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RP: LSDF Akahar [Chapter 2.0] - Answer Me

Merril followed the order and leapt across the divide, leaving Veronica to stew or follow. Her choice. Merril wasn't going to spend the entire mission babysitting Veronica while she threw a tantrum for not being first in line. She landed about as ceremoniously as you'd expect. The L'manel's gun was back up in an instant to make sure she wouldn't be caught off guard.
 
"Pffft, ahahaha!" Veronica was about to retort when the body hit the window next to her and Merril. She seemed to completely forget about the argument in her moment of mirth about something rather morbid. Why she found this occurrence funny was a mystery, as she offered no explanation. Not replying to either woman, she saunters after the group... suggesting the argument wasn't that important to her and was likely just an excuse to fight with Mars.

"Well, this'll be fun. Looks like someone figured they had better chances suffocating in space than staying in here. Can't wait."
 
LCS Mok'Ro, Aft Engineering, Deck Two
The away team entered the Engineering bay with their guns raised. In Basion's earpiece, she got a reply from the Akahar. "Their last cargo manifests were skipped, we know they picked up something, but they didn't follow protocol and failed to catalogue it. I'll send you the last one they had submitted." Bastion's HUD then appeared with a checklist - idea being that whatever wasn't on that checklist was their target. Their declared cargo included lots of ores mined from asteroids,

One of the most notable sights in the engineering bay was that everything looked undisturbed. Just like the people who were working here just vanished without a trace. The consoles were deactivated and the tools were left on their desks and walls. The walls and floors were clean, albeit dusty. Shelving unites were filled with various pieces of repair equipment.

Gough walked in and flicked a light switch on: the room lit up. "Seems clear," Gough noted after scanning his eye across the room. "I wonder if the consoles are still usable," he while looking up at the lights. Yar'mak followed him to cover his tracks. He looked at the console and wiped the dust from the keyboard and screen, sending a plume floating into the vacuum. He pressed the power button and it lit up. "Would you look at that."

The boot sequence wasn't standard though, it seemed to be skipping through the startup diagnostics erratically before descending into programming cacophony and going to a black screen. "It's screwed," Yar'mak sighed. The two turned around to start looking around the rest of the room for something more interesting.

A pained moan could be heard from somewhere inside the engineering room. It sounded like someone in anguish, like they were having red hot pokers pushed against an old wound. There were no signs of life in the room, though. "Keib, Al'ris here," she reported back to Akahar, "Who... what was that?"

LSDF Akahar, Bridge
Keib played the recording back and tried to match the voice to anyone on the Mok'ro's crew. He took slices of crew interviews and logs that he was given and tried to match them to any specific person. It matched nobody who'd submitted logs. "I don't know. I seriously doubt anyone would still be alive though."

LCS Mok'Ro, Aft Engineering, Deck Two
"Roger. This place is getting worse by the minute," Al'ris said as she approached a bookshelf filled with binder books full of engineering notes. "I wonder..." she mused as she picked up the book dated most recently and flicked it open. The handwriting was well presented in block letters of Lorath script.
Engineering Notebook said:
This asteroid we've picked up seems to have these odd metamaterials in it. It's like, the building blocks to make whatever we want. It... regenerates too. Is it alive? We're unsure. It serves our needs at present, and necessity was required because of the hole in deck three on starboard from that asteroid hitting us when our shields were down.

Captain wants us to run more preliminary tests before we report back to Lor. I'm a bit wary of poking this thing further but its her orders. Dunno what drew her to it.
Al'ris looked at the material diagrams and scrapbook photographs of metallurgy samples, then flicked ahead again. On this page were pictures of circuitry and the strange metal being applied into it and charts of performance boosts - and sporadic dropouts. It was beta hardware.
Engineering Notebook said:
The Captain keeps on mumbling something about the metal. I know she's a fan of the GodSkeletons, but I think this is a different metal. Our tests are still proceeding at a reasonable clip but I think the subject isn't enjoying the consultations, so to speak. We're starting to lose control of it and the Captain.
She flicked it forward to a blank page far ahead, and started flicking back until she found a page that had something on it. The handwriting now resembled chicken scratches, and there were holes in the paper as the pen was thrust through it. Ink had bled through to the other pages too, resembling blood splatters.
Engineering Notebook said:
The metal lives.
THE METAL LIVES.
THE METAL LIVES.
THE METAL LIVES.

THE METAL LIVES.
THE METAL LIVES.
THE METAL LIVES.
THE METAL LIVES.
THE METAL LIVES.
Al'ris closed the book and gulped before passing it to Bastion. "We have a book full of crazy here." The pained moan crept through the room again, and it was right next to Al'ris - behind the books. The Fyunnen froze.
 
