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The Hybrid
My first serious attempt at writing novel-length literature
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Silvertie
Older, less cringe, still mad.
Fractal Insanity

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Post: #1
The Hybrid
This is the only compulsory thing you have to read in this post. I've placed any comments I'll make, and all chapters inside spoilers for two reasons.
1) Easier "bookmarking" of chapters. Just unspoil the chapter you want to read, no inadvertant reading of a character dying in the chapter after the epic fight you're reading.
2) If you're just visiting to drop a comment, you don't have to scroll through my entire story to quote relevant posts.

Another thing; DON'T QUOTE THIS POST. It's much larger than it looks; my literature is no lightweight.
Read on, citizen.


Spoiler for Prelude:
It is the 24th century. The Human Empire has expanded over 120 solar systems with terra-compatible planets, and a further 30 solar systems rich in raw materials like metals. In addition to this, the Empire has a presence on a further 50 solar systems of both types.

It all began back in the 21st century; at about approximately 2056, perhaps earlier. During that time, World War 3 was in progress, so a lot of specifics are unknown; but what is evident, is that when the dust settled in 2058, another army had risen, and beaten all the other fighting nations. That army called itself “SyntheDyne Corporation”. Under the guise of enforcing peace, it systematically crushed each nation’s military, one by one. Over time, the Corporation grew to be an unrivalled global superpower, a megalithic jack-of-all-trades. And then, it did something unexpected. It stopped, and extended the hand of aid to every nation.
With each nation’s defenses in tatters, and governments in disarray, they had no choice but to accept the aid. Being bankrolled by SDC, with its seemingly endless resources and diverse production range, the world rebuilt itself anew; and all the time, nobody saw the whole picture. People saw parts, like evidence of major candidates on the take from SDC, to covert weapons deals which violated the weapons laws that SDC initially put into place; but nobody ever shared any of it, for fear of death.
SDC had an iron grip on the world, and nobody knew.

In 2078, exactly 25 years after “The Shuffle”, as people called it; SDC worked its contacts and set the Human race on the path to the stars. Supplying near-For the loss spaceship technology to each nation, it forced the spread of the human race across many star systems. Over the next 50 years, great advances had been made in terms of wealth and prosperity. In 2042, the Human race, now identified as the Human Empire; made first contact with an alien race. The aliens were similar in planet requirement, and inhabited 5 such planets in the star system. Without hesitation, SDC pulled the levers and initiated the first human-related, inter-species war.

Using the weapons technology developed over the last dozen years, SDC armed the human race, and manipulated them to a seemingly easy victory. Comfortable in their victory, the Human Empire relaxed its guard, just as a fleet of the aliens recently vanquished unleashed a crippling blow- they induced a supernova in the Sol system, home of Earth. The empire was quick to react, destroying the offending fleet, but it was too late. Earth was gone.

Over the next century, the empire expanded and exterminated without prompting from SDC. Loss of Earth meant there was nowhere to go but outwards. Over this time, 12 sentient alien species were exterminated in warfare, 4 of which had high technology. Assimilating the technology of the vanquished, SyntheDyne moved into more and more far-flung areas of science.

However, peace did not last. In 2297, unsatisfied with the current leadership of the SDC, the Madrigaar system, base of all the science related to a race which used organic steel; rebelled. It attempted to launch a coup d’état, under the name of Biologic Metals. Using a combination of the organic steel dubbed “BioSteel”, and cutting-edge SyntheDyne robotics, they produced an army which was small, but tough enough to rival the raw numbers of the SyntheDyne army; the BioMech. This army took the entire system and its neighbors by surprise; and all fell within 3 years. The Empire civil war still rages on to this day.

This tale begins in 2310, 13 years after the start of the rebellion, on the planet Cordia, in the Harlan system; a contested system of no tactical value. As such, neither side is waging a major campaign against the other here.

Spoiler for Chapter 1 - The Boy:
--- A secret lab, exact location unknown, Planet Cordia, Harlan System March 15, 2310 ---

A scientist stood in front of a glowing, glass-fronted suspension tube filled with fluid, watching stuff bubble and bloop. The rest of the lab was in darkness.
*blip blip*
He turned, and paced to a desk, where a phone was making a distinctive *blip* noise and flashing; he had a caller.
“Is this Samson’s Pizza Deli?” spoke the phone.  It was a code phrase.
“Sure, can I take your order?” replied the scientist. The response indicated that the line was secure and free of taps.
“Samson. Is prototype 2 ready?” asked the phone. The tone was no longer jovial. “I hope for your sake it is.”
“Yeah, it’s done, H,” Samson replied, unfazed by the very thinly veiled threat. “He’s in a sleep state and will be until he leaves the packaging.”
“Good. Have it sent over with priority 3 security ASAP.” Priority 3 meant highest possible levels of covert security, so as to not raise suspicion. Priority 2 was full-blown military convoy, whereas Priority 1 was a straight raze and burn of any potential obstacles.
“Yes sir,” said Samson, slapping a button on the desk marked “prepare subject”. “You want it delivered to Biologic Metals HQ?”
“Shut up moron!” replied H, very quickly. “SyntheDyne might have their ears to the ground on this one.”
“Sorry sir,” apologized Samson. The glass tube’s light was extinguished, as a metal cylinder descended around it.
“You’d better be. Have it sent to Cell 5. They’ll deal with it. Got it?”
“I got it-” the line shut off with a click. Samson put the phone down, and turned to look at the tube, its light now un-obstructed, and sporting a brand new frame to keep it functioning in transit.
“I wonder what they have in store for you…” he walked forward, and after a bit of thought, slapped a sticker on the tube’s casing.
‘Hybrid Prototype 2’


--- Surveillance van, not too far away ---

“Sarge,” a man in black body armor motioned for another man in armor to come over to his laptop. “Wee got him. The prototype is being transferred ASAP, apparently.”
“Really? Okay, everyone,” ‘Sarge’ clapped his hands. “Wee’re a ghost’s ghost in 5! Let’s go! Wilkins!” He pointed at the man with the laptop. “Get the SDA on the line, wee’ll need an operative.”


--- Intersection, Downtown, City 7, Planet Cordia, Harlan System ---

The teams were in place. The target was a shipping container truck coming this way. Two teams of SyntheDyne Tactical trooper specialists were concealed in vans either side of a 4-way intersection.  The specialist troopers worked in pairs, operating mission-specific heavy weapons. In this case, it was some SD8 rocket launchers. Further along the truck’s intended route, two APCs were parked. Intended as a decoy by way of obvious trap, they were still a serious part of the operation, carrying two full complements of SDT between them, and cannons. SDT were the elite of pure human infantry, and the SyntheDyne Corporation had trillions on their payroll across dozens of worlds. And to complete the trap, a single, nondescript black car on the only uncovered side of the intersection. Ironically, it was the most lethal unit of the lot- a SyntheDyne Agent, the most deadly of the Corporation’s human warriors.

Inside the car, Agent Jonathan Sride scratched his short haircut. The part-Russian stood at about 6’5”, aged 35 years old. He had his feet on the dashboard, and was idly spinning his handgun, a .45 Semi-automatic SP5 on the end of his finger, and watching pedestrians stroll past, looking for any hot ladies. His job was to tell everyone the truck was coming, and then retrieve the objective. So simple, he wasn’t going to walk out of this with anything less than a perfect rating, it was that simple. Nobody knew exactly what this “prototype” was, but whatever it was, it must be important. His money was on it being some sort of combat armor. He put the feet down as the truck in question moved past.
“Target passed the lookout.” Sride muttered into his lapel microphone.
“Roger that Sride.” The radio cut out, and Jonathan pulled himself out of the car. All pedestrians had vanished by now, that sense of something big about to go down more deterring than a fat naked man dancing on a pole.

The truck approached the intersection. Sensing something amiss, the driver sped up… as predicted, and the SyntheDyne team made their move. Firstly, the turrets on the APCs fired CS2 shells. CS2 shells aren’t so much about dealing damage as they are about simply throwing targets around. Since the APC shells were approaching from the front, the force they exerted brought the vehicle to a standstill in a split second. The second part was performed by the SP8 teams. In synchronization, they both fired their rockets. The effect of the two simultaneous rocket impacts on the engine was impressive, completely destroying the engine and seats in the cockpit. Needless to say, the henchman driving the truck was pasted.

Closing in on the now completely immobilized and demolished truck, the SDT troopers encircled it, and began to move towards the container on the back end of the truck. Jonathan was still a distance away, when he realized that this was too easy. He began to sprint.
“Get back! It’s a trap!” he shouted, as his boosted muscles propelled him towards the SDT men, who didn’t hear him. He stopped and dived for cover behind a mailbox abruptly as he saw a sliding door on the container move to the side to reveal…
“It’s a BioMech! Get d- ark” shouted one SDT trooper as he was gunned down by the “BioMech” in question.

BioMechs were the signature unit of the rebel corporation/division, Biologic Metals, and made from Bio-Steel. Just like human flesh, except steel, Bio-Steel could grow, heal and even get stronger; having a robot army built from the stuff was a huge tactical advantage, and offset SyntheDyne Corporation’s natural advantage of manpower and advanced technology.

Capable of wielding any gun or weapon intended for human hands or use, today’s BioMech was carrying a minigun, the sort that you find securely mounted on helicopters; and using it to great effect, chopping SDT in half, and generally making holes in stuff. Jonathan looked at his .45 pistol. After a judgment call, he drew a second, identical pistol. SyntheDyne Agents, as a rule of thumb, never used anything more powerful than a pistol; usually because the pistol was good enough for them. With their nanonic muscle supplements and Neural Augmentation Systems, as well as a lot of natural talent with firearms, one Agent with a pistol could defeat odds as unfavorable as 10:1. Even so, one BioMech with a minigun was still a considerable challenge.

Jonathan hurdled the mailbox, dual pistols up and firing with unnerving accuracy on the BioMech’s head, which, like regular humans, was where the “brain” or rather, CPU, was stored. However, the .45 rounds merely bounced or deflected off the shiny dome of the BioMech. Evidently, this one had extra armoring on the skullcap. As the BioMech brought the gun to bear on Jonathan, he gave up on the headshot, and changed target to the BioMech’s kneecaps. If a lesser man tried it, it would have been suicide. For an Agent, it was a legitimate tactic.
Since the tactic was so suicidal, no designer considered such an avenue of attack, and no additional plating had been installed on the knees; the result being that the knee joints were trashed, and the BioMech began to collapse. The BioMech, computing vectors like mad, began to move its arms to bear on the now airborne Jonathan. It didn’t get there. The next two .45s from Jonathan decimated the shoulder joints, crippling the BioMech. Jonathan landed on the deck of the truck’s trailer, next to the still struggling BioMech.
“Faster, stronger, better my donkey.” He muttered, putting the gun barrel to the underside of the BioMech’s chin, and firing. This time, the bullet had no problems penetrating the CPU, and the robot died. Jonathan checked the status of the SDT. Of all the men who had been in firing lines, about 90% were dead, and 8% were about to die. Jonathan turned to face the interior of the container, and entered.

He looked around; nothing but a big, glass tube. He frowned. He wiped the condensation off the glass, and looked through.
“A boy?” Jonathan cocked an eyebrow. The boy inside the tube had breathing apparatus on his face, and was wearing a white/light blue one-piece suit. Jonathan put a hand to his ear, activating his Neuro-radio. Different from the lapel microphone, it established a direct satellite link to HQ; not local wireless radios.
“HQ, you read?”
“Wee read you Sride. This better be good.”
“It is. The prototype isn’t here. All I see is a boy in a suspension tube.”
“What? Is it a setup? Wait, why would they do this with the boy? I know it seems crazy, but this must be the “prototype 2” they were talking about.”
“That’s nuts.”
“Wee don’t care, Sride. Get that thing out of the truck, wee want it.”
“Fine, Sride out.” Jonathan lowered his hand, and examined the tube. It was big and heavy. No chance of moving it, then. He looked at a keypad. The keypad would make things easy, obviously draining the suspension fluid, and opening the glass front. Jonathan drummed a random number on it, seeing:

******
Invalid pass code, try again

“Horse dicks.” Jonathan pulled a code-cracker out of his pocket. Using something just above brute force decryption, it found passwords. 5 characters meant a lot of combinations, and he might be a while.

--- Biologic Metals control room, Biologic Metals outpost, Cordia ---

A computer jockey raised his hand. “Sir, contact lost with the parcel’s courier.”
“What?! Impossible!” A fat man got up from his central computer, and waddled over.
“I’m getting reports of gunfire from our scouts, suspect SDC interference.”
“Spoon! Wee can’t allow the subject to fall into their hands! Um…”
“Activate the bomb.” A man in dark spoke up. He was wearing what appeared to be a suit of sleek, close-fitting combat armor. “Do it. Now.”
The computer jockey swallowed nervously. “Bomb activated. Detonation in 60 seconds…”


--- The intersection ---

*Beep… Beep… Beep…*
“What’s that?” Jonathan stood up. The code cracker toiled away. 2 out of 6 characters.
*Beep… Beep… Beep…*
There it was again; a beeping. Jonathan walked around the tube to find… a pulsing light winking at him. It was attached to a metal box which was stuck in a large brick of putty-like substance… SDEX-10, spoon was powerful enough to vaporize a car with a Lego brick-sized piece, this was more like a house-brick of the stuff.
“OH Spoon. EVERYONE, GET THE FUCK OUT OF HERE!” The SDT examining the truck heard him, and quickly passed the message on. When an Agent told you to get the fudge out, you got the fudge out, no questions. Jonathan peered at the bomb- it was a nightmare. No indication of how long until detonation; all the wiring in a smooth, one-piece box; no idea if there was proximity radar, so he couldn’t get close to have a poke around. In addition to that, his bomb-defusal skills were rusty like a shipwreck. He ran to the code-cracker. Only 3 of 6 digits? Fuck it, Jonathan drew his gun, and took aim at a part of the glass that made a line of fire nowhere near the boy.
*BLAM* *schwitt*
He gaped. The bullet cracked the glass, no more: bullet proof. Plan three then; the mighty foot. He raised his leg, and gave the glass a good stomp.
*SMASH!*
The glass shattered around his foot, making a hole which widened as the suspension fluid flowed out. Reaching through, past the shards, he grabbed the boy, disconnected all the not-boy, and pulled him out. Carrying the boy in a fire-fighter’s lift, he ran like hell, away from the truck, to a corner of the intersection. There was a large metal statue standing there. It was out of range, and it should stop any shrapnel. Sprinting hard, he was thankful that it was a boy and not a man; a man would have slowed him to a jog, at best. He was almost to the statue, when…
*BA-BOOM*
The ground illuminated. New shadows were cast. Jonathan threw the boy towards the ground behind the statue. If he’d timed it right, or was lucky, the boy would bounce and roll past it; but he would be behind the statue for the time it took for the shrapnel to hit their various targets.
But he was not so fortunate; he was still 5 meters from the statue. A small, but in this case, lethal, distance; his only hope was to pray that no shrapnel hit him. He dived towards the statue after the boy, turning his head to look at the explosion. In that respect, he was a bit fortunate- he saw the jagged blade of metal flying towards his face. Contorting wildly, he twisted his neck… and an unbelievable pain seared across the right side of his face.
He landed heavily, sliding to a halt as the rest of the shrapnel buried itself in everything except him and the boy, who had slid just past the statue. Jonathan looked up at the boy, who was ironically in the same posture as him, but mirrored. He saw the boy’s face. It was odd, almost like something was missing. He reached out. The boy looked so close. His heart fell when he grabbed thin air; it fell even further when he realized why. He touched his right cheekbone and eye gingerly, and held the hand to his left eye. Red with blood and with a clear goop mixed in. He realized that the clear goop was vitreous from his right eye. He’d be lucky to ever see out of that eye again. His arm went limp as he suddenly became tired. Breathing was so hard…. he’d just have a little sleep… just… a… quick…

Spoiler for Chapter 2 - Surrogate Father:
--- SyntheDyne Agency HQ Complex, Cordian outpost, Medical Bay 5   ---

Jonathan groaned. Drinking on the night before a morning where he had to get up early? What the hell was he thinking? He kept his eyes shut. He didn’t want to get up. But then, he had to.
“Whurugrh… my head feels like a… a… eggplant.” He sat up, and heard a lot of footsteps running across linoleum flooring, and voices. He suddenly became alert.
“Whoa! He’s awake!”
“Jonathan! Stop!”
“Don’t open-“
He tried to open his eyes. He was rewarded with one eye opening successfully, and the other… ripping.
“GHARRARGH!” Jonathan screamed. He remembered now. The explosion, the boy, the shrapnel; he remembered it all. The doctors stood around his bed, hands out ready to do stuff, but not sure where to begin.
“Give me a mirror.”
“Uh, Agent Sride, you don’t want that.” One of the younger-looking doctors cautioned. “You’re not exactly a picture of health right now.”
“MIRROR.”
“Give the man the mirror already. You can’t change an Agent’s mind about spoon without evidence.” An older doctor gestured at Jonathan. “He won’t believe you until he sees it with his own eye.”
Jonathan got his mirror. He prepared himself, and looked.
His face was a nightmare. A huge, deep gash with a chocolateload of stitches meandered its way across the left side of his face, crossing the cheekbone and eyebrow, and going to just above the eyebrow. And it wasn’t a contoured one, either; some areas seemed deeper than others. The shrapnel had carved a straight line through his face, regardless of bone. He was lucky his brain didn’t get in the way, but his eye obviously did. His eyelid was in tatters, thanks to his reckless eye-opening; stitches still attached to one or the other. His eye was even worse; it was stitched and refilled with vitreous again, but the iris was milk white, and so was the pupil. Otherwise, it showed no marks apart from that of the gash. He most certainly wouldn’t be seeing through that again.
“Told you.” The young doctor said, meekly.
“Where’s the director?”
“Med bay three, with the –MHMMp” The young doctor was stifled by the third doctor, who grimaced in apology.
“Sorry, dude.” The third doctor turned to Jonathan. “Doctors’ orders are to stay in bed, and rest. You face got really messed up by that blast; I’m surprised you didn’t take any other hits. Anyway, you- now cut that out. You keep frowning like that, and you’ll burst the stitches.” The doctor put on a disapproving face. Jonathan continued the frown. The two stared each other down for several seconds, and then the doctor gave way.
“Oh, alright; but Take It Easy, you hear me?”
“I hear and obey, doc.” Jonathan got up, and ripping the IVs out of his arm, walked over to the exit.

--- Med-bay 3, SyntheDyne Agency HQ Complex ---

The Director of the SyntheDyne Agency on Cordia, Alphonse Eleric, stood with a small crowd of Agents, and looked at the boy on the hospital bed, illuminated by the only source of light in the ward, creating an island of light upon which the bed lay. Alphonse, “Al” to friends and “Director Eleric” to subordinates and enemies, he was also of Russian descent from long ago, and sported a goatee which indicated there might be a little bit of Czech in him. Other than that, he had a rather slender frame; not bony, but not too rounded either.
Al considered the events of the last several hours. So much fuss over a single boy. Why was he so important? What made him so dangerous, BM would rather destroy him than let him fall into SDC’s hands?
“Excuse me, Director? Here are the results of the full-spectrum scans.” A scientist was holding a piece of paper out to him. Al looked at it. Broadly speaking, the boy was “normal”, i.e. no physical deformities or similar. His eye color was unusual, and his complexion unnaturally pale; but nothing too radical.
On the other hand, the boy’s DNA… that’s where it got spicy.
“You sure these readings are right?”
“Of course, I didn’t believe it at first either.” The director continued to read, when the door opened, to reveal a security guard.
“I thought I said no inter-“
“Sorry sir,” apologized the guard, “but I’m just escorting Agent Sride.”
Sride walked in, surgical gown flapping in his draft. The guard winced as he saw something he shouldn’t have, and shut the door.
“Agent Sride, aren’t you scheduled for a bit of bed-rest?” enquired Alphonse, “And why would you need a regular guard to guide you?”
“Well, I don’t need the bed rest. Doctor Me says I’ll be fine,” explained Jonathan, “and I don’t need that guard so much as I need his eye,” Jonathan pointed at his right eye, “as you can see, mine is pretty much done.”
“Any man with half an e- oh; never mind.” The director coughed, he almost threw salt in the wound there. “Here, I trust you can still read?” he held out the paper he’d been reading to Jonathan. Jonathan went to grab it, missed, and corrected his hand.
“Mono-scope vision will play merry hell with my depth perception,” complained Jonathan as he read the document. “Hey, what’s this? This is some funky DNA, Al.”
“Don’t call me that in public,” reprimanded Al, indicating the other senior agents nearby, “and that DNA; structurally speaking, it’s perfectly sound. It matches what wee know about the human genome. It’s what it’s made of which is important.”
“BioSteel? His chromosomes are made of BioSteel?”
“Correct. A scan has also found a flat growth of BioSteel on the brain’s surface, too. If it wasn’t for the fact that it has a defined shape, wee never would have picked it up, it’s that well disguised against the brain tissue.”
“So this kid’s a successful merging of BioSteel and human flesh, then?” Jonathan passed the paper back, and looked at the boy on the bed.
“It would seem so. It looks like the key is to integrate the two at a DNA level first, then move on to the larger, more physical stuff,” concluded the Director.
“That brings me to a question, Director.”
“Go ahead, you’re MVP right now. Shoot.”
“What happens to this kid?”
“Good question. The truth is, I don’t know. Wee’ll probably put him into a lab for observation.”
“A life in a lab? The kid’s about five, six years old! He needs a family!”
“Oh? I’m curious as to where this line is coming from, Jonathan.”
“What I’m saying is, keep him under observation, but in an undercover way. Let him live in a semi-family environment. Please.”
“Alright, Jonathan; let’s say I play it your way. Who looks after the kid?”
Jonathan opened his mouth, but then closed it again. What he was considering saying… where did it come from?
Was it because he’d fought to save this kid? What was it? Jonathan’s face throbbed.
Was it because of the sacrifice he’d made for the kid? Or, was it just that feeling of being a fatherly figure, shielding the boy from things he couldn’t comprehend? He decided.

“I’ll look after him.”
“Don’t be retarded, Jonathan.” A woman on the other side of the bed said.
“Sasha’s right, Jonathan,” a Mexican man on the other side of the Director chimed, “Your head’s muddled from that explosion and the gash. You lost a chocolateload of blood man, down like 3 pints at least by the time wee got there.”
“I’m not muddled guys.  Julio, Sasha; thanks for caring. But it’s not a blind decision. I have a… feeling about this one.” The last Agent around the bed, a man in a black shin-length business coat with a silver tie and metal mask and wearing a hat, spoke up.
“You don’t sound so certain about that feeling, Sride.”
“It’s new to me, Silvertie. I can’t explain it, you have to feel it, and you know it when you do. Although, for someone like you… I suppose it’s unobtainable.”
“That’s true. But, for me, feelings only get in the way of logic.”
“Well, think. Logic points to me too. I can mind a kid, I’m the second-best agent in this room, and I happen to think I make a very dashing father figure.”
“Stop, before your ego crushes us,” drawled the Director, “I’m not arguing. Jonathan’s a suitable candidate for the job, if he wants it, he can have it.” The Director turned to Jonathan, and looked him square in the eye, “You’re not getting time off regular work for this.”
“I know. But that’s why godfathers exist, eh, Al?”
“Oh, come on. You’re not roping everyone into it,” The director took a step back.
“I’m not,” defended Jonathan, raising his hands; “Just you.”
Al gave it some serious thought.
“Alright, fine. You win. But that’s it. You want any more, you do it out of your own pocket.”
“That’s fine.” Inwardly, Jonathan rejoiced. He’d gotten what he wanted. Now to see how it played. They all stopped, as the boy began to stir. The agents, with the exception of Jonathan, stepped back into the shadows. The boy opened his eyes, and looked at Jonathan. How Ironic, Jonathan thought. His right eye is grey, and the other one is gold. He thought about how his eye would likely turn out- very much like this boy’s.
“Who… are you?” The boy rasped. Evidently, his voice wasn’t often used. Jonathan thought. How should he do this? He decided to go simple. He crouched so his head was level with the boy’s.
“I’m Jonathan Sride; I’m your dad.”
“Dad?”

