from the sympathetic burn on her back.
“That reminds me,” Kaji said. “I got you a present.” He watched as her eyes lit up at that remark.
“What is it?” Asuka asked, with a hint of hunger in her voice. “Although, of course, you really shouldn’t have,” she added, hastily. “But what is it? What is it?”
“I managed to get you the action-reports from the Harbinger-4 incident,” the man said in a deliberately casual tone, before biting into a prawn cracker. For all her talents, Asuka really wasn’t that good at feigning disinterest.
“Thank you, Kaji,” she said, in what he was pretty sure could accurately be described as a squeal. She leant forwards, and he resolutely kept his eyes upwards. “What can I do to repay you?” Asuka said, in what he thought was meant to be a seductive tone. From his perspective, it was a failure.
“You can pass me the soy sauce,” he suggested, watching the faint flicker of disappointment warring against the ecstasy, before being resolutely crushed.
“Well,” the reddish-blond girl said, as she passed the aforementioned condiment, “thank you. A lot. Really.” Her hand hovered over her own plate for a moment.
Kaji smiled. “Yes, Asuka, you can go watch them right now.” He dug a hand into his pocket, and withdrew a storage chip. “It’s locked, so you can’t copy it, and... well, you know how classified everything Eva-related is.”
“Understood,” Asuka nodded, picking up her plate, and adding a few more things to it for good measure. “If you’ll excuse me...”
“You are excused,” Kaji said, gravely, his face twisted into a grotesque mask of ‘reasonable authority figure’. It looked rather comic on him. He shook his head, as Asuka disappeared into the next room.
It took less than an hour, as he cleaned up the table (there had been several distracting calls from his superiors, so the last parts of the meal had been cold), for the laughter to start. And it wasn’t nice laughter; he could hear the contempt dripping from it. Depositing the plates in the sink, he poked his head into the living room.
Augmented Reality interface before her, Asuka was working her way through the autocensored footage from Unit 01 and surrounding units. At the moment, she had the same image of Unit 01, from multiple angles paused. With a finger poke, she set it to play again.
On the screen before him, from multiple angles, the grey-blue figure of Unit 01 fired its Babylon in one hand. The structural diagram to her right, complete with flashing red, showed the consequence of that decision, as fractures propagated up the
“Useless,” Asuka proclaimed, mirth fighting with superiority. “What an idiot.”
“Really?” Kaji asked. From his point of view, it had looked fairly impressive.
There was almost a faint hint of pity in the stare she directed at him, quite unlike her normal interactions with him, before her normal exterior returned. “Yes. Complete and utter idiot.” She shook her head, hair whipping behind her. “Seriously, what kind of an imbecile tries to fire a Babylon with one hand, and hasn’t even grasped the concept of bracing yourself with your AT-Field?” She paused. “Well, this Third Child, obviously.
Mein Gott, I can’t believe he passed the handling tests to even qualify. I mean... arggh! It’d be like trying to fire a man-sized rifle without bracing it.” The disgust on her face was evident. “If someone like him is piloting... they must be desperate. Or stupid. Facility 0343 needs to get Unit 03 ready, so someone competent can pilot, even if they have to ship them all the way from Australia.”
“And yet he’s managed to eliminate two Harbinger-level threats,” Kaji pointed out, mildly.
“Hardly,” Asuka snapped. “Asherah; he lost control, and the Eva did it. And Eshmun... that doesn’t count as a kill! The Army and Navy had already blown it in half. That’s... that’s like half a kill, at most.” She crossed her arms. “And he should lose points for getting so damaged both times.”
“So there’s a point system now?”
“There should be!”
The man stroked his chin. “Aren’t you a little harsh on him, Asuka?” he asked.
“Hardly! I’d say, the problem with him is that whoever’s been responsible for his training hasn’t been harsh enough. I mean, he’s my age, so he’s had...” she paused, “well, this Third Child obviously started after Berlin-2, so he’s had maybe eight years training. Now, that’s still less than me, but... it’s
inexcusable to be this bad!”
“Asuka...” the man began, trying to prevent the rant.
She ignored him. “I-I-I’m
glad I’m here on the Front,” she continued. “I never want to pilot with someone that useless. Look at him! An utter lack of control! I bet he’s still utterly reliant on the control yokes for memophysical association! What a crude, bumbling
idiot.” She was almost spluttering. “I’m actually offended that someone like that is allowed in a masterpiece like an Evangelion, even one as crude as the Test Model!”