"Attention people," Mars called out and raised her rifle. She pointed at Al'ris and gestured at her to circle the bookshelf from the left, while Mars would circle from the right. She then proceeded to do just that, changing her rifle for the pacifier gun she carried. It might be crazed crew-member after all.
 
She appeared bored, but her eyes were everywhere, paying far more attention than she was pretending to. When Alris started to read a booklet, she couldn't help herself from acting like a curious feline, peering over her shoulder obnoxiously. Of course, she wasn't trying to be subtle with how close to her back she was, but this stopped at the noise that caused her eyes to shoot up towards the source.

Veronica, as she tended to do, decided to throw a kink into the plan. This time in the form of grabbing the bookshelf and yanking it forward as she steps out of the way if it decides to topple. Whether or not it was an attached fixture was apprently not a concern to her, as she pulled with her half cybernetic limbs hard enough for either. The women trying to go around it would now have to deal with the fact they had no cover from what was behind it, if anything... but the same went for the maker of the noise.
 
LCS Mok'Ro, Aft Engineering, Deck Two
"Hey what are you-?" Al'ris asked as she saw Veronica in her peripheral vision, peering at the notebook before she approached the bookshelf.

Veronica grabbed the bookshelf and pulled it down with a crash. Books and paraphernalia came clattering down starting from the top shelf and ending with the books on the bottom. It wasn't just the sound of binders and technical manuals hitting the floor, the occasional metal clank or crumbling stone could be heard as she cast the shelf down to look at the wall behind it. The shelf itself was made to be moved around for any reasonable environmental setup - and Veronica's preferred setup appeared to be the floor. "What the hell do you think you're doing?" Al'ris growled as she wondered why Keib let her in on this mission.

What she saw was something worth covering up to most observers. The first things she could see were a pair of arms and hands embedded into the wall, blending almost organically with it in strands of the wall bleeding over it. It almost looked like they were trying to push the bookshelf away themselves - but were pinned down. Between those two arms and hands were what seemed to be the moving indentation of a screaming face, as though it'd been painted over with steel and plastic.

A croaking moan emanated from its mouth while the muscles in the forearms flexed futilely. Whatever this person was supposed to be in life was difficult to distinguish its arms kept struggling and its face was affixed into an expression of unseeing horror and agony, the interior of their mouth fully visible and forced open. Just how this poor soul found themselves like this was a mystery.

"Oh... my God," Yar'mak said, standing back, lowering his LMG and nearly dropping it in wonder and fear. "What the fuck happened to them?"
"Keib what am I looking at here?" Gough asked as he snapped a picture and sent it to the Akahar.

It didn't take long for a voice in their earpieces to reply. "They seem to be embedded in the ship's walls for a reason that I cannot presently fathom. But they seem to be alive too. Can you talk to them?"

Gough's brain raced. Of all the strange and potentially dangerous things in the universe, he was never ordered to talk to one of them. "Sir?" Gough asked again, blinking and mouthing choice words to the others.

"Can you talk to them?" Keib repeated. "It isn't rocket surgery - though you might need surgery to get them out of there. If they're a witness to what happened you can get a firsthand account."

"Uh, understood... um," Gough mumbled back before looking at the face in the wall again. How they were alive in vacuum was one thing, how they were speaking without a thorax was another. "Hello?" he asked over loudspeaker.

The face in the wall ceased moaning for a moment to make the words out. "Uuuurrhrhghhnnnnn," the face in the wall replied, not a wail of agony but something it'd concentrated on to make somewhat palatable for sentient ears, though slowly drawn out and breathly. "Looooururgaaaffff." Their voice was distinctly muffled by the wall covering the inside of their mouth save for the tongue, but they were able to hear somehow. The muscles in their forearms were still flexing slightly.

"Can you understand us?" Gough asked as he looked to the others. Al'ris had simply stood away for the entirety of this exchange, breathing heavily into her helmet and not looking directly at the person in the wall.
Yar'mak stepped in and tried to touch the embedded person's arm, but Gough intercepted his wrist and shook his head at him. He didn't want his friend picking up anything that'd lead to whatever... whatever happened here.

"Yeeeeeeerrfffff..." Gough could've sworn that he saw the uvula of this person's mouth moving a little, along with the back of their mouth flexing to squeeze air through the windpipe and larynx. But - he felt like he was talking to a statue, and he shuffled his feet and clasped his hands about himself defensively, finger not far from the trigger in case this turned out to be a trap.
 
Mars frowned heavily under her helmet. What kind of wild gun did Keib send with her on this mission. Veronica was just a liability, a loose cannon. Might be useful in a fight, but too dangerous in military salvage mission. Mars just hoped that the mission will be over, before Veronica kills someone. With a sight, she looked at the being embedded in a wall, what a terrible sight. Bastion did not but in as Gough took action and started checking it out.