Spoiler for Chapter 3- Like Father, Like son:
--- Jonathan and Dimitri Sride’s quarters, SyntheDyne Agency HQ Complex, August 12, 2318 -----

Jonathan sat at the dining table, and ate breakfast with his 14 year-old son, Dimitri. 8 years had passed since he’d been adopted. Dimitri had black hair, and wore a rather short haircut. His face was still something of a concern, people that had never seen him before tended to be a little unsettled by how… neutral Dimitri’s face was. His still-mismatched color eyes didn’t help. It wasn’t that he didn’t show expressions, it was that feeling his face was missing… something; and yet, there was no reason to suspect such a thing. In the years following the impromptu adoption, Dimitri had quickly forgotten the events of that day. Today, Dimitri was eating egg and toast soldiers.
“’o asting amoge, Dod?” Dimitri said, his words muffled by the food in his mouth.
“Swallow first, Dimitri. Man, I can’t even understand what you say sometimes.” Jonathan had a mug of coffee in his hand, and was holding a piece of toast in the other. Dimitri swallowed.
“I said, No lasting damage, Dad?”
“Oh, nothing to report, a few scratches and such; thanks for caring.” Jonathan rolled his shoulder and clicked it. He’d landed a bit heavily on it after being thrown from an exploding BioSteel SpiderMech. Over the years, his face had healed, leaving a livid scar across his eye and cheek. The eyelids and eyeball healed up alright, but he still would never see out of it. To spare some people the discomfort of the sightless orb, he wore an eye-patch in public.
“Good. You might want to get that shoulder checked, it’s a liability,” Dimitri said, looking at his egg, which seemed to be lacking yolk now.
“Please, don’t patronize me. I practically taught you everything you know.” Jonathan waved his toast around, stopping when his shoulder clicked again. “On the other hand, when you’re right, you’re right.” Jonathan crammed the last of his toast into his mouth, and took the plate over to the kitchen.
“Got any upcoming missions, Dad?” Dimitri was also just finishing, and he followed Jonathan into the kitchen.
“Well, I’ve been back about 12 hours, I don’t know. Why don’t you go see Uncle Al and ask him for me?”
“Yeah, alright, I’ll go. What about you?”
“Well son, I have a nurse to go see.” Jonathan wiggled his eyebrows. “Don’t be too quick about your work now, you hear?” Dimitri chuckled, Jonathan’s innuendos and dirty humor now all too familiar.
“Alright, catch you later Dad.” Dimitri grabbed a jacket, and went out the door, which slid closed automatically behind him. Jonathan looked at it. 8 years, and he still wasn’t used to it; being called ‘Dad’ in earnest. He sighed and put dirty dishes into the dishwasher.

--- SyntheDyne Agency HQ Complex, Agency tower ---

Dimitri wandered through the Agency’s main doors, and looked at all the people milling about. He’d been living on-site for 8 years, since he was about 6, and was a familiar face to a lot of the staff.
“Hey Dimitri.” A janitor walked past, pushing a bucket and mop.
“’Sup, Hans, how’s the ear?” Dimitri began walking backwards.
“Twelve thirty, innit?” Hans’ face indicated that he didn’t realize his answer was completely unrelated to the question. His eardrum had been kind of ruptured by some sense-overload ordinance discharging in a warehouse a couple of weeks ago.
“I guess it’s still buggered then. See you around!” Dimitri turned, and almost bumped into a group of suit-clad Agents. “Sorry there.” He made to move around them.
“Hold it!” one of them grabbed him by the shoulder, and not gently. “What’s a kid doing here?”
“Hm? Oh, you guys must be new. I’m Dimitri.”
“Don’t want your name, I want your authorization.” Dimitri thought about it; he hadn’t had to wear that stupid card for ages, so it was sitting in a pile of DVDs in his room.
“Eh, got one, just don’t have it on me.”
“Kid, you’re in the wrong place to be telling lies.” The Agent pulled a pistol. His companions did the same. “Perhaps I should just shoot you right n-“
“Do that, and you’re in trouble, Agent.” Another Agent had shown up. “This here’s the son of Jonathan Sride. You waste this kid, you die.”
“I… what? Look, why’s a kid wandering around here with no ID or authorization? My family can’t do that. They can’t even come here with visitor’s clearance!”
“Not the point, new fish. This kid’s special, he’s been wandering around since forever. In fact, I did the same thing you just did, except Director Eleric caught me. Now step off, let the kid go.” Grudgingly, the offending Agent let go, re-holstered his gun, and left, muttering something about smartass kids.

“You know, Julio, I could have dealt with that,” Dimitri said reproachfully.
“Lies, Dimitri.” Julio made a dismissive gesture with his hand. Standing at just less than 6 feet tall, and at 29 years of age, Julio was one of the “players” in the Agency. His much-diluted Mexican blood and heritage gave him darker skin than most Agents, and a moustache. For chocolates and giggles, he wore a Mexican sombrero some days. Hardly anyone got the connection; they would just see the big hat.
“I suppose I can’t lie to you, Julio.”
“You can’t. Wear the card next time.”
“But it looks so dorky.”
Julio sighed. How Jonathan got anywhere with Dimitri, he had no idea. “Look… pop on over to R&D, see what they can do for you.”
“Yeah, alright.” Dimitri crossed his arms. Thanks to his nagging of R&D staff, he’d actually gotten some neat toys which they’d developed, but had no real practical application or market. Among these, he had the slim-line impulse jetpack which wasn’t very strong at lifting stuff, and barely managed to lift a full-grown agent; but for an 8 year old kid, it worked just fine. Another one was a remote control car… with concealed, bonnet-mounted miniature chain-guns. Let’s just say he won the Remote Control Grand Prix by miles.
“Thanks Julio.”
“No worries. Give my regards to your Dad and the Director.” Julio moved back towards the entrance of the Agency. Dimitri went to an Elevator, entered it, and ascended.

After a bit of socializing, Dimitri reached the Director’s office. Running his thumb over the scanner plate, which disabled the locks, the door slid open, and Dimitri entered.
“Ah. Dimitri. What brings you… here… today?” Alphonse Eleric said, fighting to get the words out, as he was intently focused on his screen. He didn’t look up, as only four people were allowed to just enter without his consent; he was one of them. Of the other 3, only one didn’t wear a suit. Dimitri moved around the desk, to look at Alphonse’s computer screen. He saw a game; Half-life Anthology. It was a remake and roll-together of a game and its modifications, which was immensely popular back in the early 21st century. It was made by a company whose name had something to do with taps… he forgot. At the present, the Director was playing as a man in orange armor, wielding a crowbar. As he watched, the Director’s character was hit with gunfire from soldiers in white, and died.
“Hard luck, Al; better luck next time, eh?” Dimitri moved back to the front of the desk, and sat in a chair.
“Man… games must have been hard back then. Using a keyboard and mouse! How did people manage without neuro-controllers? Anyway,” Alphonse turned the screen off, and turned his swivel chair to face Dimitri. “What does my favorite god-son want from me?”
“Psscht.” Dimitri waved a hand. “I’m your ONLY god-son. And I’m here to see what my dad’s got scheduled for the next couple of days.”
“Oh, really? Okay.” Al turned on a different monitor, and began typing on the holo-board. “Let’s see. Jonathan Sride; just finished a mission… it says here Jonathan’s handling training and instruction of new Agents, so he should be bumming around here for at least 5 months, if not longer. Does that answer any questions you might have had?”
“Uh, yeah; thanks Al.” Dimitri stood, and made to leave.
“Hold it- I got some things for you to do. Here, it’s on a bit of paper in case you forget.” Al handed Dimitri a shit of paper, and a parcel. “I want you to deliver that parcel to Doctor Bernard in R&D, and then report to the training grounds.”
“Okay, I was going to see Doctor B anyway; but why the training grounds?”
“So wee can get you training to become an Agent. You can’t have a free ride forever, you know.”
“But I’m only 14!”
“The earlier you start, the more you learn. You could have the basics and intermediates by the time you’re 18, and then the advanced stuff by 20. You’d be one of the best in the Agency.”
“I guess so. Well; there’s worse jobs, I suppose.”
“That’s the attitude.” Dimitri turned, and left the office.

As the door slid shut, a woman stepped away from the wall. Al made a disapproving noise. “Sasha, how long have you been standing there?” Sasha Carnstrom, a woman in her early thirties, was one of the few women who bothered joining the Agency, let alone graduate. Ironically, she was also the second-in-command and ranked number 3 in the agency. She had majored in Stealth and Infiltration, with a supporting degree in Assassination. She was also the de-facto secretary for Al Eleric.
“I’ve been here since you gave Dimitri the parcel. Does he remember his heritage?”
“Don’t be blonde, Sasha.” Sasha made a grimace. Her hair was naturally blond, but today it was a gold-yellow. “If the boy did, he’d probably flip out, and wee’d know about it quickly.”

The boy in question was jogging through the SyntheDyne Agency “Campus” as everyone called it. It was primarily for the Agency HQ, but supported a variety of Corporation facilities; including a R&D lab sub-complex. After breezing through the complex’s security, he made his way to the main lab where the head of R&D would be. He entered to see an old man in a lab coat, shouting at a robotic arm mounted on a pole, which was waving a plastic, square rifle around.
“Hey! Doctor B!” Dimitri waved his arm, while remaining in the doorway. In this R&D lab, when you entered the lab without announcing yourself, you tended to become fair game for any number of experiments to “malfunction”, to say the least.
“Huh? Oh, Dimitri, it’s you!” Doctor “B” waved, and then faced the arm once more, “You! Put the rifle down!”  The robotic arm whirred and clicked, paused, and then proceeded to ignore the Doctor, pointing the gun at various targets and firing.
“Whoa!” Dimitri ducked quickly, and rolled behind a solid steel block pillar- put in place for such events as this. He watched as a plasma burst flew through the air where he had been, and melted a hole in the wall. He peeked around the pillar to see Doctor B wrestling with the arm. There was a flash of blue, and the doctor stepped back, revealing a mechanical arm with half of the bicep melted off. Unable to function, it collapsed and dropped the gun. The doctor checked the gun and put it back on a rack. Doctor Bernard, or “Doctor B” as he liked to be called, was an elderly man approaching his 65th birthday, and head of the Research and Development department. The fact that he was 65 was amazing enough; over the whole of the Corporation’s R&D labs, the average time-span a person worked in the department was measured in single digits of years, if not months. Doctor B had been working there since he was 25. While he’d been given many hints by a lot of people that he should get out of the R&D game before the long odds he’d been playing against caught up to him; he blissfully ignored all of them, and continued just the same, somehow avoiding death on an almost daily basis.

The doctor sat at his large, central desk which was heaped with media of all sorts; not just research-related media, either. Dimitri sat on a chair after he cleared some of the stuff off it.
“What brings you to my wonderland?” asked Doctor B.
“A few things; one is this;” Dimitri held up the parcel for the Doctor to inspect. As the doctor did so, Dimitri shifted, and removed some things which had been digging into his leg and buttocks. He removed a small book on quantum physics; a boxy, rectangular device which promptly sprouted blades and superfluous fittings, almost certainly guaranteed to have been painful if he’d left it there.; and the most disturbing item, a DVD entitled “Girls gone Wild #23”.
“Hey! That’s mine.” The doctor quickly snatched the DVD before Dimitri got a good look at the images on the covers. “Man, how did that get there? Anyway; I have the package, it’s a good lump of BioSteel recovered from a mission. What else were you after?”
Dimitri thought. “First, I need some sort of not-lame device I can put my authorization and ID on; secondly, where is all your staff hiding; and thirdly, what the heck is that plastic gun?”
“Wow. Someone’s got a lot of demands. Now, I think I have something for demand number one, let me look for it.” The doctor turned around, pulled open a filing cabinet, and began flicking through the folders. “As to where all my staff is, they’re on holiday. They’ve gotten smart, and realized that when only a few take a holiday, the workload on those remaining is increased. And when a few are given more experimental work, their mortality rate increases tenfold. Thus, they have all taken their holiday leave simultaneously; I have to hand it to them, this is the smartest bunch of interns I’ve had for a long time. I’ll talk about number 3 later. Ah.” Doctor B pulled a thick folder out of the cabinet, and flipped it open on his desk.
“Let’s see... wee have the regular card… wristband… here’s one that might appeal to you. It’s an access ring. A miniature version of the microchip in your regular access card is concealed inside the ring’s decoration itself. Just upload your id to it, and it’s as good as a card. Even better, it’s designed to work for one person, the person wearing it when ID is uploaded. It’s in aisle 3…” The doctor got up, and bustled off. Dimitri levered himself out of his chair, and followed him.

They got to the aisle in question, and began checking boxes; Dimitri with more caution than Doctor B, because sometimes, past prototypes malfunctioned in the boxes, and because they were air, shock and in general, everything, proof, you had no way of knowing what you were going to find or be hit with. The doctor opened them faster simply because he was a reckless old man, and firmly believed that things he made wouldn’t hurt him. What made it worse is that he was always emerging unscathed from experiments gone catastrophically wrong; the only thing worse than an annoying, arrogant bastard is an arrogant, annoying bastard that is always, by luck, right. This was also a huge contributing factor in the doctor’s 40-odd year survival streak, surprisingly.

“Here it is.” Doctor B pulled a box off the shelf, and blew dust off the top of it. “One of our more applicable prototype series, they rejected this one because it was supposedly too easy to make a fake of and switch for the real deal.” He deactivated the vacuum seal, and opened the box. After a quick look inside, the doctor fished out what appeared to be…
“Hey, it’s that sandwich I misplaced! This is where it went?” Dimitri checked the box’s label.
“Last… sealed… 2315… DOCTOR! Don’t eat that, that’s 3 years old!”
Doctor B looked at Dimitri. “That was a vacuum sealed box, boy. No bacteria.”
“It’s a CHEESE sandwich! It’s even Blue Vein! Cheese IS bacteria!”
“Blue Vein?” Doctor B looked closer at the plastic-wrapped artifact. “Huh, I don’t remember ever purchasing blue vein cheese before… perhaps I really shouldn’t eat this one.” He put the sandwich on a shelf, and presented the open box to Dimitri. “Pick a ring, any ring.”

Dimitri looked at the box. The doctor had evidently gone all out as far as choice was concerned, with many designs available, some of the designs still quite popular. He then decided, picking out a ring which was little more than a metal band with a metal square on it. It was a discreet ring, less attention-grabbing than some of the others.
“Going to pick that one, eh? I thought you might. It suits you.” Doctor B put the box away, and they went back to his desk.
“Anything else you wanted, Dimitri?”
“The plastic gun, what is it?” Dimitri pointed at the plastic gun.
“Oh yes. You know those Biologic Metals plasma rifles? The big heavy metal ones made of plasma-resistant Carbon-alloy uranium?”
“Yeah, only BioMechs use them; they’re too heavy for humans; even an Agent can’t use them easily.”
“That’s the one. Well, wee decided to have a bit of fun one day, and see how accurate they were, and wee shot a plastic cup.”
“What happened?”
“The cup was fine. Plasma couldn’t touch it. Wee tried it again, but this time, with a plastic box, and wee put some gunpowder in it. The box didn’t detonate. Wee took the lid off, and it detonated; thus, our plastics must be resistant to Biologic Metals Plasma weapons. Typical, everyone was fudgeing around with high-density alloys, and the answer was so low-tech, the 21st century could have stopped it. No wonder wee stomped those K’aandar who created plasma technology; very impressive against hard targets, but surprisingly ineffective against soft ones.
Anyway, wee had another idea; dismantle the gun, and replace everything wee could from shell to trigger with plastic. Wee did that, and that there is the result. It’s now less than one sixteenth its original mass, and it retains the same destructive capability. Only problem is, because it’s plastic, it’s rather fragile. You rupture the power cell for this thing, and it explodes in a ball of plasma flame. This plastic is really thin, plastic cup-grade plastic. It breaks if you throw it, for the love of god. So wee’re still doing work on it.”
Dimitri nodded. He got the gist. “Thanks for your time, Doctor B. Good luck with the gun.”
“Have a nice day, Dimitri.” Doctor B turned back to the gun, and began to dismantle it.

The training ground, against expectations, was a large building. It wasn’t an outdoor facility or anything- it was a VR training ground. These were better than traditional training grounds, because trainees got all of the work, none of the unplanned horrible weather, and the scenario could be modified for realistic live-fire exercises.
As Dimitri walked in, he passed a man in a dark coat. The man wore a plain business hat, a featureless metal mask, and apart from the coat, wore the basic uniform of an Agent. His tie and mask were silver, hence his code name:
“Morning, Silvertie.” Dimitri nodded to the tall, mysterious man, who paused to do the same before leaving.
“Man, what a person. Never says a word to anybody, keeps to himself… on the other hand, he is the best agent on this campus,” Dimitri muttered to himself.
“Now, come on. I know I’m not perfect, son, but I’m standing right here!” Dimitri turned to see his father, Jonathan, standing in the doorway.
“Oh, I’m sorry, dad. I didn’t see you there. But then, it is true. He’s ranked #1, best completion/failure ratio by miles, to be honest.” Dimitri shrugged.
“Yeah, I know,” Jonathan sighed, “but wee have someone else’s talent to discuss; yours.”
“Al told me about this.”
“Oh, did he? But then, you asked what I was doing, and… yeah. I got it.” Jonathan fast-forwarded his tape of logic to the relevant point. “Doc said I had to take it easy for a while, and only do basic exercises for a while- hence me being instructor to new fish.”
“So you’re going to be training me?”
“Hey- second best agents make excellent personal trainers. I can’t put you in a proper new recruit class yet, you’re too young. But I can train you one-on-one. And that’s what I’ll do for the next 4 years whenever I can. You’ll pass the graduation op with flying colors, and take Silvertie’s place at #1, beat even your old man!” Jonathan punched his palm in emphasis. “You ready to get started with the training?”
Dimitri looked at Jonathan.
“I’m always ready.”

Spoiler for Chapter 4 – Graduation Scenario:
--- SDA compound, Training grounds, April 28, 2322 ---

Dimitri exhaled sharply as he bent over backwards to avoid an incoming blade. He followed it with a sweeping kick, trying to kick the legs out from underneath the attacker. Instead, his leg met empty air, and he realized that he’d just lost. The knife blade came out of the air and towards his face…

*Scenario Failed*
*Retry?*

“Not even,” said Dimitri. He was now 18 years old, and still had the same irrationally unnerving face. He got out of the simulation pod. Simulation pods took complete scans of a user, and linked the user’s consciousness to a virtual body in a virtual world, in the middle of a specified scenario. Just like in the real world, the user was limited by the physical capabilities of his body, and was auto-failed upon death.
The scenario just finished, Scenario #529, was a simple mission; eliminate the enemy, any choice of hand-weapons permitted, enemy was armed with standard Agent gear, 9mm pistol and knife; and yet, it had a massive failure rate; few managed to beat it, by killing the sole opponent, which seemed to be exceptionally skilled; and of those, most were pyrrhic victories, with simultaneous kill-strikes occurring. Rumor had it that only one man had ever beaten that scenario with a flawless victory; although, apparently, the scenario had been added roughly when Silvertie graduated, so that very narrowly ruled out Silvertie.

“That’s a tough one, huh?” Jonathan stood there, watching his son. He was starting to go grey around the temples, and had a few more scars, but otherwise hadn’t changed over the 4 years.
“You’re telling me. Did you have this one when you were training?”
“Oh yeah. Took me like 20 attempts before I even managed to clip the bastard. Even then, he still handed my donkey to me most of the time. Heck, if I tried it now, I’d win, but I’d be mighty cut up.” He scratched his side.
“Stop that, you’ve got stitches. You’ll just pop them.” Dimitri told his father. If it wasn’t for his reminders, Jonathan’s frequent injuries would be aggravated or extended.
“Yeah, yeah. So; think you’re ready for the real life graduation scenario?” Jonathan flashed a winning grin at Dimitri.
“Yeah, probably. As long as I don’t have to do scenario 529, I’ll be good, I reckon.” Each Agent, in order to graduate, had to pass their graduation Scenario; a scenario in the VR training grounds, but against human-controlled enemies, as opposed to the usual computer-controlled lot. The challenges ranged at random from retrieval, to infiltration, and even unfavorable-odds close-quarters combat. It was a mixed bag what he’d get. There were rumors that there were scenarios that were un-passable, as nobody in the history of the Agency had ever passed it, and all those who attempted it failed.
“What day’s my graduation scenario?”
“First of May, 2322. Not too far away.” Jonathan cocked an eyebrow. “You sure you want to jump into it like this? You’ve only just qualified for official training.”
“Yeah, but you’ve been teaching me more than that for years.”
“True. But you are now officially my student, and I’ve never had a student fail before. Don’t be the first.”
“Come on. How hard is it going to be, Dad?”


--- Graduation Scenario, May 1, 2322 ---

The base Graduation Scenario was a special one. It was designed specifically to be interchangeable and neutral. The one base scenario was always customized on the fly, at the last minute, to prevent the candidate learning about the challenge beforehand.
Today, the flat plain had a met-panel arena set up in the central area. The arena was 200m in radius, 400 in diameter, plenty of room. Graduation Scenarios were open for spectatorship, so there were considerable numbers of Avatars present. Avatars represented the body, much like if you were using a VR pod, but unlike the pod, they only transmitted sight, smell, vision and hearing, and could not interact with the scenario in any way.
Dimitri, wearing a suit, stood at one end of the arena, arms crossed. There was a podium where the judges would issue the scenario objective from, and observe the challenge. He would be marked on how he did the challenge, and whether he passed or not; from that, he would either be pronounced a graduated Agent, or told to come back next year. He straightened his posture and uncrossed his arms when he saw the judges line up at their seats. He could see… Al, two senior Agents he didn’t really know; Julio, who winked at him, and smiled; another unknown agent, and Silvertie. He could hear murmuring from the Avatars; he wouldn’t be able to hear them once the assessment was underway, but he could hear them now.
“Why are there 6 judges? There’s only supposed to be 5.”
“Silvertie’s judging? That kid’s toast, Silvertie’s pretty strict.”
“Man, this kid’s cocky. He’s barely enrolled, and he’s already looking to graduate.”
Dimitri shut them out. He had things to focus on. He saw Silvertie stand up, and the Avatars fell silent. Usually, his hat cast enough shadow to obscure most of the metal mask; but from this angle, Dimitri could see the whole thing. It had a rectangular hole in the mouth region for breathing through, and two indented eye sockets had eyeholes to see through.
“This is the Graduation Scenario for the Candidate Agent Dimitri Sride,” Silvertie proclaimed, his voice echoing around the mask. “The boundary for this scenario is the walls of this arena; should you leave them for more than 10 seconds without first having completed the scenario, you will be disqualified.
For equipment, you will have 30 seconds to pick any and all hand-held equipment you feel is appropriate for the job.” Silvertie paused to check something off a piece of paper.
“Your objective today is to defeat all enemies completely. You must render the enemy immobile for at least 10 seconds or more, free of active influence from you. A kill counts as a success. You have one enemy to defeat;” Silvertie paused, “That enemy is me.”

