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Chapter 23 - Professionalism

  Chapter 23Professionalism

  

  //

  SPATIAL

  CHECK //

  >

  DATE
:

  17.03.7088

  >

  TIME:

  
19:33:12

  UST

  (UNIVERSAL

  STANDARD TIME)

  // LOCATION TRIANGULATION //

  >>>

  SETTLEMENT: 


  WAYSTATION

  #0085

  >>>>

  LOCAL:


  THE

  LOTUS ROOT – BASEMENT

  Jake sat

  low on the stool, fists hang loosely between his knees and elbows

  resting heavily on his thighs. He was chewing through his fourth

  toothpick, watching Carla take her pound of flesh on the sorry lump

  tied to the chair.

  “Carla,”

  he growled, after a particular heavy metal fist knocked some teeth

  loose. “Too much, bring it back.”

  “He’s

  still awake, isn’t he?” She pouted, stepping away from the figure

  anyway.

  “He won’t

  be if you punch him like that again.” Jake stood, hoisting his

  pants as he did. “Remember, we’re here to teach him a lesson

  until Command decides on his formal punishment. We’re

  .”

  The

  prisoner on the chair groaned weakly, fearfully.

  Carla

  laughed, cruel and sharp. “You were warned, Root. Don’t step out

  of line and do as you’re told!”

  “She’s

  right, Tim.” Jake stepped closer, towering over the trussed up man,

  gesturing to Carla to back off. “Our creed is simple; the Client is

  sacred. You show them respect. You do the job. You keep it clean.”

  “By the

  void, dude. You broke so many rules in just three days!” Carla

  perched herself up on another stool like a gargoyle, a manic smile

  spread wide. “Poor chicka already had it rough, you didn’t have

  to be such a dick.”

  “Look,

  I’m sowwy.” Tim finally spoke, his face swollen and several teeth

  missing. “She was a nobody. Addict, only had CredShards.”

  Carla

  barked out another laugh, her canines showing, “She’s not a

  nobody anymore, dumbass. She’s-”

  “Carla,”

  Jake grunted out a warning. “What did we say about TMI?”

  “Aww,

  Jake.” Carla cocked her head to the side, looking at him with a

  proud smile. “You really just sounded like Mills!”

  Her

  squadmate blushed, rubbing the nape of his neck. “Thanks, Carl.”

  He jerked his head over his shoulder to the door. “Now get out of

  here and wait for Mills’ call. I’ll babysit.” He let out a long

  suffering sigh. “Again.”

  Carla

  giggled, moving off her perch and skipping towards the door. “Sucks

  not being the actual baby anymore, heh? I took your spot, I took your

  spot.” She danced in place, waving her arms to her little tune.

  “It’s

  been 3 years, Carl. Stop rubbing it in.” Jake glared over his

  shoulder, crossing his arms.

  “Nevah,”

  she hissed with a smile before slipping out the door. Leaving Jake to

  slump his shoulders and turn his icy glare back on Tim, contemplating

  more violence in response to the light jab.

  Carla

  closed the door softly and winced, pressing a hand on her side. She

  stretched her neck, her bloodied knuckles leaving streaks of blood

  across her jaw and neck. She looked around the space, other opaque

  glass doors leading to other solid concrete cells like the one she

  just left. Another team occupied the cell on the opposing side, she

  nodded towards the guard keeping watch outside. He saluted her back.

  Carla sat

  down on a stool next to the door, stretching her arms over her head,

  pushing her healing surgical scar to the limit as the station docs

  had suggested.

  Trill.

  Trill. Trill.


  Her Slate

  rang and vibrated against her leg. She blinked, the only outward sign

  of her surprise. She pulled out the clear piece of technology out of

  her pocket, her own moving portrait staring seriously back at her

  before it turned on the spot to show the profile. Her hair had been

  long, black and wavy, loose over the shoulders. She swiped to see the

  caller’s ID.

  ‘Mills

  – Lotus Dad’


  She tapped

  the receiver and pressed it to her ear, a wild, jagged smirk pulling

  her mouth wide.

  “Hello!

  You have called through to the Bloody Dregs of the Compost!” she

  chirped. “We’ve got one trussed up Root, one shy Nightshade and a

  lovely bag of human waste ready to be distributed!”

  “Carla.”