"Veronika, dear, be so kind and stop doing whatever the fuck you want. Just bloody wait yeah? As soon as we find something that wants to kill us or make us part of a wall, I will let you ravage it to your hearts contents. Until then, just don't do anything." Mars said to the geshrin ex-pirate.

"Hellion," Mars used Al'ris' second name, since there was an outsider up and about. "Calm down, I need your head in the game. There is no fight yet, be on watch for now, take a deep breath."

"Soft-Touch," Mars turned to Merril. "Check life-signs of that poor sod, try to not touch it and be careful. Hawkeye, cover her. Wild-Dog, eyes on the exits, let's be careful."

Mars then moved away a bit, she did not want to watch the thing in the wall anymore. The tall fyunnen sighed and called Keib on private line. "Keib, what the hell are we dealing with." She said. "This is not Misshu or pirates. Hell it is probably something worse. You should better be ready to destroy this ship and everything in it. Also I want a quarantine for us, when we get back, who knows what causes this all. Also Veronica, is grounded for next mission, she does not know what teamwork or chain of command is."
 
Merril wasn't fast enough to stop Veronica, so she just let the geshrin do her thing and reveal the trapped person.

"Well, shit. This ain't anything I've seen before. . ." she commented, giving them a once-over. She grimaced under her faceplate. "Can't check it without seeing them. We don't have those fancy scanners like the cats do! And if we try to cut 'em out, they'd just die of space."

A tingle went down Merril's spine while she looked them over. She'd butchered animals, survived wrecks and brought people back from the brink of death. But this? This wasn't natural in any sense of the word. This was alien.

She rummaged around in her pack on a whim, to discover that something new was in her medkit that she hadn't known before.

"What the. . ." the wildcat mumbled, pulling out the little clear lens and turning it on. It worked as a scanning device, of sorts, so she put it to good use.
 
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"Oh go spin on that fat stick in your ass a little more." Came Veronica's eloquent and well spoken reply to Mars chastising her for acting rashly. "This is interesting anyway." The pirate knelt down in front of the trapped person, clearly intrigued by what happened to the person. "Well now. Someone got creative. Dunno how you all are gonna ask him shit. Ask things with only numbers as answers?" That... was actually a fair idea. Almost a bit too smart for the pirate.

"Hey, soft-ass. bet they didn't train you for this." It was a rather obvious statement. Nobody was trained for this kind of thing. She did stand up and to the side when she saw her pull a scanner out. A raised eyebrow showing she was at the very least interested in what they could decipher from the poor bastard stuck in the wall.
 
LCS Mok'Ro, Aft Engineering, Deck Two
"Pack it in, will you?" Gough sighed at the pirate as he got into position and covered the exit out into the back-side of the ship with Yar'mak covering the other into the corridor. Al'ris meanwhile breathed into her suit and gathered her wits.

Merrill put the monocle against the lenses of her hood and mask of the WIND armour and flashed it over the embedded man. She could see that upon inspecting the biology of this person, the program was attempting to outline their whole body, but it seemed to end at their midsection before cutting off abruptly - and by what it was getting - they were not just stuck in the wall and the intervening matter displaced for their bodies - they were one with it.

Their gender and race were currently indeterminate, their breathing was null and void, but their heart rate - or something masquerading as one was perfectly fine. The vital status summary on Merrill's monocle simply read: "UNKNOWN"

She knew from her training that red readouts were bad, but purple ones defied explanation in its entirety. It started moaning again, "Meeeeerrrrrilllll..." they were calling for the medic by name.

But nobody had said her name over loudpseaker - just over radio, and even then it was her moniker of 'Soft-Touch'. The person in the wall didn't look at all familiar nor did a name recognisable to Merrill appear in the crew manifests.

Yar'mak was covering the way they'd came in and he looked ahead and saw that there was a corpse in the corridor they'd come from, halfway between lying and floating there just as fresh-looking as the one who'd introduced them to the Mok'ro, lying past the hole the team had to jump over to get here.

He looked out the windows to either side of the corridor, the one on his left peered down into the open cargo bay while the one on his right was looking at the void of space. There were holes all over the ship. Yar'mak rationalised that maybe they floated in, bounced off a wall, stuck there?

When his eyes settled back down along the iron sights of his gun, he'd noticed that it had shifted and it was now lying over the hole and about ten metres away from him - but the motion sensors didn't detect anything moving at all - as though pinned without gravity. A choice expletive was muttered over the communication channel as he kept his sights trained at the corpse.