The Avatars on the tiered seating instantly went into a loud murmur.
“It’s Silvertie against the new kid? That’s unfair.”
“Kid’s got no chance.”
“I can’t believe they’d cook something like this up.”
“My test was to defeat 2 graduated agents, which was hard enough. Silvertie’s #1, how can Sride win?”
Silvertie crossed one more thing off the list, and put the paper down. Everyone shut up.
“Dimitri Sride. This is your mission. Do you accept it?”
Dimitri swallowed. If he rejected it, he would have to wait 2 months for another scenario, and be given a “Not accepted” grade. If he rejected the next scenario, he would be given an automatic fail.
On the other hand, if he accepted, and lost, he would get the fail. The mission ahead of him was simple, but then, it was also a very difficult one. Dimitri made his decision.
“I accept these conditions and the mission.”

Spoiler for Chapter 5 – Silvertie:
The crowd gasped. The judges simultaneously looked away or face-palmed. Silvertie did not react, merely nodding in approval.
“Very well: select your equipment.” He gestured, and a weapons rack rose out of the ground. Dimitri thought. He wasn’t just marked on a pass/fail basis; he was also given marks based on how he achieved his goal, and his general style and technique. For maximum marks, it was expected that the candidate pass the scenario with standard equipment, i.e. single pistol and knife, lock-picks, and suit. Since he had no locks to open, the lock-picks were dead weight, and he was already wearing his suit. Agency suits were different from regular off-the-rack business-wear. Each suit was a marvel of micro engineering, with nanonic threads and integral force-fields, and so on. Essentially, each suit was a very cleverly disguised suit of combat armor. It would be a valuable asset. In terms of weapons, he picked his choice of pistol; a .45, like his father. He’d grown up using a .45, and found other caliber guns to lack in areas compared to the .45. He spun the pistol, and holstered it.

“Time is up.” The rack dropped back into the ground.
“Spoon!” Dimitri exclaimed. He’d forgotten to grab the knife. He hadn’t even started the mission, and already he’d messed up.
“Sride,” Silvertie was now on the ground, equally spaced from the center of the arena as Dimitri, but on the opposite side, “you seem confident a single clip of ammo is all you need.”
“Yeah,” Dimitri lied, “I’ll beat you, and without taking a single injury.”
Silvertie laughed openly. “Ha! You’ve got some balls, I’ll give you that. I’ll put my recommendation in for style points.” Up at the judges area, Director Eleric stood.
“Commence mission in 3… 2… 1… Mark!”

Silvertie wasted no time, as did Dimitri. Both opened fire, but with different strategies. Dimitri strafed as fast as he could, firing his .45 with two hands.
Silvertie just stood there, firing his 9mm pistol with one arm. The difference was that if Dimitri stopped moving before Silvertie ran out of ammo, he’d not move again, because he’d get immobilized by a leg shot or something. Even though it was a 9mm at 100+ meters range, and Dimitri had his suit, Silvertie was a certified professional, and not number one for no reason.  To make things worse, his gun’s bullets were larger, and therefore, he had less to a clip than Silvertie, and he had no spare clips, whereas Silvertie probably did. His suspicions were confirmed as Silvertie stopped firing for a brief moment, 4 seconds long, and reloaded his pistol.
Seizing the moment, Dimitri broke cover, took aim, and fired his last bullet.

The bullet sailed through the air, ionizing air particles and distorting the air around it as it travelled. The .45 slug flew towards Silvertie, who, curiously, made no move. The reason was evident but half a second later, as Silvertie saw the bullet he’d fired sail off on an angle, hitting a wall. Dimitri looked at Silvertie. The man was quickly straightening up, a large dent and gouge on the silvered surface of the mask.
He opened fire on the now exposed Dimitri, who rolled for cover, narrowly avoiding the bullets. As he rolled, Dimitri considered his options. He had no ammo, so no gun. He had no knife, either; most would say he was hosed. Even so, close range was better than long range, at which he had no defense or attack. He counted the 12th shot, and broke cover, charging directly at Silvertie. As predicted, Silvertie decided he would forgo the firearm in favor of the knife.  Dimitri threw a fast straight right punch, which was deflected by Silvertie’s left hand, while his right, holding the knife, cut a path for Dimitri’s face.
Exhaling, Dimitri bent over backwards to avoid- wait.

This was familiar. Yes. Now that he thought about it, Dimitri’s fighting style was almost exactly like the enemy in Scenario # 529. In fact, that year, Dimitri graduated at about the same time as the scenario was made…
Dimitri realized then. Scenario #529 was to beat Silvertie in single combat. And only one man had ever beaten Scenario #529 flawlessly, someone who knew Silvertie’s fighting style inside out; Silvertie himself. Dimitri was no Silvertie, but he knew that after that slash…
Dimitri fought the urge to sweep-kick, and rolled instead. He was rewarded as a loud SHUNK sounded not 30 centimeters from his head. He was no Silvertie, but all those hours of practice on #529 were about to pay off, or make him lose big.
Rolling to his feet, he saw Silvertie getting up, and delivered an almighty uppercut.

THWACK
Dimitri’s bare knuckle impacted against the underside of Silvertie’s chin, and he staggered backwards, flabbergasted. That had never happened before; nobody had ever predicted his downward stab, even those he sparred against often. But it looked like Dimitri had something wrong with him…

THWACK
Dimitri staggered back, recoiling from the uppercut. In that briefest of moments… he’d made skin-skin contact with Silvertie’s chin. In that moment, it felt like Dimitri had been hit with a jolt of electricity. Must have just been static, but his skin was still tingling. He stood there, watching Silvertie.
To beat Silvertie, he needed to think Silvertie… to be Silvertie.
BZT
“Gah!” Dimitri grabbed his chest. A sharp stab pain coupled with the feeling of being subjected to uncomfortable levels of electricity brought him to one knee. It felt like his heart was going to explode.

Silvertie wasted no more time. He charged, knifeless; as he’d overdone it a bit with the stab, expecting to have his knife stuck in person, instead of in the dirt, which was where it would remain for the duration. He wound back for a punch as Dimitri dropped to one knee, and was about to connect it when-
WHAP
Silvertie’s eyes boggled behind the mask. “Impossible!” He threw another punch-
WAP
“What is this devilry? Who are you? Where is Dimitri Sride?” Silvertie watched as a man with tousled black hair, and horrific burns to his face stood up. The burns made him look like some sort of demon, with teeth exposed, no nose, and general deformities caused by intense flames. But Silvertie knew better. It was him, his real face. Nobody still alive knew that… so how had this imposter imitated him? There were flaws with the disguise, though- the fake was wearing the wrong clothes, had no hat, and no mask. And, looking into his imposter’s eyes… he saw the right eye was the correct color, but the left eye was gold-colored.
The fake Silvertie rose to two feet, easily matching Silvertie’s efforts to push him back.
“Where’s Dimitri? What on Cordia are you talking about Silvertie? I AM Dimitri.”

Spoiler for Chapter 6 - Doppelganger:

“You lie!” Silvertie pulled back his hands, and performed a backflip kick backwards. It should have connected, perhaps dislodged a few teeth. It whiffed, hitting nothing but air. It was almost like the move was predicted. He began to move to a defensive posture, intending to…
Dimitri’s head buzzed. Somehow, he just knew that Silvertie was going to make that kick, and before he could think otherwise, he got out of the way. He knew that Silvertie was going to take a particular posture, and just knew that there would be a weak spot just there, for an instant. He leapt forward, with newfound agility, and feinted around Silvertie, who was still settling into his posture, and kicked just there…
WHAMP
Silvertie landed on his back. He was livid. He began to rise, but was stopped by a grip of steel around his neck; HIS grip of steel. He began to gasp. He thought about what happened. If Dimitri had somehow become him, then… it was no point appealing to his own better nature for mercy; if he didn’t listen to it, why would this doppelganger do any different? Silvertie gave up, and prepared for a very fast killstrike.

Dimitri continued to hold Silvertie off the ground. It was so easy… just a little longer, and Silvertie would pass out. Then he could just drop him.
Why stop there?
What was this… feeling?
Why stop at unconscious? Kill him! A kill ensures victory!
I… I can’t act like that. That’s not me, it’s not right.
What do you think got you this far, Instinct? Please; it clearly isn’t up to scratch. It’s been me. And now, I will carry this body to victory, even though it’s not my own.
Dimitri’s arm lowered slightly. Then it tightened its grip, and rose rapidly.

To the outside world, the man that looked like a demon lifted Silvertie by one hand with no apparent effort. The demon swung Silvertie by the neck, and slammed him, headfirst, into the ground. The brutality of the move was evident when Silvertie’s image froze mid-crunch, and wavered, eventually turning transparent green, and fading. The demon straightened up, and… morphed. After a few seconds of pulsating, Dimitri stood there, looking at his hands.

The judges boggled at the man standing in the middle of the arena. A quiet throbbing noise and the sound of a few steps echoed around the table.
“Silvertie; what just happened?” asked the Director.
“Don’t know;” replied Silvertie, “My guess is that he’s not entirely human.”
“Wee knew that when wee let Jonathan adopt him. Wee’ll discuss it later.” The director stood. “Attention, everyone; Judging is finished.”
The crowds, now un-muted, murmured.
“Doesn’t judging usually take longer?”
“I think he cheated.”
“What is he?”
“I heard he’s got some secret gadgets or something.”
The Director cleared his throat, loudly.
“Wee’ve made our decision. Dimitri Sride has completed the allotted challenge by kill, and has passed the assessment.”

--- Director’s office, 57th floor, SDA building ---

“Alright, Director,” Dimitri began, once everyone was seated, “I think you know more about this than you’re letting on, even to me; and I’m the one with the secret in question.”
The rest of the gathered agents; Sasha, Jonathan, Julio, Silvertie, and Al; all shifted uneasily.
“Dimitri… it’s bigger than you think. It’s not going to be explained all off the cuff. Wee assembled here to give you your badge, and graduation gun.” The Director wore an expression of unease. “I think wee can skip the ceremony given the circumstances.” He handed to Dimitri a badge, and a chromed-silver handgun. It was ornamental, but unlike other ornamental guns, it remained a solidly functional gun; even custom-made for the Agent and pre-loaded with their ammunition of choice. It was up to the Agent to either use it in combat, or keep it on the mantelpiece.

“Thanks Director…” Dimitri fell silent, looking at his reflection in the gun. Silence held the room.
“Look. Dimitri, I’ll get a folder put together on you and what wee know, along with relevant notes,” said Eleric, sitting back in his chair, “You just go out and have yourself a bit of a celebration. One of our youngest full-fledged Agents, I’ll have you know.”
“Yeah, you’re right; as usual.” Dimitri checked the safety on the graduation gun, and stuck it in the back of his pants, his proper holster occupied by his usual gun. “Any of you want to come with?”
“I love to get drunk as much as the next girl;” began Sasha, “but our esteemed Director’s given me a bit of legwork to do; in addition to that, I’ll probably have to go assemble the information for that folder of yours; Doing it drunk… well.” Sasha threw her hands in the air. “Can I get a rain check?”
“I’ll pass.” Silvertie, unsurprisingly, backing out of a social event. “It’d ruin the atmosphere if I took the mask off, and I’d look like a wimp drinking through a straw. That, and I need to go beat myself up, can’t believe I lost to you or me.” He got up, and with a nod of the head, left.
“Huh, “beat himself up”, he said. What’s that all about?” Jonathan shook his head, and adjusted his eye patch and its strap. “Anyway, your old man’s game for a drink or two. I’ll just go grab my party ‘patch.”
“Wait, party patch? Don’t tell me you have an eye patch for parties?” Dimitri looked at his father, somewhat surprised.
“Heck yeah, Dimitri; See you in ten.” Jonathan left. Dimitri looked at Julio.
“Well, I got some overdue mission report to write… but I can do it later.” This earned him a disapproving look from Sasha and Al.
“This “later” you speak of… it had better be “tomorrow” later, or you’ll be in a spot of bother, Julio.” Eleric tented his hands and rested his goateed chin on them. “I’m serious, keep me waiting on that City 13 report any longer, and…” Eleric made a gun shape with his hand, put it to his head, and made a quiet explosion noise.
“Ah ha… ha; Actually, I think I’ll take a rain check too, Dimitri. Sorry pal.” Julio got up, and walked to the door. As it slid closed, the sound of someone sprinting off at top speed could be heard.
“Julio… excellent agent, poo poo desk jockey.” Al saw Dimitri’s worried look. “Oh, don’t worry yourself. I set the deadline for the document about a week early, and threaten him with death when it’s not done by that time, tell him the actual deadline, it’s on my desk 12 hours before deadline; sweet as a nut.”
“Right; well, unless there’s anything you want to out and tell me now… otherwise, I’ll just go and party, if you don’t mind.” Dimitri lazily saluted, and left.
“He is going to flip out when you tell him.” Sasha observed drily.
“I’m not blind.”


Outside, at the compound car park, Dimitri stood there next to a car, tapping his foot. Jonathan finally showed up, running hard.
“What took you, Dad?”
Jonathan caught his breath, and straightened up. “Couldn’t find it easily, turned out it was under the couch.” Sitting over his blinded eye was a dark purple eye patch, with a picture of an old-fashioned mug of beer. Dimitri drew a sharp breath.
“You’re kidding me.”
“No joke, Dimitri. When I wear this,” Jonathan indicated the patch, “its party time.” He looked around. “Is it just my impaired vision, or is there nobody else?”
“Nope; everyone said they had things to do. But then again…” Dimitri looked down, “I don’t exactly blame them. That was some pretty freaky stuff; I don’t know where it came from.”
Jonathan grimaced. Seeing Dimitri like this… well. He looked at Dimitri, and removed the eye patch. It was a bit too jovial, given the atmosphere.
“Dimitri; you see this?” Jonathan pointed at his obvious scar and eye.
“I see it, Dad.” Dimitri looked at Jonathan.
“Do you know how I got it?”
“Mission, that’s what you told me. Got too close to a bomb, you said.”
“That’s right; but there’s a lot more to it.”
“A lot more; how much more, exactly?” Dimitri had a feeling where this was going.
“Let’s just say it involves you. Come with me.” Jonathan got into the car, and waited for Dimitri to get in. He programmed a course for Downtown City 7.

Spoiler for Chapter 7 – Where prototypes come from:
--- City 7, Downtown ---

Dimitri and Jonathan stood next to a statue on the corner of the sidewalk, their car parked not too far away, watching the hover cars fly past; the non-hover vehicles like trucks, cheap cars and motorbikes drive past on the ground; all in near silence thanks to the electric fusion engines. The duo watched the traffic for a bit, before Jonathan spoke.
“Tell me, Dimitri; what can you tell me about this intersection?”
Dimitri looked at the abnormal features in the intersection. “There was a bomb explosion at some point. The center of the intersection’s road-steel is newer than the surrounding panels; the walls of buildings around this intersection still bear shrapnel damage in most cases; and this statue,” Dimitri thumped the big metal statue commemorating the founding board member of the planet, Chairman Cortez; “this statue looks like someone took a flak cannon to it.”
Jonathan made an impressed noise, his un-patched blind eye scrolling around. Despite the years, he could see the intersection clearly in his mind and blinded eye. “Very astute, Dimitri; I can see a post-graduation in recon would be a suitable line of study for you.” He cleared his throat. “You know there was an explosion here. I can say you were right, because I was here. This was where I lost this.” He indicated his eye. “You probably can’t guess why, though; am I right?”
“You’re quite right. Why did you lose the eye?”
“I lost it for you.” Jonathan turned to Dimitri, who looked at Jonathan.
“Why would you have to give your eye for me,” Dimitri asked, “and why here? I’ve never seen this intersection before.”
“That’s right. You’ve never seen it, but you were here, 12 years ago.”
“Dad; get to the point.”
“Dimitri… the truth is…”

“Oh, would you look at that,” a mystery voice interrupted. Dimitri and Jonathan looked around for the voice’s owner, to see a man in slim black combat armor flanked by two bodyguards. The man’s face was obscured by a black half-balaclava and goggles, which were pushed up on his head; the bodyguards looked like gorillas on steroids, and as thick as two short planks.
“The thief returns to the scene of the crime. 12 years I’ve been waiting for this. 12 years of stake out! Ridiculous; it’s not like I had company to talk to.” The man waved his hands about in emphasis, although the Agents were focused on the blade hilt protruding over his shoulder. In unison, they drew their pistols, and pointed them at the man, who seemed unfazed.
“Oh dear; where are your manners? More to the point, where are mine? Silly me; the name’s Captain Marcus Fronz of the Biologic Metals army; pleased to make your acquaintance, Agent Sride and Prototype 2.”
Dimitri and Jonathan clicked the safeties off their guns, only to hear a louder click behind them. Slowly raising their hands, they saw two more henchmen strafe around them, wielding Biologic Metals Plasma Rifles. Looking like big, heavy brutes of weapons, Dimitri remembered that they were the basis for the one he saw in the SDAC labs. Also remembering how damned heavy the things were, he realized that these henchmen didn’t just have gym muscle.
“Show a little generosity there, you two; give me the guns.” Fronz gestured, and Jonathan and Dimitri put the safeties back on, and handed the guns to him. Fronz examined the guns.
“Very nice work, these; well maintained, and the choice of ammo size is reasonable; wise weapons of choice.”
“What do you want, Captain Fronz?” Dimitri said the word “Captain” with as much contempt as he could.
“What I want? I want to bring you two assholes in, so I can get off this stupid stakeout and back on the promotion ladder! I mean; your destruction of the convoy, Agent Sride; you destroyed a very important operation of mine, and I took the fall for it! And all you had to pay was a blind eye; and you got this prototype!” Marcus’ eyes darted all over the place, and he began to hyperventilate. “Aargh!”  Marcus stormed over to the wall and punched it, leaving a considerable mark on the concrete. Dimitri noticed several things in this moment:
1) Fronz had anger management issues, to say the least.
2) There were no crowds or traffic.
3) He still had the graduation gun in his back pocket.

After venting his rage on the wall, Fronz turned to face the two.
“You know what? I can deal with this on my own. You lot,” he pointed at the henchmen, who suddenly looked like they wanted to be doing something else, “get back to the room, and call a prisoner transport.” Grudgingly, the four mooched back down the street, and vanished down an alleyway. Fronz turned to face the Agents.
“Before the prison wagon gets here, I think I’ll have a little fun with you two.” He drew his sword to reveal a Katana with an odd edge. “Nobody said you had to get there in one piece.”
“Come on, Captain.” Jonathan spoke up, “I know you did your research on this one. Our suits are combat grade armor; a blade isn’t likely to scratch the surface, even. It’s that tough!”
“Wee did do our research. This is the result.” Fronz flicked his sword as if flicking fluids off the edge and with a flare of plasma flame, a solid-looking cohesive plasma edge sprang into life, leveling exactly with the odd edge, giving a smooth, conventional edge.
“Now the hard bit; what to cut off; actually, I have a better idea. Since wee only need DNA samples from Prototype 2, and it doesn’t matter whether he’s alive or dead; he’s equally expendable, so I’ll kill him!” With that, Marcus leapt forward, towards Dimitri, swinging his blade through the air, leaving a trail of ions and burnt ozone in the air behind it. Dimitri jumped back, and realized that even with that jump, he was still in range of and vulnerable to the Captain’s slash. He braced for the impact of the blue blade when-
“Move, Dimitri!” He was pushed and thrown quickly to the side by Jonathan, who then occupied the space that was originally Dimitri’s. Dimitri watched as the blade flashed, and passed through Jonathan’s right bicep and left forearm like a hot knife through butter. Jonathan screamed, and fell over, dimly aware of the irony in the situation. As blood streamed out of his new stumps, he realized that he was more or less in the same position as 12 years previously, lying in a pool of his own blood. Although, the key difference was in that there was still something trying to kill him, and this time, he had backup.

Dimitri rolled on landing, and drew his graduation gun, flicking the safety off. He was a good 4 meters away from the Captain, and he had a gun; tactical advantage, Dimitri. Marcus looked at Dimitri, and his victim.
“Oops. Guess this blade has a bit more weight than I’d like. Oh well.” He pointed at the ridiculously shiny gun in Dimitri’s hands. “Another gun, huh? That’s not like you Agents, usually you have just the one.”
“Well, tough spoon.” Dimitri chambered a round. “Prepare to get a lead aneurism, asshole.”
“Not so fast!” Marcus quickly ducked down, and grabbed Jonathan by the back of the collar. With strength that belied his size and build, he held the now unconscious body of Jonathan up, while hiding behind it; with his plasma-katana held in a backhand grip, edge and point inwards towards Jonathan’s stomach. “Try and shoot me now, Prototype!”
“Dimitri weighed it up. If he took the shot and got it, he had a very good chance of disarming the bastard. If he missed, Jonathan might die. He wondered what his father would say:
“Do it! Take the shot! Don’t worry about me; I’ve not got much longer to live! Shoot!”
Dimitri nodded in decisiveness, and adjusted his aim.
“You’re not serious about taking the shot, are you? You must have a mental defect; I’m behind your “dad”!”
“Not all of you.” Dimitri steadied his breathing.
“What are you-?”
*BLAM*
*clang*

“Aargh!”
Dimitri ran forwards, scooping up the plasma sword. He’d taken the shot, and instead of aiming for anything really serious on Marcus’ body, he’d shot the hand and forearm holding the sword. If he was accurate, the shot should have travelled down Fronz’s wrist and forearm, generally messing stuff like nerves and bone up. Judging how he dropped the blade and was now backing away from Jonathan’s body, making loud noises of pain; Dimitri would say he was dead accurate. Throwing the sword into the ground next to him, he slid forward to catch Jonathan as his now unsupported body fell. He looked at the bloodstained face of the man he called his father.
“Dad! Don’t give up on me!”
Jonathan cracked open an eye; the good one.
“Did… you… get… Captain?”
Dimitri looked up, to see nobody on the street. The Captain must have made a run for it; without his sword, as it was still lying where it fell.
“He got away.”
“Oh… I… wanted to… get that bastard…”
Jonathan looked up at the sky, and his adoptive son’s eyes. Grey and gold… his remaining eye shut.
“Dad! Don’t die! The medics are on the way! Just don’t die on me!”
The sounds of a young man with mismatched eyes shouting at the body of a man who was short the better part of two arms and about 3 liters of blood on the corner of an intersection with a long history could be heard for quite a distance away on the quiet streets of City 7.