Internally, Kaji sighed. He actually couldn’t tell her the truth. The identity of the Third Child was still classified; all Asuka was allowed to know was his age, and sex. And... actually, the GIA agent didn’t understand why the age wasn’t classified for the other Children, too. Probably some mistake when sealing his file, was his opinion. The whole misunderstanding over how long the Third Child had been training was something he was going to raise with the Evangelion people.
It wasn’t healthy to promote misunderstandings, the spy thought with deliberate irony.
“He does have a very good Synch Ratio,” he pointed out.
“And I’m sure that if Evangelion piloting was all about that one number, he’d be the biggest, bestest pilot ever,” the girl snapped. “Oh, wait, no. Mine is still better. So, just to clarify, I’m the best pilot in a technical, synchronisational, tactical, and strategic sense, and am also in the best Evangelion.” She snorted. “Well, at least they have their priorities right there. It’d be worse if that idiot was in
my Unit 02.”
Kaji frowned. She did seem to be actively offended by this stuff about the Third Child and Unit 01; probably the idea of a competitor at all, he thought.
Out loud, he said, “Well... um, Asuka, I’ve just has a call. I’m needed in the office, some new data’s come in over the Migou response to what you did today, and I need to check it out. Will you be okay?”
“If I don’t die of laughter first,” she said, rolling her eyes. “No, I’ll be fine. But be back soon, and maybe we can watch the rest of this together.”
“Maybe,” the man replied, his face deliberately blank.
The schadenfreude-rich laughter resumed as he left.
~’/|\’~
Her uniform was already hanging up neatly. The smart fabric didn’t crease, after all, but it was still a good idea to leave it like that. The dark-green shorts and black top, the entopic image of a white hand flowing and shifting over the surface of the material, were, by contrast, worn-in and comfortable, soft fabric not designed for any kind of formality.
In Colonel Oxanna Kristos’ opinion, her current position here at Facility 2501, assigned by Anton as the Army supervisor of this sub-facet of the Evangelion Group, as they couldn’t trust the officers seconded to the Foundation fully, was a rather nice one. It was, in fact, almost a bit of a break, compared to the last time she had been dragged off to handle an operation. What had happened in Balleydehob had been... messy.
By contrast here, the most she had to deal with was deployment issues, logistics, and the work from Slavik which she could do remotely. The Evangelion team ran most of the day-to-day affairs, and so she was very much looking in, rather than involved in the day to day affairs.
Perhaps that was why she had started to interact with Test Pilot Soryu more. It really shocked Oxanna how little attention some of the Evangelion team paid to her. Personally, she had put it down to the length of time they had known her; they still looked at her as a little girl. Despite the fact that this “little girl” was, apart from having far more potential in her little finger than some of the engineering staff had in their entire bodies, also walking around at the age of sixteen with a degree in the Natural Sciences. In fact, the only reason she had not moved onto the Arcane Sciences was the fact that it was not permitted, at her age, to do so, which was a
controversial decision with her, to say the least. And the fact that she had that known association with the head of the Achtzig Group... well, Oxanna had spent time around the man, and it showed. Oh God, it showed. So, yes, she had effectively begun to mentor the girl, who had instinctively responded, opening like a flower (albeit one with lots of thorns) in response.
Of course, such an association came with fringe benefits...
That was when the house LAI informed her of a visitor.
Checking that her pistol was still in place, she went to the door.
Really, though, she thought,
the pistol won’t do much. If something that’s trying to kill me can get past the blood checks, the CATSEYE scans, the wards, the neural scans, they’re probably prepared enough that a 10mm won’t do much.
Something ran the bell. Checking the camera and the CATSEYE, she nodded to herself, and stepped up to the door.
No one.
She looked to her left, and then right, up and down the corridor.
Still no one.
“Who are you looking for?” a confused-sounding man asked. A certain blue-shirted unshaven individual was leaning against the wall, to her left.
“Goddamnit, Ryoji,” she swore, flinching. “Don’t do that.”
“You always look left first,” he explained. “So I just stepped around you. It’s not hard. Especially if you’re very fast.”
“It’s not hard? You’re very fast?” She left a deliberate pause. “Then why are you here?”
The man winced, “I walked into that one,” before shrugging. “Well, anyway, I bought you some flour,” he said, holding a white bag. “Well, I couldn’t find any flowers, and I thought that, given it’s
pronounced the same...” He put it down on the table, smirking at her.
“You’re late,” she said, trying to both raise an eyebrow and not laugh, while at the same time taking off her top. It was surprisingly hard to multitask like that, especially when he got up close and did
that to her ear.
There wasn’t much talking after that.
~’/|\’~