LSDF Akahar, Bridge
Keib was looking at the imagery and data from everyone's helmets and the medical monocle, and took a few select shots from the images that Merrill was picking up. Those things were just as useful as the WIND and Tenshi helmets for gathering info. He had to keep an eye on these for the sake of information on the mission. He had to concur with the way each of the participant's helmets shook and muddied the footage, their disgusted and confused voices choked the audio.

He felt hairs on the back of his neck stand up as he flicked through the items of interest with a dry mouth. Keib looked down at his console and started sending a message to Aiesu, who he'd left to her own devices in his office. She would've been a kid in a candy store, having all the access to everyone's files - but nothing seemed to have been accessed or pilfered. Was she really on her best behaviour or just acting on it?
Code:
>MK: Aiesu I'm sending you a few things the away team have found.
I'm going to be blunt and be frank; Whatever stake Lazarus had in this ship,
I'm more than happy to let them keep it so long as it stays the fuck away
from me when it's off of my hands.

>MK: Just... just look at these.
>MK: [Send >>>] softtouch_scandata_1403866881.lvd.enc
>MK: [Send >>>] softtouch_scandata_1403866884.lvd.enc
>MK: [Send >>>] softtouch_scandata_1403866887.lvd.enc
>MK: [Send >>>] softtouch_scandata_1403866892.lvd.enc
>MK: [Send >>>] softtouch_scandata_1403866895.lvd.enc
>MK: [Send >>>] gough_view_1403866883.lvd.enc
>MK: [Send >>>] gough_view_1403866885.lvd.enc

>MK: It's synthesis. It's ... pure synthesis. I'd normally be over the Moon
with joy at such a discovery but my crew - this ship is in danger regardless
of whether we continue this mission or stop.
>MK: Tell MOTHER, whoever they are that they can come and collect it
themselves if we survive.
 
Mars felt a drop of cold sweat tricking down her back. She was starting to be a bit nervous and she did not like that at all. Mars was not nervous or scared for years. Sure there were few adrenalin moments, but she was always in control. Now she felt that control slipping. For one there was the situation which was completely unfamiliar. Mars was used to jsut taking ships apart and bagging dead bodies, and shooting pirates now and then, thought that was actually fun. This was something new. And secondly there was rogue element. Veronica. Mars liked the woman in her mind, but having her on a mission was just too bad. Mars knew that only was to control that woman was shoot her and tie her. Otherwise, the ex-pirate would do whatever she wanted. That was not good. Not only it could cause a clusterfuck, Mars knew that she could not contain the woman and it would loos Bastion's position in eyes of her team.

"Keib? Keib? You there?" Mars continued saying in the comms. Meanwhile she raised a hand and gave a nepleslian gesture to Veronica, Mars saw it in some Nep-drama, so she gestured to Veronica that she was number one. Maybe the pirate girl would take better to something like that. "Keib, you are giving me a bit of a scare. I do not like this at all. Talk to me."
 
LSDF Akahar, Bridge
Keib looked back up from his console and gasped, "Bastion - Apologies, just what I'm seeing is as unbelieveable as you say," his voice seemed to be laced with regret. Caught in the data again, caught in the bigger picture rather than the biggest feet on the ground. "If you can't get anything out of Wall Man, advance down to the cargo hold from the stairs closest to the Aft - the ARIA Maesus should be in the Forward Engineering on Floor 3 near the Ship's Command Quarters on Deck 2 and 3."

The waypoints appeared on Bastion's visor after Keib typed the commands in - it was going to be a long trek across open terrain with the cargo for cover, "If things go wrong further I'll arrange for Vathr'dral to pick you up down there, bottom of the gash on Starboard-" it lit up.

If followed, the team would go downstairs, run (or jet themselves) along the bottom of the cargo bay and into the Front Engineering deck just beneath the bridge by crashing through the window to the Commander's Quarters that overlooked the cargo bay. Then a swift dogleg turn would be made into the third deck's starboard corridors and towards the widest part of the Gash, the identified extraction point.

"Sound plan, Bastion?"
 
"Roger that, we are on the move," Bastion replied to Keib and turned to her group. It seemed the wall-man was not all there in the head anyway. And to get him out, or even starting to try figuring how to get him out, they would need this are pressurized and that would mean engineers and lot of people. Mars would be happy to just blow this ship up, that would sort everything out nicely. "Keib, do me a favour. Prep a torpedo, if something gets us, just destroy this junkheap. I would rather go in a big way, then became a wall ornament. Got that?" Mars was sure happy, this was her personal line and no one else but Keib could hear this.

"Okay team," She turned back to her men and women. "We are leaving. Can't do much for mr. wall-man now. We are moving on towards the ARIA unit, I got a waypoint from Keib. There is also extraction point listed so if something happens we meet there. Forwarding it to lot now. Anyway, same formation as before. Move out."
 