--- SyntheDyne Agency Complex, Agency Tower, Databank level ---


Sasha Carnstrom browsed the files on the Databank direct-access computer.
“Dimitri… Dimitri…. Ah, here wee go.” She watched as screens of information flashed up. “That’s a lot of stuff, I might need more folders.” She highlighted all the documents, and hit “Print”. The nearby laser printer fired up, and began to noisily produce pages of information.
The noise proved a perfect distraction for the person covered head to toe in a dark bodysuit to quietly pad along the large open space behind Sasha’s seat.
Leaning back on her seat, Sasha stretched. She’d been fetching files for the Director all day, and- what was that no-
The dark person ungloved a hand, and grabbed Sasha by the neck. The body suited person shuddered, and after 4 seconds, drew a syringe. Quickly jabbing it into Sasha’s carotid artery, she held Sasha still as she struggled and quickly stopped moving. Checking her pulse to make sure she was dead, her killer pulled her out of the chair.

The killer pulled their hood back, to reveal a woman’s features: Short, spiky black hair and a rather generic face. Checking the corridor behind her and the door’s lock, she began to strip the bodysuit off, revealing a body that belonged to someone that did their fair share of acrobatics and general athletics. Turning to the corpse of Sasha, she stripped that, too and began to put Sasha’s clothes on, underwear and all. The clothes were a bit large, but that was only to be expected, as Sasha had been about twice the killer’s age, but that didn’t matter. Concentrating, the killer stood there, and quickly inflated to fill the clothes. Crouching over her old bodysuit, she sifted through the pockets for three things; a small, flat case that could have been for makeup powder; a square, functional looking communicator; and a small cylindrical device. Shifting all her old clothes into a pile, she pressed a button combo on the device, and threw it onto the pile. After a second, it activated, glowing and creating distortions in the air. As she watched, the bodysuit and anything attached to it disintegrated with each pulse, until all the clothes were completely gone. She returned her attention to the corpse of Sasha. Hiding a corpse in a databank room was hard, but she had an idea. Walking over to the nearest supercomputer in her 'borrowed' heels, she pulled the side off the computer and grinned. Dragging the body to the opened cavity, she carefully wedged the body in the bottom of the case, under all the wiring and such. With any luck, she shouldn’t decay for a while thanks to the clean-room environment, and the concealment in the supercomputer.

Opening the make-up case, she revealed no makeup, but an array of single colored contact lenses. She double-checked the hue of her victim’s eyes; a stunning green, rare in today’s gene pool; and picked a lens out, putting the others away in her pocket. She went over to a shiny metal pillar and used it as a mirror as she looked at her golden left eye, and placed the contact lens over it. Both eyes were now a shade of green; perfect.
Making sure the tampered supercomputer showed no traces of being opened, or that there was a person’s dead body in there, she went over to the printing. She knew what it was for, and put it into a single folder. The assassin, now under the guise of Sasha Carnstrom, entered the elevator, and left the Databank level.


Spoiler for Chapter 8 – The truth shall set ye free:
Dimitri sat in the back of the medic’s APC, and watched as three white-armored field medics worked like mad around the body of the man who he had known for most of his life as his father.
“Pass me that suture!”
“Watch that bone!”
“Get me a soaker!”
Dimitri looked at his hands, which were covered in blood. He’d tried to stem the bleeding as best as he could, but… there was too much. He had the plasma blade next to him, deactivated. The flat of that and the handle were also spattered with blood. In short, it looked like he was the one to hack off Jonathan’s arms.
“I think that’s all wee can do here for now. Let’s get this man back to the compound; wee’ll have better equipment there.” Two of the three medics left to get into the seats of the APC, while one remained with the grievously injured Jonathan, checking specific details and making notes on a clipboard.
Dimitri, for his part, saw none of it. He was busy thinking about what had happened; more specifically, what Marcus Fronz said.
“Prototype… that’s what he called me.”
The APC started moving, and the medic looked up. “Agent Sride, are you okay? Do you require any medical assistance?”
“Prototype; what’s he talking about?”
“…Agent Sride…?” The medic inched closer. PTSD was still a prevalent factor in the Agency, and Agents had been known to flip out after combat on occasion.
“BACK OFF!” Dimitri’s head shot up, and glared at the medic, who promptly jumped back and deployed the helmet, a somewhat cylindrical affair that served as both bullet and biological weapon defense. Dimitri calmed down.
“Sorry, got a bit on my mind.” This was an understatement, but it was a step in the right direction.
“It’s okay, Agent; I’ve seen similar post-combat reactions before.” The medic turned back to his clipboard, but kept the helmet up. He’d also seen gullible medics slaughtered from behind by those claiming to be sane.
Dimitri paid the medic no more attention. He had some soul searching to do.


--- Director’s office, 57th floor, SDA building, half an hour later ---

Dimitri sat there, facing the Director. The two were alone, and Dimitri still held the graduation gun and plasma blade. The two sat in silence for several minutes, and then the Director began to speak.
“Dimitri… the medical department says that they’ve managed to stem the bleeding; it seems that your father will beat the medical odds once again.” When this elicited no response, he went on, “I’m sorry. I should have begun easing you into this sooner; what I’m going to allow you to find out will be quite heavy.”
“Al. Please, don’t beat yourself up on this one.” Dimitri waved his hand, “at least, not until I see what you haven’t told me.”
“Of course,” Al pressed a button on his desk, “Sasha, bring in the folder, please?”
Sasha walked in. Dimitri looked at her. Something was a little off in the way she looked at him. Then he considered his clothes; he was still wearing clothes coated in Jonathan’s blood, and carrying a blade flecked with the same.
“It’s not my blood, if you’re wondering, Sasha.”
“Well, I can kind of see that, seeing as you’re still upright and all.” Sasha quickly walked over to the desk, and placed the folder, which was several centimeters thick, on the desk in front of Dimitri; she turned and left, the doors sliding silently to a close behind her.
“I know there’s a lot of stuff there, Dimitri. Please take as long as you need to read all our Intel on you.”


Several hours of silence later, Dimitri finished the last document, put it down, and sat back in his chair.
“Well, Dimitri?”
“I don’t have any problems with what you decided to do; it’s what I would have done.” Dimitri clicked his neck. “It explains a great deal of things that have happened recently, as well as things which have never really made sense.” Dimitri sifted through the pile until he found the document he wanted.
“So, Jonathan was never my real dad, then?” Dimitri looked at the document; formal adoption papers signed by Jonathan.
“Quite true; he made quite an irrational judgment that day he saved your life, and decided to adopt you. It enabled us to keep an eye on him, and give you a semi-normal upbringing.” Al sat forward, and looked at Dimitri. “You know a piece of shrapnel did that to his eye. It did it because he was busy throwing you behind the statue; if he hadn’t, you might not be here today.”
“The statue from today?”
“The very same; he went into that cargo truck expecting to find a weapon or some advanced technology. He found you and a bomb instead.”
“So it would seem.” Dimitri sat silent. “Although, looking at what information you’ve put together here… my designation was “Prototype 2”, correct?”
“Our wiretaps and interceptions would indicate so.”
“Then there is a large chance I am not completely unique.”
“You mean, you think there is another with abilities similar to your own?”
“Well, number two. If I was the only one, why bother with a number? There was at least one predecessor to me, and who knows how many after.”
“I can’t believe wee never picked up on that.” Al seemed genuinely surprised, it was quite a slip up.
“It’s a speculation; I wouldn’t take it too seriously.”
“But it’s a very good speculation; I’ll get some feelers out and listen for any mention of more prototypes in particular.” The Director made a note on a piece of paper. “Now, as to your Agent status… now that wee know what happened in that arena; wee can safely judge that while it was an unusual event, it was not outside the rules of engagement, as it was a personal skill. Nobody can contest that. But, the real question is, do you still want to be an Agent?”
Dimitri considered it, briefly.
“Of course; what else would I do? And, on that note, I would like to apply for a post-graduation specialization.”
“You want to post-spec? Fine by me; what fields?”
“I was thinking Infiltration and Recon. With my unique skill, I should be able to infiltrate like no other.”
“I expected as much. Well, seeing as you now know about your ability and need practice; would you consent to being observed? Wee have precious little data on what you can actually do.”
“Sounds like a plan.”
“Okay;” Al pulled out a form and quickly scribbled some things over it, “I’ll give you an hour or two to go do what you have to;”
Like visit Jonathan, correct? Dimitri thought silently


--- Medical bay 4, private ward ---

Dimitri looked at his adoptive father, lying on the bed. The doctors had done their thing, and capped his amputated stumps with… Dimitri turned to the attending nurse.
“What are the metal things?”
“The stump-caps?” The nurse tilted a head, thinking. “They’re bio-metallic translators. Wee’ve hooked them up to his nervous system, and other exposed internal elements and now they’re ready to attach mechanical limbs to.”
“Translators… I can’t say I’ve heard of the things before.”
“You shouldn’t have, Doctor B just cranked out these prototypes a couple of hours ago.”
“Bio-metallic… wait, do these use BioSteel?”
“Apparently so, the doc’s been waiting for a good use for our limited stock of biosteel."
"Isn't this what BioLogic have been trying to do for a while now? Fusing human flesh and BioSteel?"
"In a sense; but the methodology behind it varies," the nurse made a comparative gesture, "Biologic Metals try and mould the flesh to accept the BioSteel, which, as far as I know, has resulted in a zero percent success rate, and one hundred percent fatality rate."
Dimitri shifted uneasily; this nurse was not aware of the biological marvel standing in front of her, it seemed. She continued her explanation.
"The doctor has gone the other way and applied Occam's Razor; rather than struggle like Biologic's scientists, he chose to change the steel to match the body. While it means that each transplant needs to be tailored to the patient, it means a much greater chance of the graft taking."
Dimitri cocked an eyebrow. "Much greater chance? What kind of odds are wee looking at here?"
"Well..." the nurse coughed and lowered her glance, "This is the first actual trial..."
"Say no more. He fit to talk?"
"He should be able to talk. However, Agent Sride has been on painkillers for the better part of the last 5 hours, so he may be a tad unresponsive."
"Thank you for your assistance, nurse. Could you leave us be for a while?"
"Certainly. Just press the red call button if anything goes pear shaped; not that anything will, of course."
The nurse hung up a clipboard, grabbed a metal trolley, and left, wheeling the trolley away.

Jonathan, for the ninth time, and easily the worst one; woke up from being knocked unconscious by something. Not only was it like trying to sit up through almost-set concrete (which he'd done before, long story) his arms were both off balance and burned as if they were on hot embers.
Once he was done creating a metaphor for his intense, semi-dulled pain (which the painkillers he'd presumably been given had done little to dull; much like wrapping a sharp rock in thin blanket); he got around to sitting up.  Jonathan opened his eyes to see a still bloodstained Dimitri sitting on a chair looking at him. "Nice to see you're alive, Dimitri." Jonathan’s jovial tone belied the pain; it would have taken a great analyst of micro-expressions to have picked the nanosecond-long flinch of pain.
"I could say the same about you, Jonathan. You lost more than a few liters this time, I’m afraid." "Jonathan?" The man in question quickly worked out what was going on. "I see; Al told you all about the adoption, then?”
“Yeah… I suppose you were about to tell me the truth when that Captain jumped us, right?”
“I was getting there. If he’d been a few minutes later, wee wouldn’t be here having this conversation.” Jonathan waved his stumps for emphasis, and looked at them, more specifically, the metal caps on the ends. “Hey, Dimitri; got any idea what these things are? They itch and burn like a really bad rash.”
“They’re like stump caps for your prosthetic limbs to attach to. Ask Doctor B about it.”
“Ah. Well, if you don’t mind, I’d like to go back to sleep; this pain is starting to pick up.”
“Sure thing…” Dimitri hesitated, the habit of 12-odd years weighing on him; “…Dad. I’ll come back and visit later, alright?”
“Don’t hurry; I need my beauty sleep.” Jonathan grimaced and rolled over. Dimitri looked at the back of the double-amputee lying in the bed, and left.

Spoiler for Chapter 9 – The man with a thousand faces:

--- SDA compound, Training grounds, 1 hour later---

Dimitri logged into a Simulation pod, and connected to training room 13. His vision was filled with wireframe objects for a moment, and then a wave of solidarity flowed down through his world, and everything looked real again. The transition, although it wasn’t part of any tests, had been known to induce vomiting and, in one rare case, insanity, in the inflexibly-minded user. Dimitri’s virtual body spawned inside a small sitting room.
“Huh, this is new.” Dimitri looked at the room. From the looks of things, the manual exit to the simulation was the door behind him, and there was only one other door in the room. The room was dark, and lit only by a single, archaic TV set. There were two high-backed armchairs facing the TV, which was showing random feeds from rooms unknown. Dimitri walked forward, to walk past the chairs and to the non-simulation-exit door on the wall behind the TV. He almost walked right past one, when he realized an important thing.
It’s a trap. This is part of a test.
Drawing his .45 handgun, Dimitri put three rounds into the high-back of one chair. He was rewarded by a scream of both pain and surprise; and a quickly dissolving holographic-green shape fall forwards out of the chair, gone before he even hit the ground. A slow clap sounded from behind him. He turned to see Silvertie, slowly clapping his hands.
“Bravo, Dimitri. You did better than I expected.”
“Wait, so wee’re already moving to a test?”
“More like a bet… which I won, thanks to you. A certain agent who disagreed with the results of your assessment a few days ago approached me. If you didn’t kill him first, he won the bet; and vice versa. I’m glad you did though, I don’t have 20,000 spare credits.”
“You don’t strike me as a gambler, Silvertie.” Dimitri frowned at being part of some other people’s sport.
“But I’m not. I was 95% sure you’d at least take the first shot or punch. From there, you should have had no worries.” Silvertie waved an arm, and the walls dissolved, revealing a much larger, brightly lit warehouse, filled with row upon row of weapons and equipment. “Now, to the real test. Please, have a seat.”
Dimitri did as he was told, and sat in the not-shot chair. Silvertie clicked his fingers, and the shot up chair shimmered, and became as it was before it had air holes punched through it. Silvertie sat, and pulled a table between them, placing a shit of paper on it. Dimitri picked it up. It was a mission brief.
“Your mission is to eliminate all the other Agents outside of this warehouse. You may take whatever equipment you need from this room, but once you leave, it will cease to exist for you.” Silvertie held up a hand with all fingers and thumb extended. “You have 5 Agents to defeat. It is likely they will be working together, so use that to your advantage. Good hunting.”
Silvertie clicked his fingers one last time, and was engulfed by a green stream of ones and zeros, and when it vanished, he was gone. Dimitri stood up, looked at the equipment around the room, and made a plan.

--- Elsewhere in the simulation ---

An Agent scratched the back of his head with one of his two SP-4 SMGs, and yawned. He was sitting in a swivel chair behind the reception desk of a dock-side shipping company; the warehouse door had opened, for him, at the main doors; true to the instructions’ words, the doorway no longer led back to the warehouse. He didn’t get why this was part of his course; he was majoring in Assault and Vehicular Combat, not guard duty. He pulled out his radio and clicked it on.
“Yo, it’s Derek. Anything going down on your ends?”
4 voices murmured things along the lines of “no, it’s boring as hell”.
“So, anybody know why wee’ve been picked for this one?”
“Eh, I heard Silvertie was the one who had us pulled from our regular training,” one voice replied.
“Silvertie? Sounds like he’s put together a bit of light exercise for himself,” speculated another.
“Bah, compared to Silvertie, wee’ve got no chance,” said the third, miserably.
“What are wee doing again?” asked the fourth voice.
“What did you do with your brief?” queried the second voice.
“Huh, James probably lost it already,” scoffed Derek.
“Shut up, I didn’t,” retorted James, “I just left it back in that warehouse.”
“Well, for those of us who were too pants-on-head retarded to hold onto their briefs,” voice one announced, and the sound of paper being unfolded crackled through the radio; “Our job is to defend against and defeat an Agent who will be attempting to defeat all five of us.”
“Just one; Are you sure you got the right instructions there Andrew?” Voice three asked, skeptically.
“Of course, I- Hey! Stop right- don’t com-“Andrew was cut off by the sound of someone being grabbed by the neck, and gunshots. The other agents listened.
“I spotted the target! He’s running between shipping crates out the back! I think I have him cornered in a dead end, but I want some backup,” Andrew shouted. Everyone breathed a collective sigh of relief, and throughout the company building, got up and made their way to the docks area.

Andrew waited, pointing his SP-16 at the gap where the enemy had escaped, until his allies showed up.
“Got the bugger in the leg,” Andrew explained, as they looked at the blood spatters in the area, and the trail of blood leading into the shipping containers; “should be an easy kill. You guys take point, I have to reload.”
The other agents grumbled about shared risk and unfairness, but did it anyway, stacking up at the gap, they filed in one by one, followed by Andrew who was busy reloading his SP-16.

Derek led the way, closely followed by James and the other two; Andrew was somewhere at the back, as usual, finding an excuse to sit out of direct combat and still take the credit. He followed the crates, and stopped at a corner, where he waited. Everyone stood behind him, and he almost jumped when Andrew poked him in the neck with his finger. He looked at Andrew, who quickly said in sign language, “What’s the holdup?”
“Just being careful, you reckless bastard,” Derek signed back. Readying his dual SMGs, he stepped around the corner, guns leveled, to find…
“What the hell is this?” James exclaimed loudly behind him. In the dead end of crates, there was a body with shot up kneecaps, and a gag in his mouth. It was Andrew, bloodied and in exquisite pain, but still alive.
“Wait, if this is Andrew, then, who’s-“ Derek turned around to see himself pointing a fully loaded SP-16 at their own heads.
“What are you doing, Derek?” One agent asked the SP-16 Derek.
“Yeah, dude,” said the other, “I realize that I might have given you poo poo in the past, but this isn’t the time to-“
*BRAT-AT-AT-AT*
The agent who had been talking was blown backwards, with 4 rifle rounds in his head, and he did the virtual disintegration thing as he hit the far container, which was spattered with his own gore and blood. The agents watched him ‘Shatter’ into ones and zeros, before turning back to the two Dereks.
“Wait, there are two of you?” James said, and even though he was pointing his SP-12 shotgun at the SP-16 wielding Derek, he hesitated; a bad choice, as he was cut in half by a spray of bullets from the team-killer Derek.
“Jesus Christ!” The real Derek began to duck back around into the dead end, as his remaining ally began shooting at a Derek. Unfortunately, it was the wrong Derek in the confusion, and Derek took a spray of 9mm hollow points to the lungs. He landed heavily against the far container as he looked back at his friend, who had the back of his head blown out by the imposter. He dissolved before he hit the ground.
“You bastard, what are you?” The real Derek brought up one SMG (his other arm was paralyzed) and fired at… nothing. Derek looked around, and sat up against the wall, holding his chest. Nowhere to be seen…
“Surprise, Derek.”
Derek looked up, and saw a horrifically burnt face with a gold eye looking at him over the edge of the container, as well as the business end of a .45 pistol.
“Ah, spoon.”
*BLAM*

Dimitri shifted back to his original form, and dropped down into the dead end. The walls were splattered with gore, blood, and the floor was covered in bloodstained guns. It had been quite a gamble, but it had paid off. He even learnt a little about what he could do - assume any person’s identity at will, after just a brief second of skin-skin contact. He’d even managed to only shift some features; for the latter two shifts, he’d just kept the body of Derek, and changed faces.
“MFhmFF!” the tied up Andrew made noises.
“Oh, right.” Dimitri shot the tied up Andrew in the head, and he vanished. For a moment, nothing happened, and then the whole world shook, and all the containers dissolved, revealing an infinite expanse of flat concrete in all directions, and Silvertie, sitting in that same chair from before.
“Very nice work, Dimitri,” Silvertie said, “that’s some ability you got there. Even I would have had difficulty setting that sort of trap.” Silvertie stood, and pulled a door open out of thin air, revealing a pitch-black doorway.
“I’ll need some time to think up an assessment schedule for you, Dimitri. Your unique abilities would make a mockery of the infiltration qualification as it is now. Until then, though; the time is yours. Spend it wisely. Oh, and one other thing;” Silvertie turned around, “while I find it a note of honor that you assume my real features, I would appreciate it if you didn’t use it exclusively as a scare tactic.” And with that, he stepped through the doorway, vanishing into the darkness; after a brief moment’s pause, Dimitri followed suit.


--- Six months later, November 3, 2322 ---

Dimitri walked out of the training grounds, feeling like he’d been hit by a ton of bricks. While he hadn’t physically been hit with bricks, his simulation self had been in a situation leading to the collapse of a brick wall, on him; and anything experienced in the simulators had a memory of it sent to the real body, a prime source of people losing their sanity after one too many simulated deaths.
Rolling his shoulder to get a non-existent click out of it, he saw Jonathan walking the other way.
“Afternoon, Dad.”
“How’s your training coming along?”
“Very nice; you know that chip in my brain they found with a scan?”
“I remember it.” Jonathan nodded, thinking back to that day when he first looked at the report.
“Turns out it’s a super-capacity memory chip that somehow works with undetected BioSteel implants, to allow me to store the profiles of people that I touch.”
“So, what, you can still become Silvertie?”
“Yeah; I did it just before, actually.”
“He told me about what you kept using his face for.” Jonathan made a disapproving face.
“Oh, I only do that when he’s watching. I used it this time for his muscle structure; that guy is so much stronger and faster than he looks, and he’s got hardwired responses. You throw a punch, one twitch is all he needs to block it, it’s that deeply ingrained into his muscle memory.”
“That’s amazing, I never knew he was that into his work.” Jonathan genuinely looked surprised at the revelation.
“The doctor finally let you out of the medical bays?”
“Yup,” Jonathan replied cheerfully, “my arms are finally good to go.” Jonathan held up the afore-mentioned arms. The stump caps were now fully merged with Jonathan’s flesh stumps, and supported a smooth transition from flesh, to metallic flesh, and then to the hard steel of his two prosthetic arms. The two arms were different lengths; his left arm, which had been cut off at the forearm, had less prosthetic, mostly wrist and hand. The right arm was mechanical from bicep down. Both prosthetics were slightly thicker than their original counterparts, but that was because of the armor plating.
“Right beauties, aren’t they?”
“That they are, Dad. But judging from the expression on your face, I’d guess that there’s something secret in them.”
“Oho! You really are getting sharper!” Jonathan’s one eye crinkled with pride, “Doctor B chucked in some enhancements you wouldn’t normally find in a prosthetic; like so:” Jonathan lifted his left hand, and a small spike popped out of the index finger. “This hand is like a Swiss army knife. It’s got a Splicing Spike, lock-pick, and code buster inside it. This arm,” he lifted the right one, “is more combat-orientated, and can deliver a Tazer-grade electrical shock to targets that touch the hand. The hand is a grapple hook, and can be fired; very useful, and I can combine that with the Tazer to get people from far away. And lastly but not least…” Jonathan made a fist and concentrated, pointing his arm out to the side. The reason was evident when two blades on arms unfolded on the underside of the forearm and flicked forward; followed by a blade on the top of the forearm in the center. The three blades made a triangle shape, and if there had been a person’s neck in front of, or in the fist, the blades would have taken them in the shoulders, with the third one going through their forehead.
“Pretty basic, they’re limited to folding and unfolding; I’ll find a way to make them work.”
“Well, that’s cool; but you might want to remove shirts or roll up sleeves before you do that.”
“Eh?” Jonathan looked at his right sleeve, which was torn to shreds by the emerging blades. “Oh Christ, I didn’t think of that one! Thanks Dimitri, I think I’ll go get one of my spare shirts and jackets.” Jonathan turned and began jogging. “See you at dinner!”
“Jonathan, Jonathan, Jonathan.” Dimitri shook his head. Obviously, when it was said that wisdom came with age, Jonathan had missed the lecture, as it were.