  
Miller’s growl was music to

  her ears; deep, gravelly, and

  exhausted. She

  could practically

  see him rubbing his eyes in that tired, frustrated way. “Do

  
not make me put

  you through Comms 101, again. Sit-rep. Now. No fluff.”

  “Awww,

  you’re no fun,” Carla pouted, kicking her boots in the air.

  “Shi-shi always does that weird, gargle noise when I do it to her.”

  “CARLA.

  If I have to ring Az because you’re playing games, you are in

  serious trouble.”


  “Ok.

  Ok.” Carla straightened up, her voice instantly flattening into

  something more professional, though the smirk remained.

  “We’ve been ‘Pruning’

  Tim Passante. The idiot

  tried to extort a client before handing over the goods. He

  also broke her rib, he said he ‘tripped’ over her in

  the sub-halls.”

  The narrative has been stolen; if detected on Amazon, report the infringement.

  “Aureates’

  ass,”
Miller muttered, the

  sound of a digital slate

  being tapped in the

  background.

  “Vel’s

  team. Hound Division.”

  “Fucker

  even went out his lane. Good job, Rookie. How’s the Client?”


  “Oh,

  you know. Az took special offence, so he’s taking extra good care

  of her. Turned out she was

  his hook-up from back

  on Kelara.”

  There

  was a long pause on the other end of the line. “I’m

  sorry, what? He didn’t shove her off to you for babysitting? He

  doesn’t -What in the void is he thinking?”


  “Dude,

  you should have seen her that night Mills, she was hot! Total

  Gilded-tier brunette,” Carl sighed, leaning back against the wall.

  “But she got ‘Liberated’ so she’s a bit worse for wear now.

  Lost her stomach and she fucking escaped the Priority 3 ward after

  getting a fucking transplant! Can you believe it?! Injected nanites

  and some Major Supp or something... Az flipped his lid!”

  “Escaped

  the- Major? Do you mean Maior? Carla, what’s this woman’s name?

  Did she say?”


  Carla

  traced a pattern in her leggings, her brow furrowing. “Well, that’s

  the thing. She told Az that it was Melinda Abbot, but then Tim called

  her Melissa Cabot. So we don’t know what-”

  “Oh,

  fuck.”


  The

  line went dead.

  //

  SPATIAL CHECK //>

  DATE:
17.03.7088

  >

  TIME:
20:31:12

  UST (UNIVERSAL STANDARD TIME)

  //

  LOCATION TRIANGULATION //

  >>>

  SETTLEMENT:
WAYSTATION

  #0085

  >>>>

  LOCAL:
STATION

  REPAIR BAY ZERO

  Vasil

  Olegovich leaned back on the bench, stretching his sore muscles and

  weary joints. He glanced down the line of spaceships he and his crew

  had

  just repaired, and then stared despairingly at the spaceships

  orbiting the station in holding patterns.

  The

  overtime wasn't worth the stress.

  Billy

  was lying down next to him, his knees drawn up and an arm thrown over

  his eyes. Squeezing in a quick power nap.

  Vasil

  couldn't blame the kid. He wanted nothing more than to have a long

  soak in a rain shower and then collapse in his bunk. He hated that

  sonic pulse nonsense. He'll take water over invisible particle waves

  any day.

  He

  analysed the rest of his crew; spread across the space in front and

  behind him either power napping as well, talking or eating. He needed

  to let them rest for another ten minutes at least, otherwise he might

  risk a strike. Something Station Control wouldn't appreciate while in

  the middle of a dual technical AND health crisis.

  He

  sighed, letting his head shake before standing and turning around.

  He

  swore under his breath, waking Billy who sat up crying out, 'Not my

  heart!'

  Coming

  towards them was a platoon of Jade Sphere Peacekeepers. The rest of

  his crew shuffled out of the way, casting glares to the unwelcome

  soldiers. They were all in white and gold trimmed armour with the

  symbol of the Terran Reach etched and painted over their chests. A

  green and blue ball wrapped in three concentric rings of green, gold,

  and white.

  The

  lead man was well groomed with an almost permanent sneer as he swept

  his gaze over the motley crew.

  Vasil

  put on his chief repairman hat and headed off the platoon, not

  wanting them near his crew.