Merril, startled, raised her gun at the trapped person, palming the scanner in the process. She glanced to her teammates to judge their reactions - but was disappointed by the moral support. Al'ris was dealing with restabilizing herself, Bastion was busy doing leader-ey things, and everybody else was too far.

"Sh-shit. . ." she growled, that croaking voice reminding her of days gone by. At Bastion's new order, Merril couldn't be more relieved to be moving.
 
On the bridge, Pratima was pondering the output of the vid being transmitted from the away team.
"Kepten Kieb?" she asked, for once in lorath albet with a clipped accent. "This creature within the walls is intriguing. We believe we could use it to our advantage in construction of defense systems for Akhar. Also, perhaps this is a site with active nanities. Such devices would, of course, be invaluable. We would like, once it is swept for safety, to acquire salvage from the home designated Mok'ro."

Meanwhile, elsewhere on the Akhar, a Pratima unit, having previously noticed the absence of Aiesu from the network, had finished building a small isolated directory for storing Pratima files, that would not be connected to the AI, and camouflaged it to not arouse suspicion. Pratima liked Aiesu, but did not trust the other collective. A new water cooler, capable of dispensing supercooled water that turned to ice as it hit the glass, was now located near the gym.

Other pratima units were taking a quick Exodus to the hull of Akhar, and preparing wielding tools and netting, in anticipation of their opportunity to wield bits of the Mok'or onto Akhar. Already they had triggered a few 'airlock unexpectedly in use' warnings. It was dubious that their efforts would be ignored much longer.
 
LSDF Akahar, Bridge
Röyksopp - And The Forest Began To Sing

Keib drummed his fingers along the panel of his chair, his foot tapped on the floor as he watched things unfold on screen. He heard the Freespacer's input, but didn't formulate a response. It was a compelling observation - but what if they were wrong? "I'm afraid not, Pratima. It's too dangerous already. Recall your units on the Hull of the Akahar immediately."

The comms soon called and Keib looked at the screen.
Code:
AK: I've got something. I don't think you're going to like it.
AK: I'll be with you in a moment but I think you should come down here.
AK: Confidentiality is of the upmost importance at this point.
MK: I understand. See you in a moment.
"Miri, take control for a moment. Speed's of priority," Keib directed to the New Tur'listan Bridge Bunny as he rose from his seat. "I need to stretch my legs."
"Understood, Keib," Miri replied, nodding back at him and taking control of the situation. "Away team, proceed!"

LCS Mok'Ro, Aft Engineering, Deck Two
"Ah-Understood." Al'ris had finally gathered her wits and took point with Bastion, "Come on, Soft Touch, Yar'mak, Veronica, we have orders to move!"

"Yes Ma'am!" Yar'mak raised his LMG and pivoted, jogging across the engineering bay to meet with Gough, and the two moved ahead together. He was afraid of what would happen if that corpse in the hallway started following them again.

The team proceeded through a shorter corridor and to their immediate left was a staircase and ramp system. They double-timed down the stairs, turning corners until they hit the 'ground floor' at Deck 5. The access to the Main Cargo Storage that took up a majority of the space in the Mok'ro was wide open. It seemed to have been in the process of opening or closing, but the mechanisms jammed halfway through, providing more than enough access for the entire team.

LCS Mok'Ro, Main Cargo Storage Area
Super Metroid - Maridia, Rocky Underwater Area

This was the belly of this space leviathan, in was the contents of its former crew's takings. Cargo containers were stacked upon each other - occasionally in haphazard piles, some larger or smaller than others. It was easy to climb upon them with the lack of gravity weighing the Away Team down.

Gough looked at the nearest cargo container, "Hey, it looks like it's melting." The way the container was partially sunk into the ground.
"What about what was in it?" Yar'mak asked, looking at the container and scratching his head, then looking at the floor around it. How it blended and melted together in rivulets like something out of a surreal painting didn't set the Llmanel's mind at ease. "I'd say it'd be a good idea to stay off of the floor then."

"We'll use thrusters to glide over it or walk along the walls." Al'ris said, feathering her jets to rise into space, little puffs of thrust correcting her. The WIND armours with GUST attachments had similar capabilities to control space movement. Otherwise, the walls to either side of this massive cargo bay could be walked along.

"I'll take the left wall and keep you covered," Gough said as he floated along the floor and bumped into the wall. He grabbed onto it and reoriented himself, his relative 'down' now sideways to the others with the aid of magnetic boots. He walked up until he was at deck 4's height to provide overwatch. "I can see you all. Proceed."

"Copy that." Al'ris nodded as she and Yar'mak started floating forwards, guns up.