Dimitri stood there for a moment. He felt an itching sensation on the back of his head. He turned to see Sasha Carnstrom standing by the steps to the training grounds, looking at him. She wasn’t moving, just standing there, arms crossed.
“Anything you want, Sasha?” Dimitri enquired, loudly. Sasha gave a start, and coughed, walking over to Dimitri.
“Sorry about that, I kind of… zoned out… there,” Sasha apologized, “bit too much work lately.”
“Really, just work you say? Huh.” Dimitri started walking to the tower, and Sasha followed. “You’ve seemed like you’ve had a lot of work since about 6 months ago, to be honest.”
Sasha gulped, barely on the edge of hearing. “Have I been that pre-occupied?”
“Yeah, you certainly looked like it.” Dimitri stroked his chin, he was starting to get some light stubble; a shave was in order soon. “You’ve certainly acting odd, definitely.”
“Me? Acting odd? As if,” Sasha dismissed, waving a hand; then she stopped mid gesture. “I just remembered; I had something to get from my quarters! I’ll have to chat later, Dimitri, bye!”
Sasha ran off. Dimitri scratched the side of his head. Even more curious; it seemed that Sasha was up to something… he continued to the tower.

Sasha sprinted back to her quarters, and shut the door. She quickly kicked off her shoes, and padded over to a desk on the wall. There was a Frankenstein device sitting on it, and a square communicator device. She hit a button on the Frankenstein, and it clicked, whirred, and beeped; creating a big blue sphere big enough to fit a short man, or a woman, inside it. Sasha grabbed the communicator, and stepped inside. Abruptly, the ambient noise one never really noticed cut out. She flipped open the communicator, and pressed a button. The other end picked up immediately.
“You’ve reached a number which is not connected to the network.  Please check your dialed number.”
“Epsilon, reporting in; I have an urgent sit-rep,” Sasha’s voice sounded much different now; not her usual self. It was the voice of a completely different person.
“Epsilon, your identity has been confirmed by voiceprint, patching you through now.” Sasha, or “Epsilon”, waited for the channel to connect, tapping a stocking-clad foot on her carpet in impatience. She started when the other end was picked up.
“Epsilon; your update isn’t due for another 3 months.”
“Not that. I think I’ve been found out.”
“Found out, you? That’s impossible, unless you’ve been ignoring cues from your assumed identity?”
“Well, sort of. If I listened to the cues, it would be worse; Sasha Carnstrom’s personality is being very un-co-operative with me; I’ve had to make do with ad-libbing, but it seemed that someone’s noticed. Nobody else seems to have noticed yet, but one leak is still serious.”
“You should stop dicking around, and kill him already.”
“As you say, Commander,” “Sasha”, or rather, Epsilon, disconnected the communication channel, and rubbed her temples, “This isn’t going to be easy.”

About 800 meters away, in the security room for the whole SDA compound, Silvertie sat back from his console; they’d picked up that barely detectible channel, again. If it was legit, nobody had told him, and he got told everything.
“Did wee get a trace on it this time?”
“Yes, Agent Silvertie.” A subordinate agent ran up, and passed him a datapad. It had a map of the entire SDC complex, and zoomed in on the source of the transmission. It closed in on the SDA compound, and then onto the residential area, and then stopped, looking at a radius of about 5 living quarters.
“What’s up with this?” Silvertie tapped the screen with the back of his gloved hand.
“Some local jamming, it seems to only show up when the transmission is being made. Wee know the source is somewhere in here; it’s the only area wee can’t track through. It doesn’t have to be the center; some jammers can project an off-center interference dome.”
“Alright, get a list of inhabitants in the area; wee have an illegal transmission to find."

Spoiler for Chapter 10 – A night to die for:

--- SDA compound, 10:20pm, November 3, 2322 ---

Silvertie paced, just around the corner from Sasha Carnstrom’s quarters. It was an unhappy coincidence that the center of the interference dome was centered exactly on her quarters. He stood next to the wall, and peeked around it.
Or perhaps it’s no coincidence, Silvertie thought, as he watched Sasha leave, and begin to walk away from him. He checked the time. 10:30 at night. Hardly the time for working, and Sasha hadn’t exactly been the most social person of late. Something smelled, and he’d find out what it was.
You’ve got something to do with this, Sasha. I’d stake my reputation on it, he thought, as he quietly sneaked off after her.

Epsilon walked along the darkened walkways between buildings in the residential area. She was sweating; it was only her second attempt at assassination, and while she would probably have the element of surprise, she was also walking into what might just be an elaborate trap set by an incredibly paranoid person. As she walked, she felt the tools she’d be using. A SP-7 silenced pistol was one of them. She had to hand it to the Corporation, when they made a silenced gun, it was silenced. The loudest thing would be the sound of the mechanism working, and ejected casings hitting the ground; not counting any death noises a target might make. She had 14 9mm hollow-points, and one target; the odds of him surviving were low, to say the least. She stopped, and looked at the building in front of her. The Sride quarters, home to Jonathan and Dimitri Sride. She drew the second tool, a magnetically propelled, rubber-coated grapple-hook and launcher. She took aim at just above the edge, and turned a dial on the launcher, and fired.

Silvertie watched Sasha from an alleyway as she silently launched her grapple-hook, and it flew up, and over the edge of the square building… and too far. Silvertie watched the hook, as it flew 4 meters further than it had to. He gritted his teeth. Sasha was one of the best agents, and impatient with it; the last thing she’d do was waste time waiting for her launcher to retract un-necessary cable, and she was good enough that she could get the exact amount of cable needed within about 25 centimeters, on average. This… amateur, was clearly not that skilled, and therefore, not Agency-trained. He pulled out a communicator, and pressed a button.
“This is the SyntheDyne Agency Internal Security division. What’s up?”
“Hal, it’s Silvertie,” Silvertie whispered, “I want 30 agents to converge on the quarters of Dimitri and Jonathan Sride ASAP; the target is Sasha Carnstrom, she’s acting very oddly; shoot to kill protocol, she is armed and probably dangerous. Principals are the Srides.”
“Got it, boss.”
“Also; get people out looking for a body, that of Sasha Carnstrom. It’s somewhere on the compound, I feel.”
“Say what? You want us to kill Agent Carnstrom, and also find her body elsewhere?”
“Yes, just do it, please.”
“Whatever you say; Agent backup ETA is 9 minutes.”
“Thank you, Hal.” Silvertie disconnected the call, to see Sasha up on the roof, examining the skylights on the roof. If he didn’t do something, Dimitri wouldn’t have a chance. But if he acted too soon, Sasha could claim innocence, or other motives other than murder. He stepped back into the alleyway, and backed into a bottle some Agent drinking on the sly had left behind, and a trash mechanoid had not picked up. He winced as it fell over with a loud clinking, and took the only course of action he could think of; he stepped out into the open.

Epsilon started, as she heard a clinking back on the ground. She looked, to see Silvertie staggering out of an alleyway, walking more or less in a straight line. She watched as he lurched to a halt in the middle of the road.
Does Silvertie drink? she wondered, addressing the question to the personality storage module in her brain.
As if I’d tell you, bitch.
Epsilon sighed. While copying a person’s memories and personality had its merits in a near flawless disguise, the copy was also self-aware, and depending on how malicious the personality was, it would be more or less difficult to work with. There were few copies capable of putting up a fight, and to her knowledge, not many that would withstand metaphysical torture.
You WILL tell me, Carnstrom. Does; He; Drink? Epsilon imagined a blowtorch moving towards a naked woman strapped to a bench.
A- ngh- Fudge you- Ga- Sasha’s copy stuttered, as it was subjected to imagined torture; Silvertie drinks, sometimes. I caught him once, can’t remember when. Just stop!
Epsilon let up, and turned to watch Silvertie as he pulled out a communicator, and mashed a few buttons. He put it to his ear, and wobbled on the spot. Epsilon listened hard to catch the conversation in the cold night air.
“Dimitri, ol’ pal! What’s hap’nin?”
Epsilon drew her gun; he was calling her target at a bad time. She figured she could take the shot…
“No need to be lik’ that, bro’. Jus’ wanted to go out and have a good time… you got to be mor’ social.”
Epsilon paused, staying her hand. Perhaps it was just a huge coincidence, and Silvertie really was toasted.
“Wel’, anything’s better th’n taking shots alone at home.”
Epsilon frowned. Odd choice of words, that.
“Well, I’m getting some of the boys from int- int- security out for a bit of a party, you sure you don’t want to come with?”
Epsilon relaxed. Silvertie was obviously lonely when drunk; it made quite a change from his sober self.
“Wel, you know I’m jus’ a call away, you dig? Laters.”
Silvertie looked at his communicator for a while, and made a noise Epsilon thought was a snort, before hanging up and walking in a crooked line across the street and away. She dismissed the episode, and turned back to her work.

Just around the corner, Silvertie dropped the drunkenness act, and thought. He’d called Dimitri, and Dimitri had picked up; thanks to the mask, Sasha didn’t know that he was actually watching her. That meant that either Sasha had really gone rogue, or…
“There’s a second prototype?” He redialed Internal Security, and was patched through to Hal again.
“Wow, I’m popular tonight,” Hal said, by way of greeting, “What’s the 411, boss?”
“Hal, tell the agents to be wearing combat hazmat suits.”
“Hazmat suits; why on earth would they need those?”
“They cannot come into skin-skin contact with anyone here. If they do…”
“Say no more boss; it’s done.”
Silvertie hung up, and for the first time in years, worried that the outcome would be more than he could deal with.

Dimitri was sitting in an armchair, wearing a thermal undershirt and Flannel pants; and reading. Others of his age would go out and party; even Agents would team up and go to a bar; not him. He preferred a good book, today the novel of choice was a rather old one, Lord of the Rings. Lore had it that it was quite a popular book back in the day, with movies and everything. He jumped as his phone went off, and fished the phone out of his pocket. The caller ID said “Silvertie”.
“Dimitri speaking, what’s up?”
“Dimitri, ol’ pal! What’s hap’nin?”
“Just sitting in my chair, reading a book. You sound… drunk?”
“No need to be lik’ that, bro’. Jus’ wanted to go out and have a good time… you got to be mor’ social.”
“What? Be like what? What are you talking about, Silvertie?”
“Wel’, anything’s better th’n taking shots alone at home.”
This was getting to be a very disjointed conversation. But Dimitri pondered the choice of words. It had to be a hidden message, and to his knowledge, he’d never, ever heard of Silvertie drinking.
That’s right, Dimitri. I don’t drink. Never have, never will.
That was Silvertie’s personality… again. Ever since he’d copied Silvertie so thoroughly, he’d been unable to rid himself of the Agent’s presence; the man was now more like a conscience, listening in and offering advice whenever Dimitri had a choice to make. Sometimes it was a blessing, but Silvertie’s Copy had a knack for speaking up at inopportune times. Needless to say, Dimitri had been careful to not copy anyone else so hard since then.
“Something’s happening, isn’t there? Are you in trouble?”
“Well, I’m getting some of the boys from int- int- security out for a bit of a party, you sure you don’t want to come with?”
“So, you’re not in trouble; am I in trouble?”
“Wel, you know I’m jus’ a call away, you dig? Laters.”
The line cut off, and Dimitri put his book down, worried. Silvertie wasn’t in trouble, but someone was watching him, so he couldn’t just out-and-out warn him. Jonathan was at the medical department for observation for the night, so that meant he was all alone for this night; apart from Silvertie, of course, who was getting backup from Internal Security together. Dimitri got up, and looked for his shoulder rig and some proper pants.

Epsilon pulled the grating off the air vent, and pulled off her shoes. It was sadly cliché of her to use an air vent for infiltration, but then, it was big enough; and easier than a break and entry through the window; and shoes with heels would only make this difficult. Moving with no sound except for that of her clothes rubbing against the walls of the shaft, she moved to the first vent, to see an armchair, with a dark shape in it, facing a roof-to-floor window and backlit by an angle poise lamp. She quietly levered the grille from its fittings, and spotting a convenient couch, threw the metal cover to land without a sound on the cushions. Displaying extreme flexibility, she folded herself out of the vent, to hang from the edge by her hands, stocking-clad feet but a meter from the ground. She drew a breath, and landed with a soft ‘whamp’. Moving carefully, she carefully crouched and aimed at the back of the chair, and fired three shots, which punched through the chair with three ‘thwunk’ noises, and left spider-web-like cracks and fractures across the glass window, which, as predicted, was bulletproof. She moved around the chair, preparing to deliver a final kill shot to Dimitri Sride’s head, only to find…
“A proxy droid?” Sitting in the chair was a hastily dressed mannequin, with a black wig, look of surprise on its face, book clasped in its hands, the pages spattered with the green lubricant/electrolyte that flowed through their veins. The job of a Proxy Droid was to take the place of a real person in events where the original needed, well, a proxy, to take their place. Their use was rather limited, as the green blood, and the odd unforeseen circumstance gave them away. But in this case, it had worked very well; she’d killed Dimitri’s body double, which meant-
“Sloppy work, ‘Sasha’,” commented a voice as a hand closed around her neck.

Spoiler for Chapter 11 – Sibling Rivalry:


--- SDA compound, Sride Quarters, 10:30pm ---

Dimitri continued to hold the intruder by the neck, holding his gun not quite touching her head, but about a few centimeters away. No need to let her know he had a gun.
“You are definitely not Sasha. Sasha wouldn’t have made such a rookie mistake; not checking all around you when you enter a room… one day, it’ll turn you from the killer to the killed.”
“Don’t patronize me, ‘Dimitri’,” replied the woman, “I’m older than you by hours.”
Dimitri’s jaw dropped as the neck he was holding rippled, and suddenly, it belonged to a woman with short black hair and a much younger physique. About that of an 18-20 year old, this matched her story. Out of curiosity, he began to copy her DNA, to see what made her tick; he received a second surprise and made a small noise as a red message flashed across his vision:
-Copy Failed; Subject DNA copy protected-
“What the hell? What are you?”
“Surprise, Dimitri,” said the woman, and she span around, drawing a knife, and she plunged the 10-centimetre blade into Dimitri’s stomach. He grunted, and coughed up blood, and he fell backwards, landing on the ground.
“You should know my name. I am Epsilon; Biologic Metals BioSteel DNA Recombinant number 5.”
Epsilon stepped forwards, and ripped the reverse-serrated blade out of Dimitri, who cried out in pain, and coughed up more blood.
“You don’t have long to live, Dimitri. Tell me; did you tell anyone else about your suspicion of me as a spy?”
Dimitri coughed, and looked at Epsilon, who was now standing directly over him, one foot on either side of his waist, leaning down to look at him. Her face was rather odd. It felt like it was missing something, and the eyes… Dimitri’s own mismatched eyes opened up wide as he saw the connection. Her eyes were similar to his; the left one was grey like his, and the other eye had remained Sasha’s green color. That meant a contact lens was in place; and a contact lens would only be in place if, say, the wearer was unable to change the color of that iris…
Dimitri opened his mouth to speak, but coughed up a serious quantity of blood instead.
“I told no-one, Epsilon.” He tried to feel for his pistol without Epsilon noticing; he figured, through his blood-loss induced haze, that it must be somewhere near his right hand. Unfortunately, Epsilon did notice, and stomped on his wrist.
“You think I’m stupid, Dimitri? I might be new at this, but I don’t miss a be-“
*BLA-BOOM*
“Augh!” Epsilon dived to her left, away from the shot which had passed to the right of her. Luckily for her, the shot had narrowly missed her hand, and merely destroyed the gun. However, the momentum that was transferred in that brief moment was sufficient to break her fingers as what was left of the handle and trigger was ripped from her hand. Dimitri lifted his head, to see Silvertie through the remains of the window; on an opposing building, with a very large sniper rifle in his hands. The glass window, which was bulletproof, did what it said on the box where bullets were concerned. But when the bullet was more like a small tank shell… well; let’s just say the manufacturer’s degree ended there.

Dimitri lay there, struggling to breathe, and Epsilon was out of line of sight of the window.
“God… damn… it…” he gasped, still fumbling around. He couldn’t get up.
“Are you looking for this, Dimitri?” Epsilon held up his gun; she had picked it up as she rolled to her left. “Well, I’m sorry, but you can’t have it.”
“You’re… so… dead… Epsilon…” Dimitri coughed up more blood. Gut wounds were a pain.
“On the contrary; I think you’re about to be very dead; not even SyntheDyne medical science can save you now.” Epsilon began carefully moving towards another air vent, not bothering to make no noise this time, as she used her blade to lever the grille out. “Perhaps when you reincarnate, you can have another go,” and with that, Epsilon wiggled into the vent, and disappeared. Dimitri, for his part, could only sit there, watch, and think.
“Reincarnate…? Worth… a shot…”

Epsilon slowly poked her head out of the roof vent hole. No Silvertie; good. She didn’t fancy having her head and shoulders blown off today. She crawled over to the edge, and peeked over the top, slowly. Silvertie was still watching the room, although it looked like he was getting ready to stop sniping, and get in there; did that mean he was almost certain she wasn’t there anymore? She turned, and crawled the other way. On the other side of the apartment from Silvertie, she saw unmanned rooftops; ideal for an escape, but judging by the way Agents on the ground in biohazard suits were moving, they wouldn’t be unmanned for long.  But the point was moot; she didn’t have any way of clearing the gap without a ladder, and she wasn’t high up enough to do it with the grapple-hook. She’d have to travel along the ground as well.
Checking as far as she could, she made sure that nobody was approaching, and, reassuming Sasha Carnstrom’s form, attached the grapple hook to the edge, and abseiled down to the ground.

Silvertie put the gun down. He’d seen that woman peeking over the edge, but it didn’t matter. What did was luring her into a false sense of superiority. Abseiling down from the roof, he met up with a group of 6 Agents, all fully kitted out in matt-black combat biohazard gear.
“Sir, ready to secure the premises,” said the leader, an agent in gear with a gold band around his arm.
“Alright, go in. There is a high chance that the suspect wee want is not on the premises, but stay sharp.” Silvertie drew his 9mm pistol, and chambered a round. Bringing up the rear, he followed the rest of the team into the apartment. When he got in, he found everyone pointing guns at various corners as they searched them, and a large bloodstain on the carpet.
“Where’s Dimitri Sride?” he asked the leader.
“No idea. Wee’ve got one person’s blood here, and enough of it that they shouldn’t be alive. DNA profile matches to Dimitri Sride.”
Silvertie spun around. He saw bloody footprints walking towards the bathroom. Breaking into a run, he shouldered the door open, to find nothing but an open window. He checked the frame; it had a bloody handprint on it, as if the owner were climbing out in a hurry. He looked out the window, and saw a considerable drop onto hard, steel walkway. Anyone who landed was looking at broken leg-parts, at best. He turned to see the agents, huddled in the doorway. They knew something just got complicated. Behind them, he could see a mantelpiece, with an empty rack that looked like it would hold a handgun…
“Tell everyone to check their fire, Dimitri’s out there somewhere.”

Epsilon climbed onto the roof, and looked behind her. She saw nobody giving chase; did they all think she was still in the apartment? Wary of Agents on the street, she continued to run, and came to a gap. She looked at it. It wasn’t that big, but she wasn’t sure if she could make the jump. On the other hand, it would be a huge waste of time to do the whole abseil-climb routine, so she backed up, and leapt.
Athletic Sasha’s body might have been, it was still human, and human bodies aren’t generally designed to jump 5 meters. However, care of Sasha’s boosted muscle; Epsilon made it within ledge-grabbing distance, and did so. Silently screaming in pain at her sprained wrists, she slowly pulled herself up, and rolled over the edge, panting and rubbing her wrists.
Killing people was easy; the hard part was getting away with it. She carefully got up, and began jogging across the roof, as she heard a loud thumping. She turned to see a rooftop access door jolt as someone on the other side hit it again. Agents! She began sprinting and not bothering to judge distance, leapt across the next roof-roof gap which turned out to be about 3.5 meters this time. She landed, just as she heard the door fly open under the force of some impact- presumably a foot.

Epsilon kept running, the agent would no doubt be armed with a firearm, and range would be her friend here. She was good, but not agency-trained; However…
“Hold it right there, Epsilon.”
It was a voice she shouldn’t have been able to hear ever again. She turned, dreading what she’d see. Standing next to the door, which was now hanging loose by one hinge, was a man. He was not wearing an Agent’s suit, but he carried an impractically shiny gun, and had a large dark stain on his gut area.
“How are you still alive, let alone moving, Dimitri?”
Dimitri raised his graduation .45, and pointed it at Epsilon.
“Between you and me, it was you that gave me the idea. Other than that, I’m afraid you’re never going to find out.” Epsilon watched the man, and saw in the half-light cast by two moons that he was not joking around; but then, who would?
“You’re a fool, Dimitri – You’d never hit me at this range, especially with a .45,” Epsilon scoffed. “All you’ll do is waste bullets, and perhaps agitate that stomach wound of yours.”
“I will do neither. My stomach is fine, and I won’t waste ammo.” Dimitri said, levelly.
“Big words, Dimitri; how about this – I stand here, and let you take one shot. You miss, I go free; deal or no deal?”
“You’re on, bitch.” Dimitri adjusted his aim, and fired.

The world stood still for them. The .45 bullet sailed through the air, its shallow parabola trajectory bringing it further away from horizontal with every moment. Epsilon reached for her 'borrowed' .45, gripping the butt of the gun as the bullet cleared half the distance between her and Dimitri. She managed to clear synthetic leather holster as the bullet got 3 meters away. She began to bring the gun up and as she did, the bullet hit her.
“Ah! Fuck!” Epsilon lost control, and the gun went flying out of her hands as she let go. She collapsed, falling over on her right side, and Dimitri lowered his gun, watching her clutch her leg and scream in pain.
That’s a nice shot, Dimitri. You managed to hit her kneecap from what, 20 meters away? Silvertie’s copy congratulated Dimitri dryly. It could access Dimitri’s thoughts, and it knew full well that Dimitri had been aiming for her head; but it would let Dimitri have his glory day, because fluke or no, it really was a nice shot, and nobody need know otherwise. Dimitri, for his part, broke into a sprint to clear the gap separating him and Epsilon. Panting a little, he stood over Epsilon, who was still clutching what was left of her knee. Say what you will about long-range pistol combat, a .45 hollow-point bullet’s going to blow holes in stuff, no matter how far it is away.
“You… bastard…. How are you still alive? Tell me before you kill me!” Epsilon begged, the tears streaming down her face a testament to just how green she was in combat.
“Epsilon,” Dimitri crouched, as Agent grapple-hooks flew up onto various buildings, and Agents took up covering positions, “My dear woman; look at me.” Epsilon obliged, studying her former target’s face. And then she saw it, and her jaw dropped, shattered kneecap temporarily forgotten.
“That’s right, Epsilon. It’s not just chance wee look similar. You’re a recombinant-” Dimitri’s face rippled, and changed hue; when he finished, a black man stood over Epsilon. He changed back. “Just like me.”
“B-b- Beta?” Epsilon stammered, tears now freely flowing. “It’s you, isn’t it, Beta?” She sat up, and her expression changed from one of fear, agony and hate to one of fanatical love or affection.
Dimitri almost dropped his gun. Epsilon was now starting to weird him out, quite thoroughly. She’d reverted to her original form, and was grabbing at his shin, trying to get to his arm. He gave in to instinct, and kicked her off his leg, and stepped back. She collapsed, and looked at him; it was a terrible expression of betrayal from a loved one. She raised a hand, and-
“Fire!”
The sound of dozens of darts flying everywhere filled the air, and on the rooftop, a woman in ill-fitting clothes collapsed in a small pool of blood; as did a man in Agent suit pants, undershirt and a holster, carrying a very shiny pistol.