  "Can

  I help you?" He tried to keep his tone civil, but internally he

  knew the distrust and disdain bled through, from the way the leader's

  eyes narrowed at him.

  "Yes,"

  the leader spoke down his nose, seemingly hating the interaction as

  much as Vasil was. "I'm looking for the crew that worked on a

  small Research Vessel a few days ago." He checked a pristine

  SlimDeck he had tucked in the crook of his arm. "A 'CRSS

  Reckless', required new water recycler refit, antique model."

  Vasil

  schooled his expression to hide the shock and anger. Waystation

  authority was strictly neutral, visitors' information and spaceship

  conditions were strictly confidential. No faction had the right to

  ask or obtain information about another. Vasil reminded himself that

  the owner probably told them, Control wouldn't have shared the repair

  report.

  "Why

  you want to know?" He hadn't received any orders or messages to

  share any information, so he'll do his part in keeping Neutral

  ground.

  "I

  have the authority, from the Core, to track down a vulnerable citizen

  and ensure their safety. I hope to have your cooperation in this

  endeavour." The smarmy man said pompously, so much so Vasil

  raised his eyebrow with a snort.

  "Core

  authority carries butt-kiss around here, you ain't touching my crew,"

  he turned on his heel, done with the conversation. "You are in a

  restricted area, please leave."

  "Who

  said anything about touching?" A raspy but haughty voice sounded

  from behind the Core soldiers.

  "You

  ain't speaking to them either," Vasil snapped over his shoulder

  and did a double take. A man, hunched over in a floating wheelchair,

  hooked up to all sorts of IV bags and tubing, parted the soldiers and

  came to a stop in front of Vasil.

  "Void

  bless me, man. You should be in the hospital," the Chief

  Repairman muttered before he could stop himself.

  "Looks

  worse than it is," the dark haired man rasped breathlessly, his

  thin bones stark against his skin. "I hope you understand, but

  I'm looking for my fiancée. She's far worse off than I am."

  The

  hair at the back of Vasil's neck rose, even if the man could not

  straighten up,

  the

  way the soldiers deferred to his every twitch set off a cacophony of

  alarm bells in Vasil's head.

  “You

  see,” the black-haired patient continued, his lips twitching into

  the ghost of a smile that didn’t reach his wide, burning eyes.

  “She’s on borrowed time, I need to make sure she’s nice and

  comfortable for the end. I’d like to get to her before she breaks

  what’s mine.”

  //

  SPATIAL

  CHECK //>

  DATE
:

  17.03.7088

  >

  TIME:

  
20:43:20

  UST

  (UNIVERSAL

  STANDARD TIME)

  // LOCATION TRIANGULATION //

  >>>

  SETTLEMENT: 


  WAYSTATION

  #0085

  >>>>

  LOCAL:


  CRSS

  RECKLESS

  - [ID:

  
SC

  -Vario


  
XT

  Surveyor


  The feed

  flickered.

  The cargo bay was cloaked in a dark, dull grey,

  odd lumps organised in neat piles in the centre of the space.

  Movement at the edge of the screen, and soon a

  large, box-like shape lifted on a mag-assist trolley came into view.

  A large shadow closing in as if the cargo bay hutch was closing.

  A large, obsidian sentinel slowly stepped into

  view. The movements fluid but slow. He was pushing the trolley,

  manoeuvring it stiffly into a space before the bulkhead door leading

  to the upper deck.

  Once it was in position, he manipulated the

  trolley so it’d peel away from the bulky item, letting it be

  lowered slowly to the floor. He walked around, the movements measured

  and precise as he removed the trolley and stowed it back against the

  wall.

  He moved towards the large control panel set apart

  from the wall, standing in front of the display for a long moment,

  unnaturally still.

  It seemed as if the feed froze, no motion of any

  kind occurred. And then, apropos of nothing, the sentinel moved once

  again, heading towards the bulkhead door.

  While for the bulky box, the canvas slipped off

  slowly, revealing a sleek, black kitchen appliance, three-stoves wide

  and book-ended with two fridge like cabinets. It was being lifted

  into the air, the floor of the cargo bay folding out and scaffolding

  upwards. At the top of the feed, walls pieces started folding out and

  forming a floor, as if the cargo bay was being restructured into a

  split room.

  The security sentinel didn’t look back, stepping

  through the door and disappearing from view.

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