LSDF Akahar, Aiesu Kalopsia's Room
After a minute's walk with long strides towards Aiesu's sanctum, Keib would notice something when he entered: The thick rack servers she'd been using in her private chambers: One of the blades out on the table in pieces connected to the decking which she'd gone to the trouble of peeling, revealing the pipework.

What had been a bed-chamber had quickly become a server-farm, even the lower bunk full of equipment with only a thin space to walk through and a single chair opposite where she sat with the equipment on that lower bunk laid out already for him. Upon entering, the door locked automatically behind him, presumably as per her own instruction and the dim place of pinpricks of green and red flickering with the whirring of equipment gained a semblence of real light as the ceiling lit the room.

"Ms. Kalopsia," Keib greeted her, laconic as he stood dimly lit amongst all of the machinery. "Taking cues from the Freespacers?" His neck pivoted and gazed around the room, settling on the spare chair and then swivelling back to Aiesu. He moved over to the chair and sat down on it, before letting his gaze level with the woman.

"Something like that." she said, her gaze taking on warmth as she parted herself from the hardware long enough to speak. "I think I see what the appeal of the vessel was now. This of course doesn't bode well for any of us. We've been issued with instructions to subdue it and ensure it doesn't activate the Moro'ko's FTL systems. The easiest way to do that obviously would be to destroy them -- but doing that without destroying the hull is going to be difficult. The secondary objective you're not going to like."

"First of all, what is -it-, exactly?" Keib interjected. "The Freespacers think some sort of-"

"Life, Keib. Its life. But not life as we know it. Its totally unlike anything in known space... With a single exception."

Keib rested his head on his hand rubbed his fingers through his goatee. "Who?"

"What I'm about to tell you absoloutely cannot ever leave this room under any circumstances, whatsoever. But I trust you. Remember during the war, the last rush the Mishhu made for Yamatai?" Keib nodded to her.

"Something delayed their battle-group, giving Yamatai time to form a blockade. Nobody really knows what happened. It arguably saved Yamatai from total bombardment."

Keib's eyebrows raised. "That sounds like the stuff of legends, or cryptozoolgics. Forgive me if I'm a bit sceptical."

"That's fine. What actually happened was they were intercepted. Aetheric interdiction: We don't really know how to do it yet but whatever did it, did a good job of it. Unfortunately the craft in question was unable to continue FTL movement -- and neither were the battle-group so you can imagine how upset they were when they realised they couldn't make it to the party in time. We found the wreckage on some desert world about six months later. Does the name Maras ring any bells with you? The vessel that the fugitive Miles Gunn was aboard?"

"I've ... heard the name but no. The rest escapes me."

"The craft in question was biological in nature. Well, biomechanical would be a better descriptor though the mechanical components were all made by the biological parts, the same way a crab makes its own shell. The genome structure was unlike anything we'd found prior."

"What sort of energy would be required for a being so large? It violates square-cube. You'd need an immense amount of energy or a very, very broad diet at the subatomic level spread through your entire surface area."

"Unfortunately we still don't know the answer to that question... Though what we found is quickly becoming the basis of our innovations. The maesus computer. Structol. Quasicrystalline components? They're all by-products of what we found."

Keib looked at the few available patches of bare wall in his ship. He'd put some of those things into his ship knowingly without really knowing what was in them. Only that they had the branding and advertising power behind them. "Do they have a name, these... things?"

"Our working title is Sourcian. Mostly from one of the living specimens when Lor originally discovered the craft. Its actually not what it calls itself: 'it' doesn't commit language like we do -- but we had to come up with a name."

"So, what then is the second thing," Keib shifted in his seat, wobbling back and forth before his gut settled.

"Well obviously you're here to subdue it for pickup. But if a sample can be retrieved or communication with it achieved, that would be rewarded in spades. Picture it -- your entire crew: Everything you ever wanted, all of you set up for life. Whatever debts you have, wiped clean. If your name is unspeakable in circles, we make you a new identity. At least, that's what I'm being told."

"We're going for the ARIA Core - it's SOP when we deal with retrieval on salvage. Would that suffice?"

"The ARIA core is actually a maesus computer. Same as I am" she said, tapping her own temple. "Same as yours is. So yes: Given whats happening its almost guarenteed that it has attempted to communicate with the ship. I'd even go as far as to say it has attempted to assimilate with the ship, to learn from it... And unfortunately its crew."

"I'm more worried about my crew on that ship. It's talking to them."

"You have people on the Moro'ko?"
He nodded.

"Why didn't you tell me?"
"I was upfront with them going there from the first second."

A slow sigh tickled through the tiny body sat opposite Keib.

"At least tell me they're in power-armour of some sort and not just vac-suits."
He nodded. "There's hard vacuum, possibility for hazards. Of course."