--- Far away ---

A group of 3 people, seemingly just out of their teens or in early 20’s if anything, watched a small beacon on a map turn from yellow to blue.
“Epsilon’s been tranked good,” Remarked one, a man with a wild hairstyle and sunglasses.
“Delta, you’re a retard. Wee can all see that. You think wee don’t know what that blue dot means?” Another person, a woman, berated Delta. Her expression implied that she was in a near-perpetual state of being pissed off.
“Gamma, take a chill pill. Jeez, you need to loosen up or something.” Delta adjusted his hair which was starting to lose its shape. After a few futile attempts without hair product, he concentrated, and his hair rippled, reforming into the previous shape, but much more solid. “So, Boss-man;  Epsilon’s been capped, what do?”
The last remaining person, a rather burly looking man, stroked a chin, and looked at the map with grey eyes. “Unfortunately, Epsilon was not able to confirm the presence of the lost prototype-“
“Alpha; his name’s Beta, use it. He’s not a thing.” Delta straightened up.
“Fine; Beta has not been confirmed as being on the compound, so wee must go in and do that before wee can move on.”
Gamma raised a hand. “What about that captain guy? Captain Marcus Fronz?”
“That… human?” Alpha waved a hand dismissively, “he gave us a 80% chance that Beta was there six months ago; Six months! That man’s a disgrace to the Biologic Metals Millitia; he lost the prototype, the plasma field blade, and had his arm destroyed. Fronz didn’t even see Beta do any of his tricks! He’s beyond useless.” Alpha punched his hand.
“Tomorrow, wee infiltrate, find Beta, and either recruit him or destroy him.”

Spoiler for Chapter 12 – A Rubber Shit Metaphor and a Duncan:

Dimitri opened one bleary eye. It felt like the morning after a huge party, where everyone had been mixing drugs. He sat up, thumped his head on a low roof for his trouble, and fell back down again, holding his head. It was not doing his headache any favors. Taking more care, he tried again, this time avoiding the sloped roof above his head. Rubbing his eyes, he looked around. A Medical APC – That meant he was still on the scene of the crime, and judging from the way sunlight shone in through the windows, it was early morning. He stood, and winced. He looked down to see his feet were somewhat raw from sprinting across and jumping from and to rooftops. Usually he wore shoes when he did that sort of thing. Casting his gaze around, he espied a roll of gauze; still the number 1 wound binding substance after 3 centuries of use. After a bit of crude bandage-work, he stood on now heavily bound feet. His feet looked like they were made of snow, but at least it didn’t hurt to walk on his tenderized feet.

As he began to walk, he noticed a large glass tube with fluid in it. Looking closer at the glass, he saw through the glare, and saw Epsilon, wearing a basic skintight bodysuit that covered the thighs, neck, biceps, and the torso; floating in the middle of the tank.
“Suspension tank, Dimitri,” said a voice. Dimitri turned to see Silvertie, leaning against the frame of the APC.
“So, what’s going on in the world, Silver?”
“Oh god, don’t get me started.” Silvertie ran a hand down the metal mask of his face, which made it a self-defeating action. “I’ve been up all night running a search, but here’s what wee have so far; first, your incapacitating shot allowed our snipers time to change to knockout darts and take aim. Unfortunately, due to the shape-shifting nature of their targets, they had to shoot everyone on the roof to be safe; including you. As you can see, wee’ve kept the spy under since then.
Secondly, wee searched Sasha Carnstrom’s quarters, and wee found an EM-wave scrambler and encrypted communicator. The scrambler looks like it was built a lot of other electronics; the impostor must have assembled it on-site. And lastly, the real Sasha Carnstrom; so far, none of my Agents scouring the compound have managed to find her. Wee must guess-“ Silvertie stopped, as the sound of running footsteps could be heard, and they were only getting louder. Dimitri and Silvertie looked at the door, as Jonathan showed up, panting hard.
“Silvertie, I found Sasha; her body was stuffed inside a supercomputer on the Databank Level.” The databank level was one of a few areas that only authorized personnel were allowed into, and so Silvertie had asked Jonathan to search it himself.
“That’s quite unfortunate.” Silvertie’s dismissive comment belied how upset he was. He turned to Dimitri, “Well, I suppose that takes care of thing number three then. Do wee have any idea of how our imposter did this?”
“Epsilon is like me,” said Dimitri, waving a hand, “she can copy people. But she’s obviously not very good at it, she kept making behavioral errors. Add that to her incompetence at attempting to assassinate me, and wee have a very green person.”
“That’s another point raised, Dimitri;” stated Silvertie, “How on earth are you still alive? I saw her stab you, and as green as she is, she did it quite thoroughly. You should be dead, and yet, you are perfectly healthy in that regard.”
“I healed myself.”
Jonathan leant on the wall of the APC, “You want to elaborate on that, Dimitri?”
“She gave me the idea by mentioning reincarnation. I figured, couldn’t I just transform my torso into a healthy one? So I tried it; it took longer than a regular transformation, but it got there, and my stomach was just a little sore, but not cut or internally damaged.” Dimitri prodded his stomach through the hole in the undershirt he was still wearing. “And I suppose you know how well I was after that.”
“Quite. Well, I-“ Silvertie was interrupted once more, but this time by his communicator. He pressed the “receive call” button, and waited.

“Boss!” It was Hal, and he sounded panicked. “Wee have a huuuuge problem! Like, really huge!”
“Calm down, Hal. What’s happening? Silvertie stood quickly, and began to walk out of the APC, Jonathan standing aside to let him pass, and Dimitri throwing on a Suit Jacket over his bloodstained rags.
“Wee got a lot of reports of violated space-time inside the confines of the complex! It must be Biologic Metals!”
“Wait, what?” Jonathan boggled; he could hear Hal as Silvertie didn’t have it pressed to his ear completely on purpose.
“Space-time is being interfered with on a really big scale, but only on our compound! Wee’re shutting down crucial systems and trying to get defensive systems up but it’s useless! The violations are being induced by an off-site system!”
“Hal, do wee have any intel regarding the problems wee might face with this?”
“No, it’s right out of the blue, this! None of our taps have picked any of this up before!” Hal was steadily getting more and more hysterical, clearly out of his league.
“Does Doctor B have any ideas about this?”
“Haven’t been able to get him on the line; Every other division must be calling him too!”
“Force a connection; you’re Int-Sec. You can override everything.”
“Okay, I’ll give it a-“ Hal’s voice was lost to static, and Silvertie held the phone away from his head, looking at it in disbelief… or what passed for that with Silvertie and his immobile metal mask.

“Oh lawdy; Look at that.” Dimitri looked at the skyline, pointing. Silvertie and Jonathan followed suit. The skyline was shimmering as if the whole sky were covered by a force-field, and then it… solidified, for want of a better word, and it was if the sky was made of glass… incredibly flawed, cracked glass.
“Reality is bending. If wee don’t end this soon, who knows what would happen,” said Silvertie, stating the obvious.
As the trio looked out at the environment, they saw smaller distortions, rents in thin air that briefly revealed glimpses of unreal landscapes and sometimes darkness, and then collapsed on themselves, vanishing completely.
“I think wee’d better move; this location doesn’t seem too safe,” suggested Jonathan, picking up a biohazard combat suit.
“Excellent plan; wee should also try and get to Doctor B. If anyone knows how to stop this, it’s him.” Silvertie quickly threw on as much of the hermetically sealed suit as he could over his existing one. Dimitri, for his part, also pulled a spare on, but had no issues with too many layers of clothing. When they were done, Silvertie adjusted his helmet, and then placed his hat on top; earning him odd looks from the Srides.
“It’s my hat.”

5 Minutes later, they were jogging quickly through the outskirts of the residential area, with a small retinue of Agents following them. The Agents, who had been combing various sites for Sasha, now known to be a corpse; and when the distortions and rifts showed up, they had hunkered down in plain sight, and waited for help. They quickly got courage back when they realized that they’d be running behind three of the best agents in the whole complex.
Some of them were having a good time of it; interesting things to look at, and people to chat to them about, and nobody actively trying to kill them. Others, namely the people carrying large, awkward pieces of forensic equipment, or those who had to listen, were now running through a micro-hell.
“Where are wee headed, anyway?” asked one sufferer, of Dimitri.
“The R&D department; Doctor B’s got so much causality-violating equipment experiments on record, they made the area more stable than usual, wee hope!”
“What, wee’re going to R&D to be safe? You’re nuts, you know that?”
“Possibly… but my dad and Silvertie say it’s the best plan wee’ve got so far.”
The Agent adjusted a tripod, his designated cargo, and made a noise like a snort. “What a load of bullchocolate, you’re telling me that the two best Agents on this planet decided to – ohchocolate” The Agent’s accusation was cut very short as a large rift opened quite fast directly in front of the running group. Displaying incredible reflexes, the two leading Agents stopped just short of jogging through the portal, and had the strength to withstand the inevitable people-stacking that occurred behind them.
Jonathan watched as the portal a bare 10 centimeters away from his face closed, leaving no trace.
“That was a close one,” he said in a voice which indicated he’d been holding his breath, cautiously waving a hand through the space in front of him.

The trip to the R&D department passed without incident to the party, although they were witness to how dangerous the rifts were. An APC driving along not too far from them failed to stop in time to avoid a rift not dissimilar to the one that the party did avoid. The APC skidded into the rift, and then… broke. As it passed through, the APC jerked, shuddered, appeared to be a lot of different objects at once; and then when it cleared the rift, apparently receiving no damage, everyone was proven wrong and surprised when it flashed, and turned into an equal mass of what appeared to be wood. With what seemed like its job done, the rift closed.
The Agents and their retinue looked at the smoking pile of wood now sitting in the middle of a city, on a planet which never even had wood-analogues before.
“What. The. Fuck.” Stated an Agent carrying a large gun which was like a SMG, but manlier. He walked over to the pile, and prodded it with the barrel of his gun, eliciting a dense *thunk* *thunk* noise as he did so. Another Agent with a device that looked like a hand-held camera walked over, and looked at the wood through it. After a moment’s decision, they announced their findings.
“It’s redwood, from earth.” Silence greeted the statement.
“What.” Jonathan broke the silence, “I’m fairly sure nobody got Redwood to grow on some other planet, and earth’s gone.”
“Well, if that’s really Redwood… wee’re now looking at the last 12 tons of Redwood left in the galaxy,” said the analyst. Everyone thought about the wood; more specifically, how rich they would be if they found a buyer for one ton of it; right up until Silvertie cleared his throat loudly.
“In case you daydreamers forgot, wee’ve got places to be, and rifts to avoid.” To punctuate his statement, a whole building rippled, and was eaten by a rift at its center. Everyone got the message, and began running.

The party gathered in the R&D Foyer, which, even though it was a foyer, bore marks that said “something went wrong here”. With all the random Agents they’d picked up deciding to make themselves comfortable in the foyer and other administrative areas, Silvertie, Dimitri and Jonathan made their way into the labs. Carefully entering in case the recent spatial turmoil set some experiment off, they found Doctor B sitting next to a post-like machine radiating a pleasant green glow, and working on one that looked similar. He looked up as the trio entered, and relief etched itself all over his face.
“Oh thank god, you’re alive. I was worrying I’d have no pieces to play in stopping this thing.” He stood up, and shut the hatch on the device.
“Wee’re alive; what’s going down?” Dimitri asked, removing his helmet.
“Going down? Everything! Look.” Doctor B bustled over to a large angle-poise monitor, and swiveled it to face them. It looked like a live feed from a camera, which was pointing at the Agency Tower. He picked up a microphone, and spoke into it. “Johannes, you read me?”
“Yes doctor,” responded Johannes in a near flat monotone through a desktop speaker.
“No system malfunctions?”
“No doctor.”
“Could you please look at the anomaly?”
“Yes doctor.” The camera’s view shifted, bobbed back and forth a bit, and then looked up. About 400 meters above the camera was one of the biggest distortions, and while no rift was forming, it was certainly a huge distortion, and looked like a giant globe of ripple-covered water.
“Is that the source of all this spoon?” asked Jonathan.
“Mhmm,” responded the Doctor. “Johannes, please activate the distortion filter.”
“Filter activating.” The view flickered, a click was heard through the speaker, and the view suddenly turned into a rainbow-hued one, not unlike a view through a thermal filter. Doctor B turned to the three Agents.
“This is the distortion filter. It measures how heavily an object or anomaly impinges on space. I’m sure you’ve all heard of the rubber-shit and ball weight metaphor.”
A few grunts and ‘Mhruhm’ greeted this statement.
“Oh, alright,” exclaimed Doctor B, “I’ll be brief. Space is the rubber shit, and its corners are pinned down to time; and objects sit on it. The weight of the ball sitting on the ‘shit’ depends on how much it messes with space. Most objects are nothing more than polystyrene balls. But this anomaly-” he pointed at the screen “-Is like a massive 20-Kilogram weight on the surface of reality. Just being here’s going to fudge with stuff. Things will move to it; it produces gravity; it is like a little brother to a black hole.”
“Okay… I think wee get the idea, what’s that thing for?” Silvertie pointed at the green-glowing post thing. On closer inspection, it was probably more like a spear, only the tip was no more than a glass-walled, rounded-edge cylinder chamber from which the glow was emitting.
“That’s the anti-distortion scepter.” Doctor B picked up the non-functional one, and threw it to Silvertie. “That thing is like an anti-weight on the shit of reality, rather than press down, it presses up, and can counter the effects of a weight. Just leave it in an area, and everything inside its effect range will be subjected to a negative weight on the rubber shit, as it were.”
“And the idea is to put this next to that source?”
“Quite, although I warn you; while it sounds simple, it no doubt has defenses against this sort of thing, and that scepter has a maximum output. If the distortion power surpasses the stabilizing power of the scepter, you’ll be hit with whatever’s left over from the distortion after it’s been stabilized; and I trust you’ve seen examples of what happens to things that get hit by rifts.”
“Yeah; APC into 12 tons of Redwood.”
“Redwood, huh? I saw an Agent running around outside get hit; he turned into slices of watermelon.”
“That sounds pretty brutal,” chipped in Dimitri.
“No, I mean he literally got turned into a platter of watermelon slices. I have no idea why or how, but I retrieved it, and put him over th-” Doctor B pointed over at a desk, and faltered as he saw Jonathan standing there, munching on a piece of watermelon, the plate next to him covered with rinds and seeds.
“What?” Jonathan asked, as they stared at him.
“Well,” Doctor B said, abandoning the train of thought, “he WAS over there. Anyway, that scepter will only cancel the distortions, it won’t actually stop or destroy the source; and its battery powered for about 3 minutes.”
“So, can’t wee just shoot the distortion?” asked Jonathan, after spitting out a bunch of seeds onto the plate.
“No, Jonathan. Anything that gets close tends to get polymorphed, that’s what wee call it when something hits a rift and is transformed.”
“Hmm. What if the scepter was near the distortion when wee shot at it?”
“Then it might hit, assuming you can hit a target from that far away, and you have a way of keeping the scepter next to it long enough.”
“What if wee put the scepter on an aero-drone or something, have it hover next to the distortion?” Jonathan persisted, doggedly pursuing the destructive options.
“Johannes; play video file 3, if you please.”
“Yes doctor.” The camera’s view was changed to that of a pre-recorded segment.

In the video, Johannes (or his camera, anyway) watched an aero-drone fly up to investigate the anomaly. Audio was set to the radio channels at the time.
“Watch where you’re flying that! If it touches the anomaly…”
“Shut up, I got it. I’ll fly it under the anomaly, that way I can’t crash into it unless I fly too high.”
The drone wobbled and jerked as if under heavy turbulence, and flew under the anomaly, where it hovered.
“See, perfectly fine.”
The second voice was proven wrong very quickly; the drone bucked and shuddered as if it were travelling through a very violent storm, and the camera panned to watch the drone plummet to earth burning, bits of propeller following it.
“What the spoon!? How in the name of hell did that happen?”

The video stopped, and the trio turned back to the Doctor, seeking explanation.
“It seems that the anomaly can use it’s distortions to mangle the air currents around and in it. As you saw, it can also wield some particularly violent currents; that drone had its propellers and main engine obliterated by a Mach-2 current of air, not generally something wee find on this planet, if any.”
“Ouch. Well, I suppose wee will work something out on our way there,” Silvertie said, drawing his gun, and giving it a quick field clean.
“You’re not serious about this, are you? How are wee going to find an air vehicle which can take that kind of poo poo?” Jonathan waved his hands around in emphasis.
“Well, now that you mention it…” Doctor B held his chin, deep in thought.
“You’re kidding me. You have a flying vehicle capable of withstanding such punishment?”
“If I remember correctly…” Doctor B closed his eyes, retracing his memories, “In the storage warehouses on the south side of the complex, there’s a R&D Vault for everything too big to fit in the one here; mostly vehicles. If you poke around in there, you should find something that looks like a giant hollow glass prism... I never tested it against Mach-2 wind spears, but it’s got basic hover tech, and I’ve shot it with a solid tank shell, it didn’t falter; No weapons, but sturdy as heck; Never mass-produced because it was so expensive to make and had limited applications.”
“That sounds like the business. I think wee should get going while the going’s good.” Silvertie put his gun away.
“Hold it; you’ll need access codes, and someone to find the vehicle for you.”
“You’re not coming with us, surely?”
“Of course not!” Doctor B ‘harumph’ed and affected an air of disdain, “I’m over 60! I’m far too old for such gallivanting around! But I know someone who would fit this job perfectly…” The doctor walked over to a giant locker built into the wall, and punched in a quick 7-digit number. The metal-slatted door rolled up, to reveal what looked like a big, 6’5” tall robot.

“It looks like a big, 6’5” tall robot,” observed Dimitri.
“That’s because he is. Everyone, meet your new guide, Duncan.”
“…Hello Duncan?” Jonathan volunteered.
“GREETINGS TO YOU, AGENT,” boomed the big robot, stepping out of the darkish room, and revealing his build. The robot looked like a man wearing a combat biohazard suit and helmet, although clearly the helmet was not supposed to be removed, and he sported a larger-than-normal power pack, presumably to power him, too. “HOW MAY I ASSIST YOU?”
“Duncan’s a little enthusiastic, I missed a decimal point when inputting his parameters, and once an AI is initialized, the parameters cannot be altered, unfortunately;” Doctor B turned to the robot. “Duncan, listen to me.”
“DADDY!” The robot turned, recognized his creator, and quick as a blink, grabbed Doctor B in a hug which, while it meant to convey love and affection (which it did in spades, to be honest) it also conveyed clicked vertebrae and similar back problems. “I LOVE DADDY!”
“Daddy feels your love Duncan let go of me please” Doctor B quickly commanded, all in what was left of his breath after having it squashed out of him by the robotic-love.
“Are you sure you only missed ONE decimal point there, Doc?” Jonathan chuckled.
“Okay, maybe I missed a few,” admitted the doctor, clicking his back once Duncan let go, and checking for broken ribs. “Duncan; I have a job for you-”
“ANYTHING FOR DADDY!”
“-yes, yes, I can see that- NO I DON’T NEED A HUG THANK YOU –Look, Duncan. Take these three men to the experiment warehouse on the south side; help them find the Incredible Flying Prism. It’s very important.”
“YES DADDY ANYTHING FOR YOU!” The robot danced in what can only be described as pure joy at being given an important job by ‘Daddy’. “WHAT IS EVERYONE WAITING FOR, LET’S GO!” The robot began to skip its way out of the lab, not noticing that nobody was following his lead. The Agents watched it go, dumbstruck.
“And wee don’t have robots because of things like…” began Dimitri,
“…like that, yes.” Doctor B finished, an embarrassed expression on his face.
“Can I kill that thing when wee’re done?” Jonathan whined, dreading having to put up with that aggressively cheerful monstrosity.
“You can’t just kill stuff… make it an ‘accident’, Jonathan.” Silvertie’s posture was slack, as he was dumbstruck by just how bizarrely enthusiastic the robot was. They flinched collectively when it poked its head back around the corner rapidly, and its visor stared at them.
“COME ON THEN, AGENTS! WEE HAVE A JOB TO DO FOR DADDY!”

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(This post was last modified: 28/12/2009 03:44 AM by Silvertie.)
16/11/2009 01:24 AM
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Silvertie
Older, less cringe, still mad.
Fractal Insanity

Posts: 1,016.3688
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RE: The Hybrid
I've edited this post to become something of an author's commentary.

Spoiler for Preamble - 15.11.2009:
Hello all; this is a story. A story of violence and badassery. A story of a future society. There are many stories like it, but this one is Mine.
Time permitting, I'll update approximately every weekend.
Since this I'm also releasing this on a literature-dedicated *chan, They're about 6 chapters in, so I'll throw you guys the first 6 chapters so nobody can plot spoil, lol.
With no further ado, let's get this saga on the road.

I present to you; The Hybrid.


Spoiler for Commentary - Chapter 6 - 21.11.09:
Well, at this point in time, wee are now half-way through what I've written so far. (I have chapters already completed to act as an BFC (eXx1l3d From Computer), Writer's Block, or LAS (Lazy Author Syndrome) buffer.)
The plot is just starting to get unspooled, and I estimate total length to be roughly 18-20 chapters long. Maybe more, maybe less if I can't drag out the tale. And the real suspense probably won't even get here until chapter 16. D:

As usual, I beg your opinions.


Spoiler for Why authors proof-read - 28.11.2009:
Now I know. As I posted today's chapter, I discovered flaws in it. Not just that, but I also found temporal mistakes and such; while I won't go and fix them now that they're all up, if I ever make a complete repost of the story, start to end, the errors will be fixed.

I suppose this will teach me to wait until just before I hit the "post reply" button before proof-skim-reading.

"Books! I've read several on the subject!"
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Silvertie: The Blog | A Door In Nowhere: The Webcomic
(This post was last modified: 27/11/2009 04:26 AM by Silvertie.)
16/11/2009 01:27 AM
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Post: #3
RE: The Hybrid
Silvertie Wrote:This is the only compulsory thing you have to read in this post. I've placed any comments I'll make, and all chapters inside spoilers for two reasons.
1) Easier "bookmarking" of chapters. Just unspoil the chapter you want to read, no inadvertant reading of a character dying in the chapter after the epic fight you're reading.
2) If you're just visiting to drop a comment, you don't have to scroll through my entire story to quote relevant posts.

another thing; DON'T QUOTE THIS POST. It's much larger than it looks; 6 chapters is no lightweight.
Read on, citizen.
Spoiler for Comments from the Author:
Hello all; this is a story. A story of violence and badassery. A story of a future society. There are many stories like it, but this one is Mine.
Time permitting, I'll update approximately every weekend.
Since this I'm also releasing this on a literature-dedicated *chan, They're about 6 chapters in, so I'll throw you guys the first 6 chapters so nobody can plot spoil, lol.
With no further ado, let's get this saga on the road.