"Good. Are any of them fitted for demolition?"
"Yar'mak and Kam'kebek are, my Heavy and Tech Sentry respectively."

"We need to perform a controlled destruction of the Mok'ro's FTL systems. The destruction has to be total but contained, otherwise our subject may repair the engines. We only get one shot at this and we'll immediately be designated as hostile if we do this... So I say we try to retrieve the ARIA first. You only need the head, not the whole body, though the spine and the head would be ideal because of the secondary storage systems."

"Then we blast its FTL out so it can't move. What happens then? Take it with us or leave it?"

"No, we'll be returning for pickup. At that point, you're to rendevous with the Talana -- another Mynoded class vessel for decontamination and debrefing."

"I'd better head up and change my game plan then. My team should be halfway through the Cargo on their way to the ARIA now. FTL wouldn't be far off."

"Got it. Again, I want you to be absoloutely sure: The demolition has to be controlled and timed: If the vessel splits in two, it could choose to self destruct the powerplant of the Mok'ro as a defensive measure -- Which... In doing so, would mean the contamination has already been spread to other passing vessels. So what we're essentially dealing with is a spore or a method of self-propegation."

"What contamination?"

"The life-form."
Keib remembered those horrifying images. "Fuck no," he mumbled.

"We'll be scuttling whatever gear your people return in. We can't have it onboard ship. Push comes to shove, if any crew are contaminated, we'll probably have to scuttle them too. Why the reaction? What have you seen?"

He showed Aiesu a video of what Merrill had seen. It was talking.

"Huh... Interesting. Do you have any more of this?"

"About a minute's worth of audio, video and scanning data from each boots on the ship."

"Keep be informed and updated. Anything new, send it my way. The more raw data I have to play with, the better my conclusions are goingto be and the safer your crew are going to be."

"I understand." He stood up and despite his short stature for a New Tur'lista, he still dwarfed Aiesu. "I should go."

"One thing."
"Yeah?"

"Under no circumstances whatsoever should this vessel or its crew come within one kilometer of the Mok'ro. Those you've already sent you should already be considering losses. Though... Provided your mission goes off quickly enough though, we should be able to recover contaminated crew: I'm optimistic we can probably recover 40% of the Mor'ko's crew from the hull for later questioning. They're still alive. Sort of."

"I'll be frank." Those words... "That's perhaps the most encouragement I've gotten for this venture since it fell in my lap. I'll be sure to deliver quickly," he smiled.

"If they undergo total contamination for more than 48 hours, based on the data we had for the Maras, they'll be non-recoverable. It takes seven hours for our recovery vessel to arrive as of the end of your mission since its still dealing with a prior engagement."

"It's already been half an hour." Keib walked towards the door until his nose was an inch away from it, "I'll see to it that the next half hour finishes this."

Aiesu didn't nod, her expression becoming glassy and statue-esque again. The door opened.

"Keib?"
He turned around, head over shoulder.

"Good luck. I mean it."
He smiled back at her sideways and looked ahead to leave. There was no going back now.

Descent: Freespace -- briefing #3
 
Merril followed the others along, moving in tandem at the rear of the team like she had been ordered to. She could feel the tenseness settling, invading her bones. It wasn't a sensation she was the best of friends with. It was instinct, pure and simple. Her gut sense of danger folded in on itself, rising in her throat like a creature from the black lagoon.

Her visor fogged up slightly as her breaths grew shorter.

What the hell, the wildcat mentally scolded herself, I don't get afraid! It's just a dead old ship with a creepy nanobot metal or something! I don't need to be all. . . ugh not even since the stampede.
 
"Wild-dog, keep with Hawkeye, everyone will keep at least in pairs!" Mars said to Yar'mak. She liked this situation less and less. This was not like any other salvage they ran. Man being part of hull of a ship. That was new and quite frankly a bit terrifying. Mars would have none of that, if the ship will be dangerous, they should blast it out of the sky and Matriarchy would have to deal with it. What was most important for Mars now though, was making sure that no one on her team will end up like that. No more men in metal.
 
Veronica folded her arms the best she could in her suit at the chatter, looking over what they were dealing with with a masked expression of incredulity. "Living metal is what we're dealing with, huh? Fuck, Imagine the kind of shit you could get away with using that. One good shot of it past a ships shields, then run.... they'd be fucked in a matter of days or even hours and they'd never see it coming, depending on how well you use it." Perhaps it was unsurprising that the first thing the Geshrin thinks of it is how to use it as a weapon, but the possibilities were just as terrifying as the fate of it's victims, if her guess is true.