I present to you; The Hybrid.

Spoiler for Prelude:
It is the 24th century. The Human Empire has expanded over 120 solar systems with terra-compatible planets, and a further 30 solar systems rich in raw materials like metals. In addition to this, the Empire has a presence on a further 50 solar systems of both types.

It all began back in the 21st century; at about approximately 2056, perhaps earlier. During that time, World War 3 was in progress, so a lot of specifics are unknown; but what is evident, is that when the dust settled in 2058, another army had risen, and beaten all the other fighting nations. That army called itself “SyntheDyne Corporation”. Under the guise of enforcing peace, it systematically crushed each nation’s military, one by one. Over time, the Corporation grew to be an unrivalled global superpower, a megalithic jack-of-all-trades. And then, it did something unexpected. It stopped, and extended the hand of aid to every nation.
With each nation’s defenses in tatters, and governments in disarray, they had no choice but to accept the aid. Being bankrolled by SDC, with its seemingly endless resources and diverse production range, the world rebuilt itself anew; and all the time, nobody saw the whole picture. People saw parts, like evidence of major candidates on the take from SDC, to covert weapons deals which violated the weapons laws that SDC initially put into place; but nobody ever shared any of it, for fear of death.
SDC had an iron grip on the world, and nobody knew.

In 2078, exactly 25 years after “The Shuffle”, as people called it; SDC worked its contacts and set the Human race on the path to the stars. Supplying near-For the loss spaceship technology to each nation, it forced the spread of the human race across many star systems. Over the next 50 years, great advances had been made in terms of wealth and prosperity. In 2042, the Human race, now identified as the Human Empire; made first contact with an alien race. The aliens were similar in planet requirement, and inhabited 5 such planets in the star system. Without hesitation, SDC pulled the levers and initiated the first human-related, inter-species war.

Using the weapons technology developed over the last dozen years, SDC armed the human race, and manipulated them to a seemingly easy victory. Comfortable in their victory, the Human Empire relaxed its guard, just as a fleet of the aliens recently vanquished unleashed a crippling blow- they induced a supernova in the Sol system, home of Earth. The empire was quick to react, destroying the offending fleet, but it was too late. Earth was gone.

Over the next century, the empire expanded and exterminated without prompting from SDC. Loss of Earth meant there was nowhere to go but outwards. Over this time, 12 sentient alien species were exterminated in warfare, 4 of which had high technology. Assimilating the technology of the vanquished, SyntheDyne moved into more and more far-flung areas of science.

However, peace did not last. In 2297, unsatisfied with the current leadership of the SDC, the Madrigaar system, base of all the science related to a race which used organic steel; rebelled. It attempted to launch a coup d’état, under the name of Biologic Metals. Using a combination of the organic steel dubbed “BioSteel”, and cutting-edge SyntheDyne robotics, they produced an army which was small, but tough enough to rival the raw numbers of the SyntheDyne army; the BioMech. This army took the entire system and its neighbors by surprise; and all fell within 3 years. The Empire civil war still rages on to this day.

This tale begins in 2310, 13 years after the start of the rebellion, on the planet Cordia, in the Harlan system; a contested system of no tactical value. As such, neither side is waging a major campaign against the other here.

Spoiler for Chapter 1 - The Boy:
--- A secret lab, exact location unknown, Planet Cordia, Harlan System March 15, 2310 ---

A scientist stood in front of a glowing, glass-fronted suspension tube filled with fluid, watching stuff bubble and bloop. The rest of the lab was in darkness.
*blip blip*
He turned, and paced to a desk, where a phone was making a distinctive *blip* noise and flashing; he had a caller.
“Is this Samson’s Pizza Deli?” spoke the phone.  It was a code phrase.
“Sure, can I take your order?” replied the scientist. The response indicated that the line was secure and free of taps.
“Samson. Is prototype 2 ready?” asked the phone. The tone was no longer jovial. “I hope for your sake it is.”
“Yeah, it’s done, H,” Samson replied, unfazed by the very thinly veiled threat. “He’s in a sleep state and will be until he leaves the packaging.”
“Good. Have it sent over with priority 3 security ASAP.” Priority 3 meant highest possible levels of covert security, so as to not raise suspicion. Priority 2 was full-blown military convoy, whereas Priority 1 was a straight raze and burn of any potential obstacles.
“Yes sir,” said Samson, slapping a button on the desk marked “prepare subject”. “You want it delivered to Biologic Metals HQ?”
“Shut up moron!” replied H, very quickly. “SyntheDyne might have their ears to the ground on this one.”
“Sorry sir,” apologized Samson. The glass tube’s light was extinguished, as a metal cylinder descended around it.
“You’d better be. Have it sent to Cell 5. They’ll deal with it. Got it?”
“I got it-” the line shut off with a click. Samson put the phone down, and turned to look at the tube, its light now un-obstructed, and sporting a brand new frame to keep it functioning in transit.
“I wonder what they have in store for you…” he walked forward, and after a bit of thought, slapped a sticker on the tube’s casing.
‘Hybrid Prototype 2’


--- Surveillance van, not too far away ---

“Sarge,” a man in black body armor motioned for another man in armor to come over to his laptop. “Wee got him. The prototype is being transferred ASAP, apparently.”
“Really? Okay, everyone,” ‘Sarge’ clapped his hands. “Wee’re a ghost’s ghost in 5! Let’s go! Wilkins!” He pointed at the man with the laptop. “Get the SDA on the line, wee’ll need an operative.”


--- Intersection, Downtown, City 7, Planet Cordia, Harlan System ---

The teams were in place. The target was a shipping container truck coming this way. Two teams of SyntheDyne Tactical trooper specialists were concealed in vans either side of a 4-way intersection.  The specialist troopers worked in pairs, operating mission-specific heavy weapons. In this case, it was some SD8 rocket launchers. Further along the truck’s intended route, two APCs were parked. Intended as a decoy by way of obvious trap, they were still a serious part of the operation, carrying two full complements of SDT between them, and cannons. SDT were the elite of pure human infantry, and the SyntheDyne Corporation had trillions on their payroll across dozens of worlds. And to complete the trap, a single, nondescript black car on the only uncovered side of the intersection. Ironically, it was the most lethal unit of the lot- a SyntheDyne Agent, the most deadly of the Corporation’s human warriors.

Inside the car, Agent Jonathan Sride scratched his short haircut. The part-Russian stood at about 6’5”, aged 35 years old. He had his feet on the dashboard, and was idly spinning his handgun, a .45 Semi-automatic SP5 on the end of his finger, and watching pedestrians stroll past, looking for any hot ladies. His job was to tell everyone the truck was coming, and then retrieve the objective. So simple, he wasn’t going to walk out of this with anything less than a perfect rating, it was that simple. Nobody knew exactly what this “prototype” was, but whatever it was, it must be important. His money was on it being some sort of combat armor. He put the feet down as the truck in question moved past.
“Target passed the lookout.” Sride muttered into his lapel microphone.
“Roger that Sride.” The radio cut out, and Jonathan pulled himself out of the car. All pedestrians had vanished by now, that sense of something big about to go down more deterring than a fat naked man dancing on a pole.

The truck approached the intersection. Sensing something amiss, the driver sped up… as predicted, and the SyntheDyne team made their move. Firstly, the turrets on the APCs fired CS2 shells. CS2 shells aren’t so much about dealing damage as they are about simply throwing targets around. Since the APC shells were approaching from the front, the force they exerted brought the vehicle to a standstill in a split second. The second part was performed by the SP8 teams. In synchronization, they both fired their rockets. The effect of the two simultaneous rocket impacts on the engine was impressive, completely destroying the engine and seats in the cockpit. Needless to say, the henchman driving the truck was pasted.

Closing in on the now completely immobilized and demolished truck, the SDT troopers encircled it, and began to move towards the container on the back end of the truck. Jonathan was still a distance away, when he realized that this was too easy. He began to sprint.
“Get back! It’s a trap!” he shouted, as his boosted muscles propelled him towards the SDT men, who didn’t hear him. He stopped and dived for cover behind a mailbox abruptly as he saw a sliding door on the container move to the side to reveal…
“It’s a BioMech! Get d- ark” shouted one SDT trooper as he was gunned down by the “BioMech” in question.

BioMechs were the signature unit of the rebel corporation/division, Biologic Metals, and made from Bio-Steel. Just like human flesh, except steel, Bio-Steel could grow, heal and even get stronger; having a robot army built from the stuff was a huge tactical advantage, and offset SyntheDyne Corporation’s natural advantage of manpower and advanced technology.

Capable of wielding any gun or weapon intended for human hands or use, today’s BioMech was carrying a minigun, the sort that you find securely mounted on helicopters; and using it to great effect, chopping SDT in half, and generally making holes in stuff. Jonathan looked at his .45 pistol. After a judgment call, he drew a second, identical pistol. SyntheDyne Agents, as a rule of thumb, never used anything more powerful than a pistol; usually because the pistol was good enough for them. With their nanonic muscle supplements and Neural Augmentation Systems, as well as a lot of natural talent with firearms, one Agent with a pistol could defeat odds as unfavorable as 10:1. Even so, one BioMech with a minigun was still a considerable challenge.

Jonathan hurdled the mailbox, dual pistols up and firing with unnerving accuracy on the BioMech’s head, which, like regular humans, was where the “brain” or rather, CPU, was stored. However, the .45 rounds merely bounced or deflected off the shiny dome of the BioMech. Evidently, this one had extra armoring on the skullcap. As the BioMech brought the gun to bear on Jonathan, he gave up on the headshot, and changed target to the BioMech’s kneecaps. If a lesser man tried it, it would have been suicide. For an Agent, it was a legitimate tactic.
Since the tactic was so suicidal, no designer considered such an avenue of attack, and no additional plating had been installed on the knees; the result being that the knee joints were trashed, and the BioMech began to collapse. The BioMech, computing vectors like mad, began to move its arms to bear on the now airborne Jonathan. It didn’t get there. The next two .45s from Jonathan decimated the shoulder joints, crippling the BioMech. Jonathan landed on the deck of the truck’s trailer, next to the still struggling BioMech.
“Faster, stronger, better my donkey.” He muttered, putting the gun barrel to the underside of the BioMech’s chin, and firing. This time, the bullet had no problems penetrating the CPU, and the robot died. Jonathan checked the status of the SDT. Of all the men who had been in firing lines, about 90% were dead, and 8% were about to die. Jonathan turned to face the interior of the container, and entered.

He looked around; nothing but a big, glass tube. He frowned. He wiped the condensation off the glass, and looked through.
“A boy?” Jonathan cocked an eyebrow. The boy inside the tube had breathing apparatus on his face, and was wearing a white/light blue one-piece suit. Jonathan put a hand to his ear, activating his Neuro-radio. Different from the lapel microphone, it established a direct satellite link to HQ; not local wireless radios.
“HQ, you read?”
“Wee read you Sride. This better be good.”
“It is. The prototype isn’t here. All I see is a boy in a suspension tube.”
“What? Is it a setup? Wait, why would they do this with the boy? I know it seems crazy, but this must be the “prototype 2” they were talking about.”
“That’s nuts.”
“Wee don’t care, Sride. Get that thing out of the truck, wee want it.”
“Fine, Sride out.” Jonathan lowered his hand, and examined the tube. It was big and heavy. No chance of moving it, then. He looked at a keypad. The keypad would make things easy, obviously draining the suspension fluid, and opening the glass front. Jonathan drummed a random number on it, seeing:

******
Invalid pass code, try again

“Horse dicks.” Jonathan pulled a code-cracker out of his pocket. Using something just above brute force decryption, it found passwords. 5 characters meant a lot of combinations, and he might be a while.

--- Biologic Metals control room, Biologic Metals outpost, Cordia ---

A computer jockey raised his hand. “Sir, contact lost with the parcel’s courier.”
“What?! Impossible!” A fat man got up from his central computer, and waddled over.
“I’m getting reports of gunfire from our scouts, suspect SDC interference.”
“Spoon! Wee can’t allow the subject to fall into their hands! Um…”
“Activate the bomb.” A man in dark spoke up. He was wearing what appeared to be a suit of sleek, close-fitting combat armor. “Do it. Now.”
The computer jockey swallowed nervously. “Bomb activated. Detonation in 60 seconds…”


--- The intersection ---

*Beep… Beep… Beep…*
“What’s that?” Jonathan stood up. The code cracker toiled away. 2 out of 6 characters.
*Beep… Beep… Beep…*
There it was again; a beeping. Jonathan walked around the tube to find… a pulsing light winking at him. It was attached to a metal box which was stuck in a large brick of putty-like substance… SDEX-10, spoon was powerful enough to vaporize a car with a Lego brick-sized piece, this was more like a house-brick of the stuff.
“OH Spoon. EVERYONE, GET THE FUCK OUT OF HERE!” The SDT examining the truck heard him, and quickly passed the message on. When an Agent told you to get the fudge out, you got the fudge out, no questions. Jonathan peered at the bomb- it was a nightmare. No indication of how long until detonation; all the wiring in a smooth, one-piece box; no idea if there was proximity radar, so he couldn’t get close to have a poke around. In addition to that, his bomb-defusal skills were rusty like a shipwreck. He ran to the code-cracker. Only 3 of 6 digits? Fuck it, Jonathan drew his gun, and took aim at a part of the glass that made a line of fire nowhere near the boy.
*BLAM* *schwitt*
He gaped. The bullet cracked the glass, no more: bullet proof. Plan three then; the mighty foot. He raised his leg, and gave the glass a good stomp.
*SMASH!*
The glass shattered around his foot, making a hole which widened as the suspension fluid flowed out. Reaching through, past the shards, he grabbed the boy, disconnected all the not-boy, and pulled him out. Carrying the boy in a fire-fighter’s lift, he ran like hell, away from the truck, to a corner of the intersection. There was a large metal statue standing there. It was out of range, and it should stop any shrapnel. Sprinting hard, he was thankful that it was a boy and not a man; a man would have slowed him to a jog, at best. He was almost to the statue, when…
*BA-BOOM*
The ground illuminated. New shadows were cast. Jonathan threw the boy towards the ground behind the statue. If he’d timed it right, or was lucky, the boy would bounce and roll past it; but he would be behind the statue for the time it took for the shrapnel to hit their various targets.
But he was not so fortunate; he was still 5 meters from the statue. A small, but in this case, lethal, distance; his only hope was to pray that no shrapnel hit him. He dived towards the statue after the boy, turning his head to look at the explosion. In that respect, he was a bit fortunate- he saw the jagged blade of metal flying towards his face. Contorting wildly, he twisted his neck… and an unbelievable pain seared across the right side of his face.
He landed heavily, sliding to a halt as the rest of the shrapnel buried itself in everything except him and the boy, who had slid just past the statue. Jonathan looked up at the boy, who was ironically in the same posture as him, but mirrored. He saw the boy’s face. It was odd, almost like something was missing. He reached out. The boy looked so close. His heart fell when he grabbed thin air; it fell even further when he realized why. He touched his right cheekbone and eye gingerly, and held the hand to his left eye. Red with blood and with a clear goop mixed in. He realized that the clear goop was vitreous from his right eye. He’d be lucky to ever see out of that eye again. His arm went limp as he suddenly became tired. Breathing was so hard…. he’d just have a little sleep… just… a… quick…

Spoiler for Chapter 2 - Surrogate Father:
--- SyntheDyne Agency HQ Complex, Cordian outpost, Medical Bay 5   ---

Jonathan groaned. Drinking on the night before a morning where he had to get up early? What the hell was he thinking? He kept his eyes shut. He didn’t want to get up. But then, he had to.
“Whurugrh… my head feels like a… a… eggplant.” He sat up, and heard a lot of footsteps running across linoleum flooring, and voices. He suddenly became alert.
“Whoa! He’s awake!”
“Jonathan! Stop!”
“Don’t open-“
He tried to open his eyes. He was rewarded with one eye opening successfully, and the other… ripping.
“GHARRARGH!” Jonathan screamed. He remembered now. The explosion, the boy, the shrapnel; he remembered it all. The doctors stood around his bed, hands out ready to do stuff, but not sure where to begin.
“Give me a mirror.”
“Uh, Agent Sride, you don’t want that.” One of the younger-looking doctors cautioned. “You’re not exactly a picture of health right now.”
“MIRROR.”
“Give the man the mirror already. You can’t change an Agent’s mind about spoon without evidence.” An older doctor gestured at Jonathan. “He won’t believe you until he sees it with his own eye.”
Jonathan got his mirror. He prepared himself, and looked.
His face was a nightmare. A huge, deep gash with a chocolateload of stitches meandered its way across the left side of his face, crossing the cheekbone and eyebrow, and going to just above the eyebrow. And it wasn’t a contoured one, either; some areas seemed deeper than others. The shrapnel had carved a straight line through his face, regardless of bone. He was lucky his brain didn’t get in the way, but his eye obviously did. His eyelid was in tatters, thanks to his reckless eye-opening; stitches still attached to one or the other. His eye was even worse; it was stitched and refilled with vitreous again, but the iris was milk white, and so was the pupil. Otherwise, it showed no marks apart from that of the gash. He most certainly wouldn’t be seeing through that again.
“Told you.” The young doctor said, meekly.
“Where’s the director?”
“Med bay three, with the –MHMMp” The young doctor was stifled by the third doctor, who grimaced in apology.
“Sorry, dude.” The third doctor turned to Jonathan. “Doctors’ orders are to stay in bed, and rest. You face got really messed up by that blast; I’m surprised you didn’t take any other hits. Anyway, you- now cut that out. You keep frowning like that, and you’ll burst the stitches.” The doctor put on a disapproving face. Jonathan continued the frown. The two stared each other down for several seconds, and then the doctor gave way.
“Oh, alright; but Take It Easy, you hear me?”
“I hear and obey, doc.” Jonathan got up, and ripping the IVs out of his arm, walked over to the exit.

--- Med-bay 3, SyntheDyne Agency HQ Complex ---

The Director of the SyntheDyne Agency on Cordia, Alphonse Eleric, stood with a small crowd of Agents, and looked at the boy on the hospital bed, illuminated by the only source of light in the ward, creating an island of light upon which the bed lay. Alphonse, “Al” to friends and “Director Eleric” to subordinates and enemies, he was also of Russian descent from long ago, and sported a goatee which indicated there might be a little bit of Czech in him. Other than that, he had a rather slender frame; not bony, but not too rounded either.
Al considered the events of the last several hours. So much fuss over a single boy. Why was he so important? What made him so dangerous, BM would rather destroy him than let him fall into SDC’s hands?
“Excuse me, Director? Here are the results of the full-spectrum scans.” A scientist was holding a piece of paper out to him. Al looked at it. Broadly speaking, the boy was “normal”, i.e. no physical deformities or similar. His eye color was unusual, and his complexion unnaturally pale; but nothing too radical.
On the other hand, the boy’s DNA… that’s where it got spicy.
“You sure these readings are right?”
“Of course, I didn’t believe it at first either.” The director continued to read, when the door opened, to reveal a security guard.
“I thought I said no inter-“
“Sorry sir,” apologized the guard, “but I’m just escorting Agent Sride.”
Sride walked in, surgical gown flapping in his draft. The guard winced as he saw something he shouldn’t have, and shut the door.
“Agent Sride, aren’t you scheduled for a bit of bed-rest?” enquired Alphonse, “And why would you need a regular guard to guide you?”
“Well, I don’t need the bed rest. Doctor Me says I’ll be fine,” explained Jonathan, “and I don’t need that guard so much as I need his eye,” Jonathan pointed at his right eye, “as you can see, mine is pretty much done.”
“Any man with half an e- oh; never mind.” The director coughed, he almost threw salt in the wound there. “Here, I trust you can still read?” he held out the paper he’d been reading to Jonathan. Jonathan went to grab it, missed, and corrected his hand.
“Mono-scope vision will play merry hell with my depth perception,” complained Jonathan as he read the document. “Hey, what’s this? This is some funky DNA, Al.”
“Don’t call me that in public,” reprimanded Al, indicating the other senior agents nearby, “and that DNA; structurally speaking, it’s perfectly sound. It matches what wee know about the human genome. It’s what it’s made of which is important.”
“BioSteel? His chromosomes are made of BioSteel?”
“Correct. A scan has also found a flat growth of BioSteel on the brain’s surface, too. If it wasn’t for the fact that it has a defined shape, wee never would have picked it up, it’s that well disguised against the brain tissue.”
“So this kid’s a successful merging of BioSteel and human flesh, then?” Jonathan passed the paper back, and looked at the boy on the bed.
“It would seem so. It looks like the key is to integrate the two at a DNA level first, then move on to the larger, more physical stuff,” concluded the Director.
“That brings me to a question, Director.”
“Go ahead, you’re MVP right now. Shoot.”
“What happens to this kid?”
“Good question. The truth is, I don’t know. Wee’ll probably put him into a lab for observation.”
“A life in a lab? The kid’s about five, six years old! He needs a family!”
“Oh? I’m curious as to where this line is coming from, Jonathan.”
“What I’m saying is, keep him under observation, but in an undercover way. Let him live in a semi-family environment. Please.”
“Alright, Jonathan; let’s say I play it your way. Who looks after the kid?”
Jonathan opened his mouth, but then closed it again. What he was considering saying… where did it come from?
Was it because he’d fought to save this kid? What was it? Jonathan’s face throbbed.
Was it because of the sacrifice he’d made for the kid? Or, was it just that feeling of being a fatherly figure, shielding the boy from things he couldn’t comprehend? He decided.

“I’ll look after him.”
“Don’t be retarded, Jonathan.” A woman on the other side of the bed said.
“Sasha’s right, Jonathan,” a Mexican man on the other side of the Director chimed, “Your head’s muddled from that explosion and the gash. You lost a chocolateload of blood man, down like 3 pints at least by the time wee got there.”
“I’m not muddled guys.  Julio, Sasha; thanks for caring. But it’s not a blind decision. I have a… feeling about this one.” The last Agent around the bed, a man in a black shin-length business coat with a silver tie and metal mask and wearing a hat, spoke up.
“You don’t sound so certain about that feeling, Sride.”
“It’s new to me, Silvertie. I can’t explain it, you have to feel it, and you know it when you do. Although, for someone like you… I suppose it’s unobtainable.”
“That’s true. But, for me, feelings only get in the way of logic.”
“Well, think. Logic points to me too. I can mind a kid, I’m the second-best agent in this room, and I happen to think I make a very dashing father figure.”
“Stop, before your ego crushes us,” drawled the Director, “I’m not arguing. Jonathan’s a suitable candidate for the job, if he wants it, he can have it.” The Director turned to Jonathan, and looked him square in the eye, “You’re not getting time off regular work for this.”
“I know. But that’s why godfathers exist, eh, Al?”
“Oh, come on. You’re not roping everyone into it,” The director took a step back.
“I’m not,” defended Jonathan, raising his hands; “Just you.”
Al gave it some serious thought.
“Alright, fine. You win. But that’s it. You want any more, you do it out of your own pocket.”
“That’s fine.” Inwardly, Jonathan rejoiced. He’d gotten what he wanted. Now to see how it played. They all stopped, as the boy began to stir. The agents, with the exception of Jonathan, stepped back into the shadows. The boy opened his eyes, and looked at Jonathan. How Ironic, Jonathan thought. His right eye is grey, and the other one is gold. He thought about how his eye would likely turn out- very much like this boy’s.
“Who… are you?” The boy rasped. Evidently, his voice wasn’t often used. Jonathan thought. How should he do this? He decided to go simple. He crouched so his head was level with the boy’s.
“I’m Jonathan Sride; I’m your dad.”
“Dad?”