Perhaps it wasn't immediately noticable, but Keib and Aiesu may notice she wasn't using the encrypted comms between the suits to speak. Or rather, not the suit's own comms. She was apparently using a short wave comm not unlike a walkie talkie from inside the suit, likely a cybernetic implant of sorts that was just broadcasting her short wave radio. Nonetheless, she tried to get Keib's attention. "Hey Birdboss. Do we have like, a non-metallic layer in our suits? Or are we fucked from just touching the floor here?" She didn't sound very worried about asking if they were all going to die.
 
LSDF Akahar, Bridge
Keib made his way back to the bridge and resumed command. "Miri, you're relieved for now."
"Understood. Resume command, Keib."

Keib sat back down at the bridge and transmitted new orders to Bastion, "I have an additional objective for you. We have to disable the ship's FTL. Yar'Mak," he opened a line to the Llmanel. "did you bring explosives?"

"Affirmative. So does Kam'kebek," Yar'mak replied back as he floated through the cargo bay of the Mok'ro and adjusting his course to meet Gough, examining the melted boxes and seeing some of their contents spilling out and melding with the floor. "Yeech..." he sighed.

"Good. You have to remove the FTL in one go and cleanly without breaking the ship in half. Fortunately, the FTL drive is in Forward Engineering, near the ARIA core so it's not too much of a deviation from your movement plan."

The Pratimas began to scurry back into the ship from the hull, but robotic body remained, just in case. It began to trundle across the surface, checking the drives of the Akahar. After all, if they needed to run in a hurry, well, having the drives in good shape would be ideal.

Back on the bridge, the tall greenhaired Pratima continued to stare fixedly at Keib. "You are planing to disable the FTL drive of the Mak'oro?" She asked to confirm, "is there an engineer on your away team?"

"Yes, we've got a tech sentry," Keib replied to Pratima, wondering whether that green hair was dyed hair or moss.

"Good, send it these blueprints for us please." Pratima handed Keib some schematics. "They may help. Or maybe not. It should allow them to increase the yield of their standard demolitions loads using volatile chemicals commonly found in FTL systems... ideally."

"I'll send it over," Keib said before sending the plans to Yar'mak and Kam'kebek. "They've got the plans for the Harvester too."

"Thank you. Obviously the people on site should determine if it's workable. If the chemicals are contaminated, well, who knows if it'll work or not." she said with a nod.

Keib then recieved a message from ... Veronica. But it wasn't through the usual communication channels. "Veronica, I'm going to try and finish the mission quickly. When you and the others come back aboard we'll get your suits off and disinfected and keep the Hangar sealed until we get our LSDF rendezvous. All of the armour given has a metallic layer, but it also has internal layers for NBC (Nuclear, Biological, Chemical) protection purposes separate from the metal layers."

"Reccomend total sterilization using main guns, dialed back. A quick blast, should burn off outermost layers of the suit. Suit will not be recoverable. Incase crew in quarintine zone, then destroy remainder of suit."

"I doubt the suit's users will survive the 'quarantine' you have planned - we'd have to get a drone to position them," Keib shrugged.

"Yes. Would you like us to begin putting together drones?" Pratima asked. Keib nodded back - it'd at least be a distraction for them.

"Engineering can help you with materials. Bes'linn, you've got work to do."
"Understood, one of them's here already," the head of Engineering replied, a Pratima standing beside them and waving into the camera and jumping excitedly.

"Bes'linn! What do you think of equipping the drones with auto-sealant coated chainsaws so they can cut through parts of the suit, and limbs, and seal the hole with material... in case it should prove necessary? Ohhh! And infrared communications suite, so they can coordinate with each other for improved efficiency... and maybe a flare gun and signalling laser, just in case? They'll need to largely be ceramic, with bronze. Bronze is self sterilizing..."

Bes'linn rested her head in her hand and sighed at the hyperactive little Freespacer with a furrowed brow.

LCS Mok'Ro, Main Cargo Storage
Yar'Mak and Gough were moving together on the wall, with Gough looking ahead and Yar'Mak looking down at the windows into the deck hallways. He could could see the occasional corpse float by, but none had tried to make contact with him and he didn't want to make too much noise lest more of those strange Wall Men showed up.

"Say," Gough said to his friend as he looked at the melted cargo, and floating boxes in the air. "Doesn't this look a bit like a..."
"A stomach?" Yar'mak filled in the blank as he looked down a window. "Don't give me ideas, this place freaks me out already."
"So do you think it's nanites?"
"Man I don't know what the fuck this is," Yar'mak groaned. "I just want my pardon and a paycheck when this is over."

Al'ris was moving with Bastion, leaving Veronica and Merrill (And Kam'kebek, wherever they are!) together, perhaps floating through the middle of the cargo bay near Al'ris and Bastion, or on the opposite wall to Gough and Yar'Mak.
 
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