Spoiler for Chapter 3- Like Father, Like son:
--- Jonathan and Dimitri Sride’s quarters, SyntheDyne Agency HQ Complex, August 12, 2318 -----

Jonathan sat at the dining table, and ate breakfast with his 14 year-old son, Dimitri. 8 years had passed since he’d been adopted. Dimitri had black hair, and wore a rather short haircut. His face was still something of a concern, people that had never seen him before tended to be a little unsettled by how… neutral Dimitri’s face was. His still-mismatched color eyes didn’t help. It wasn’t that he didn’t show expressions, it was that feeling his face was missing… something; and yet, there was no reason to suspect such a thing. In the years following the impromptu adoption, Dimitri had quickly forgotten the events of that day. Today, Dimitri was eating egg and toast soldiers.
“’o asting amoge, Dod?” Dimitri said, his words muffled by the food in his mouth.
“Swallow first, Dimitri. Man, I can’t even understand what you say sometimes.” Jonathan had a mug of coffee in his hand, and was holding a piece of toast in the other. Dimitri swallowed.
“I said, No lasting damage, Dad?”
“Oh, nothing to report, a few scratches and such; thanks for caring.” Jonathan rolled his shoulder and clicked it. He’d landed a bit heavily on it after being thrown from an exploding BioSteel SpiderMech. Over the years, his face had healed, leaving a livid scar across his eye and cheek. The eyelids and eyeball healed up alright, but he still would never see out of it. To spare some people the discomfort of the sightless orb, he wore an eye-patch in public.
“Good. You might want to get that shoulder checked, it’s a liability,” Dimitri said, looking at his egg, which seemed to be lacking yolk now.
“Please, don’t patronize me. I practically taught you everything you know.” Jonathan waved his toast around, stopping when his shoulder clicked again. “On the other hand, when you’re right, you’re right.” Jonathan crammed the last of his toast into his mouth, and took the plate over to the kitchen.
“Got any upcoming missions, Dad?” Dimitri was also just finishing, and he followed Jonathan into the kitchen.
“Well, I’ve been back about 12 hours, I don’t know. Why don’t you go see Uncle Al and ask him for me?”
“Yeah, alright, I’ll go. What about you?”
“Well son, I have a nurse to go see.” Jonathan wiggled his eyebrows. “Don’t be too quick about your work now, you hear?” Dimitri chuckled, Jonathan’s innuendos and dirty humor now all too familiar.
“Alright, catch you later Dad.” Dimitri grabbed a jacket, and went out the door, which slid closed automatically behind him. Jonathan looked at it. 8 years, and he still wasn’t used to it; being called ‘Dad’ in earnest. He sighed and put dirty dishes into the dishwasher.

--- SyntheDyne Agency HQ Complex, Agency tower ---

Dimitri wandered through the Agency’s main doors, and looked at all the people milling about. He’d been living on-site for 8 years, since he was about 6, and was a familiar face to a lot of the staff.
“Hey Dimitri.” A janitor walked past, pushing a bucket and mop.
“’Sup, Hans, how’s the ear?” Dimitri began walking backwards.
“Twelve thirty, innit?” Hans’ face indicated that he didn’t realize his answer was completely unrelated to the question. His eardrum had been kind of ruptured by some sense-overload ordinance discharging in a warehouse a couple of weeks ago.
“I guess it’s still buggered then. See you around!” Dimitri turned, and almost bumped into a group of suit-clad Agents. “Sorry there.” He made to move around them.
“Hold it!” one of them grabbed him by the shoulder, and not gently. “What’s a kid doing here?”
“Hm? Oh, you guys must be new. I’m Dimitri.”
“Don’t want your name, I want your authorization.” Dimitri thought about it; he hadn’t had to wear that stupid card for ages, so it was sitting in a pile of DVDs in his room.
“Eh, got one, just don’t have it on me.”
“Kid, you’re in the wrong place to be telling lies.” The Agent pulled a pistol. His companions did the same. “Perhaps I should just shoot you right n-“
“Do that, and you’re in trouble, Agent.” Another Agent had shown up. “This here’s the son of Jonathan Sride. You waste this kid, you die.”
“I… what? Look, why’s a kid wandering around here with no ID or authorization? My family can’t do that. They can’t even come here with visitor’s clearance!”
“Not the point, new fish. This kid’s special, he’s been wandering around since forever. In fact, I did the same thing you just did, except Director Eleric caught me. Now step off, let the kid go.” Grudgingly, the offending Agent let go, re-holstered his gun, and left, muttering something about smartass kids.

“You know, Julio, I could have dealt with that,” Dimitri said reproachfully.
“Lies, Dimitri.” Julio made a dismissive gesture with his hand. Standing at just less than 6 feet tall, and at 29 years of age, Julio was one of the “players” in the Agency. His much-diluted Mexican blood and heritage gave him darker skin than most Agents, and a moustache. For chocolates and giggles, he wore a Mexican sombrero some days. Hardly anyone got the connection; they would just see the big hat.
“I suppose I can’t lie to you, Julio.”
“You can’t. Wear the card next time.”
“But it looks so dorky.”
Julio sighed. How Jonathan got anywhere with Dimitri, he had no idea. “Look… pop on over to R&D, see what they can do for you.”
“Yeah, alright.” Dimitri crossed his arms. Thanks to his nagging of R&D staff, he’d actually gotten some neat toys which they’d developed, but had no real practical application or market. Among these, he had the slim-line impulse jetpack which wasn’t very strong at lifting stuff, and barely managed to lift a full-grown agent; but for an 8 year old kid, it worked just fine. Another one was a remote control car… with concealed, bonnet-mounted miniature chain-guns. Let’s just say he won the Remote Control Grand Prix by miles.
“Thanks Julio.”
“No worries. Give my regards to your Dad and the Director.” Julio moved back towards the entrance of the Agency. Dimitri went to an Elevator, entered it, and ascended.

After a bit of socializing, Dimitri reached the Director’s office. Running his thumb over the scanner plate, which disabled the locks, the door slid open, and Dimitri entered.
“Ah. Dimitri. What brings you… here… today?” Alphonse Eleric said, fighting to get the words out, as he was intently focused on his screen. He didn’t look up, as only four people were allowed to just enter without his consent; he was one of them. Of the other 3, only one didn’t wear a suit. Dimitri moved around the desk, to look at Alphonse’s computer screen. He saw a game; Half-life Anthology. It was a remake and roll-together of a game and its modifications, which was immensely popular back in the early 21st century. It was made by a company whose name had something to do with taps… he forgot. At the present, the Director was playing as a man in orange armor, wielding a crowbar. As he watched, the Director’s character was hit with gunfire from soldiers in white, and died.
“Hard luck, Al; better luck next time, eh?” Dimitri moved back to the front of the desk, and sat in a chair.
“Man… games must have been hard back then. Using a keyboard and mouse! How did people manage without neuro-controllers? Anyway,” Alphonse turned the screen off, and turned his swivel chair to face Dimitri. “What does my favorite god-son want from me?”
“Psscht.” Dimitri waved a hand. “I’m your ONLY god-son. And I’m here to see what my dad’s got scheduled for the next couple of days.”
“Oh, really? Okay.” Al turned on a different monitor, and began typing on the holo-board. “Let’s see. Jonathan Sride; just finished a mission… it says here Jonathan’s handling training and instruction of new Agents, so he should be bumming around here for at least 5 months, if not longer. Does that answer any questions you might have had?”
“Uh, yeah; thanks Al.” Dimitri stood, and made to leave.
“Hold it- I got some things for you to do. Here, it’s on a bit of paper in case you forget.” Al handed Dimitri a shit of paper, and a parcel. “I want you to deliver that parcel to Doctor Bernard in R&D, and then report to the training grounds.”
“Okay, I was going to see Doctor B anyway; but why the training grounds?”
“So wee can get you training to become an Agent. You can’t have a free ride forever, you know.”
“But I’m only 14!”
“The earlier you start, the more you learn. You could have the basics and intermediates by the time you’re 18, and then the advanced stuff by 20. You’d be one of the best in the Agency.”
“I guess so. Well; there’s worse jobs, I suppose.”
“That’s the attitude.” Dimitri turned, and left the office.

As the door slid shut, a woman stepped away from the wall. Al made a disapproving noise. “Sasha, how long have you been standing there?” Sasha Carnstrom, a woman in her early thirties, was one of the few women who bothered joining the Agency, let alone graduate. Ironically, she was also the second-in-command and ranked number 3 in the agency. She had majored in Stealth and Infiltration, with a supporting degree in Assassination. She was also the de-facto secretary for Al Eleric.
“I’ve been here since you gave Dimitri the parcel. Does he remember his heritage?”
“Don’t be blonde, Sasha.” Sasha made a grimace. Her hair was naturally blond, but today it was a gold-yellow. “If the boy did, he’d probably flip out, and wee’d know about it quickly.”

The boy in question was jogging through the SyntheDyne Agency “Campus” as everyone called it. It was primarily for the Agency HQ, but supported a variety of Corporation facilities; including a R&D lab sub-complex. After breezing through the complex’s security, he made his way to the main lab where the head of R&D would be. He entered to see an old man in a lab coat, shouting at a robotic arm mounted on a pole, which was waving a plastic, square rifle around.
“Hey! Doctor B!” Dimitri waved his arm, while remaining in the doorway. In this R&D lab, when you entered the lab without announcing yourself, you tended to become fair game for any number of experiments to “malfunction”, to say the least.
“Huh? Oh, Dimitri, it’s you!” Doctor “B” waved, and then faced the arm once more, “You! Put the rifle down!”  The robotic arm whirred and clicked, paused, and then proceeded to ignore the Doctor, pointing the gun at various targets and firing.
“Whoa!” Dimitri ducked quickly, and rolled behind a solid steel block pillar- put in place for such events as this. He watched as a plasma burst flew through the air where he had been, and melted a hole in the wall. He peeked around the pillar to see Doctor B wrestling with the arm. There was a flash of blue, and the doctor stepped back, revealing a mechanical arm with half of the bicep melted off. Unable to function, it collapsed and dropped the gun. The doctor checked the gun and put it back on a rack. Doctor Bernard, or “Doctor B” as he liked to be called, was an elderly man approaching his 65th birthday, and head of the Research and Development department. The fact that he was 65 was amazing enough; over the whole of the Corporation’s R&D labs, the average time-span a person worked in the department was measured in single digits of years, if not months. Doctor B had been working there since he was 25. While he’d been given many hints by a lot of people that he should get out of the R&D game before the long odds he’d been playing against caught up to him; he blissfully ignored all of them, and continued just the same, somehow avoiding death on an almost daily basis.

The doctor sat at his large, central desk which was heaped with media of all sorts; not just research-related media, either. Dimitri sat on a chair after he cleared some of the stuff off it.
“What brings you to my wonderland?” asked Doctor B.
“A few things; one is this;” Dimitri held up the parcel for the Doctor to inspect. As the doctor did so, Dimitri shifted, and removed some things which had been digging into his leg and buttocks. He removed a small book on quantum physics; a boxy, rectangular device which promptly sprouted blades and superfluous fittings, almost certainly guaranteed to have been painful if he’d left it there.; and the most disturbing item, a DVD entitled “Girls gone Wild #23”.
“Hey! That’s mine.” The doctor quickly snatched the DVD before Dimitri got a good look at the images on the covers. “Man, how did that get there? Anyway; I have the package, it’s a good lump of BioSteel recovered from a mission. What else were you after?”
Dimitri thought. “First, I need some sort of not-lame device I can put my authorization and ID on; secondly, where is all your staff hiding; and thirdly, what the heck is that plastic gun?”
“Wow. Someone’s got a lot of demands. Now, I think I have something for demand number one, let me look for it.” The doctor turned around, pulled open a filing cabinet, and began flicking through the folders. “As to where all my staff is, they’re on holiday. They’ve gotten smart, and realized that when only a few take a holiday, the workload on those remaining is increased. And when a few are given more experimental work, their mortality rate increases tenfold. Thus, they have all taken their holiday leave simultaneously; I have to hand it to them, this is the smartest bunch of interns I’ve had for a long time. I’ll talk about number 3 later. Ah.” Doctor B pulled a thick folder out of the cabinet, and flipped it open on his desk.
“Let’s see... wee have the regular card… wristband… here’s one that might appeal to you. It’s an access ring. A miniature version of the microchip in your regular access card is concealed inside the ring’s decoration itself. Just upload your id to it, and it’s as good as a card. Even better, it’s designed to work for one person, the person wearing it when ID is uploaded. It’s in aisle 3…” The doctor got up, and bustled off. Dimitri levered himself out of his chair, and followed him.

They got to the aisle in question, and began checking boxes; Dimitri with more caution than Doctor B, because sometimes, past prototypes malfunctioned in the boxes, and because they were air, shock and in general, everything, proof, you had no way of knowing what you were going to find or be hit with. The doctor opened them faster simply because he was a reckless old man, and firmly believed that things he made wouldn’t hurt him. What made it worse is that he was always emerging unscathed from experiments gone catastrophically wrong; the only thing worse than an annoying, arrogant bastard is an arrogant, annoying bastard that is always, by luck, right. This was also a huge contributing factor in the doctor’s 40-odd year survival streak, surprisingly.

“Here it is.” Doctor B pulled a box off the shelf, and blew dust off the top of it. “One of our more applicable prototype series, they rejected this one because it was supposedly too easy to make a fake of and switch for the real deal.” He deactivated the vacuum seal, and opened the box. After a quick look inside, the doctor fished out what appeared to be…
“Hey, it’s that sandwich I misplaced! This is where it went?” Dimitri checked the box’s label.
“Last… sealed… 2315… DOCTOR! Don’t eat that, that’s 3 years old!”
Doctor B looked at Dimitri. “That was a vacuum sealed box, boy. No bacteria.”
“It’s a CHEESE sandwich! It’s even Blue Vein! Cheese IS bacteria!”
“Blue Vein?” Doctor B looked closer at the plastic-wrapped artifact. “Huh, I don’t remember ever purchasing blue vein cheese before… perhaps I really shouldn’t eat this one.” He put the sandwich on a shelf, and presented the open box to Dimitri. “Pick a ring, any ring.”

Dimitri looked at the box. The doctor had evidently gone all out as far as choice was concerned, with many designs available, some of the designs still quite popular. He then decided, picking out a ring which was little more than a metal band with a metal square on it. It was a discreet ring, less attention-grabbing than some of the others.
“Going to pick that one, eh? I thought you might. It suits you.” Doctor B put the box away, and they went back to his desk.
“Anything else you wanted, Dimitri?”
“The plastic gun, what is it?” Dimitri pointed at the plastic gun.
“Oh yes. You know those Biologic Metals plasma rifles? The big heavy metal ones made of plasma-resistant Carbon-alloy uranium?”
“Yeah, only BioMechs use them; they’re too heavy for humans; even an Agent can’t use them easily.”
“That’s the one. Well, wee decided to have a bit of fun one day, and see how accurate they were, and wee shot a plastic cup.”
“What happened?”
“The cup was fine. Plasma couldn’t touch it. Wee tried it again, but this time, with a plastic box, and wee put some gunpowder in it. The box didn’t detonate. Wee took the lid off, and it detonated; thus, our plastics must be resistant to Biologic Metals Plasma weapons. Typical, everyone was fudgeing around with high-density alloys, and the answer was so low-tech, the 21st century could have stopped it. No wonder wee stomped those K’aandar who created plasma technology; very impressive against hard targets, but surprisingly ineffective against soft ones.
Anyway, wee had another idea; dismantle the gun, and replace everything wee could from shell to trigger with plastic. Wee did that, and that there is the result. It’s now less than one sixteenth its original mass, and it retains the same destructive capability. Only problem is, because it’s plastic, it’s rather fragile. You rupture the power cell for this thing, and it explodes in a ball of plasma flame. This plastic is really thin, plastic cup-grade plastic. It breaks if you throw it, for the love of god. So wee’re still doing work on it.”
Dimitri nodded. He got the gist. “Thanks for your time, Doctor B. Good luck with the gun.”
“Have a nice day, Dimitri.” Doctor B turned back to the gun, and began to dismantle it.

The training ground, against expectations, was a large building. It wasn’t an outdoor facility or anything- it was a VR training ground. These were better than traditional training grounds, because trainees got all of the work, none of the unplanned horrible weather, and the scenario could be modified for realistic live-fire exercises.
As Dimitri walked in, he passed a man in a dark coat. The man wore a plain business hat, a featureless metal mask, and apart from the coat, wore the basic uniform of an Agent. His tie and mask were silver, hence his code name:
“Morning, Silvertie.” Dimitri nodded to the tall, mysterious man, who paused to do the same before leaving.
“Man, what a person. Never says a word to anybody, keeps to himself… on the other hand, he is the best agent on this campus,” Dimitri muttered to himself.
“Now, come on. I know I’m not perfect, son, but I’m standing right here!” Dimitri turned to see his father, Jonathan, standing in the doorway.
“Oh, I’m sorry, dad. I didn’t see you there. But then, it is true. He’s ranked #1, best completion/failure ratio by miles, to be honest.” Dimitri shrugged.
“Yeah, I know,” Jonathan sighed, “but wee have someone else’s talent to discuss; yours.”
“Al told me about this.”
“Oh, did he? But then, you asked what I was doing, and… yeah. I got it.” Jonathan fast-forwarded his tape of logic to the relevant point. “Doc said I had to take it easy for a while, and only do basic exercises for a while- hence me being instructor to new fish.”
“So you’re going to be training me?”
“Hey- second best agents make excellent personal trainers. I can’t put you in a proper new recruit class yet, you’re too young. But I can train you one-on-one. And that’s what I’ll do for the next 4 years whenever I can. You’ll pass the graduation op with flying colors, and take Silvertie’s place at #1, beat even your old man!” Jonathan punched his palm in emphasis. “You ready to get started with the training?”
Dimitri looked at Jonathan.
“I’m always ready.”

Spoiler for Chapter 4 – Graduation Scenario:
--- SDA compound, Training grounds, April 28, 2322 ---

Dimitri exhaled sharply as he bent over backwards to avoid an incoming blade. He followed it with a sweeping kick, trying to kick the legs out from underneath the attacker. Instead, his leg met empty air, and he realized that he’d just lost. The knife blade came out of the air and towards his face…

*Scenario Failed*
*Retry?*

“Not even,” said Dimitri. He was now 18 years old, and still had the same irrationally unnerving face. He got out of the simulation pod. Simulation pods took complete scans of a user, and linked the user’s consciousness to a virtual body in a virtual world, in the middle of a specified scenario. Just like in the real world, the user was limited by the physical capabilities of his body, and was auto-failed upon death.
The scenario just finished, Scenario #529, was a simple mission; eliminate the enemy, any choice of hand-weapons permitted, enemy was armed with standard Agent gear, 9mm pistol and knife; and yet, it had a massive failure rate; few managed to beat it, by killing the sole opponent, which seemed to be exceptionally skilled; and of those, most were pyrrhic victories, with simultaneous kill-strikes occurring. Rumor had it that only one man had ever beaten that scenario with a flawless victory; although, apparently, the scenario had been added roughly when Silvertie graduated, so that very narrowly ruled out Silvertie.

“That’s a tough one, huh?” Jonathan stood there, watching his son. He was starting to go grey around the temples, and had a few more scars, but otherwise hadn’t changed over the 4 years.
“You’re telling me. Did you have this one when you were training?”
“Oh yeah. Took me like 20 attempts before I even managed to clip the bastard. Even then, he still handed my donkey to me most of the time. Heck, if I tried it now, I’d win, but I’d be mighty cut up.” He scratched his side.
“Stop that, you’ve got stitches. You’ll just pop them.” Dimitri told his father. If it wasn’t for his reminders, Jonathan’s frequent injuries would be aggravated or extended.
“Yeah, yeah. So; think you’re ready for the real life graduation scenario?” Jonathan flashed a winning grin at Dimitri.
“Yeah, probably. As long as I don’t have to do scenario 529, I’ll be good, I reckon.” Each Agent, in order to graduate, had to pass their graduation Scenario; a scenario in the VR training grounds, but against human-controlled enemies, as opposed to the usual computer-controlled lot. The challenges ranged at random from retrieval, to infiltration, and even unfavorable-odds close-quarters combat. It was a mixed bag what he’d get. There were rumors that there were scenarios that were un-passable, as nobody in the history of the Agency had ever passed it, and all those who attempted it failed.
“What day’s my graduation scenario?”
“First of May, 2322. Not too far away.” Jonathan cocked an eyebrow. “You sure you want to jump into it like this? You’ve only just qualified for official training.”
“Yeah, but you’ve been teaching me more than that for years.”
“True. But you are now officially my student, and I’ve never had a student fail before. Don’t be the first.”
“Come on. How hard is it going to be, Dad?”


--- Graduation Scenario, May 1, 2322 ---

The base Graduation Scenario was a special one. It was designed specifically to be interchangeable and neutral. The one base scenario was always customized on the fly, at the last minute, to prevent the candidate learning about the challenge beforehand.
Today, the flat plain had a met-panel arena set up in the central area. The arena was 200m in radius, 400 in diameter, plenty of room. Graduation Scenarios were open for spectatorship, so there were considerable numbers of Avatars present. Avatars represented the body, much like if you were using a VR pod, but unlike the pod, they only transmitted sight, smell, vision and hearing, and could not interact with the scenario in any way.
Dimitri, wearing a suit, stood at one end of the arena, arms crossed. There was a podium where the judges would issue the scenario objective from, and observe the challenge. He would be marked on how he did the challenge, and whether he passed or not; from that, he would either be pronounced a graduated Agent, or told to come back next year. He straightened his posture and uncrossed his arms when he saw the judges line up at their seats. He could see… Al, two senior Agents he didn’t really know; Julio, who winked at him, and smiled; another unknown agent, and Silvertie. He could hear murmuring from the Avatars; he wouldn’t be able to hear them once the assessment was underway, but he could hear them now.
“Why are there 6 judges? There’s only supposed to be 5.”
“Silvertie’s judging? That kid’s toast, Silvertie’s pretty strict.”
“Man, this kid’s cocky. He’s barely enrolled, and he’s already looking to graduate.”
Dimitri shut them out. He had things to focus on. He saw Silvertie stand up, and the Avatars fell silent. Usually, his hat cast enough shadow to obscure most of the metal mask; but from this angle, Dimitri could see the whole thing. It had a rectangular hole in the mouth region for breathing through, and two indented eye sockets had eyeholes to see through.
“This is the Graduation Scenario for the Candidate Agent Dimitri Sride,” Silvertie proclaimed, his voice echoing around the mask. “The boundary for this scenario is the walls of this arena; should you leave them for more than 10 seconds without first having completed the scenario, you will be disqualified.
For equipment, you will have 30 seconds to pick any and all hand-held equipment you feel is appropriate for the job.” Silvertie paused to check something off a piece of paper.
“Your objective today is to defeat all enemies completely. You must render the enemy immobile for at least 10 seconds or more, free of active influence from you. A kill counts as a success. You have one enemy to defeat;” Silvertie paused, “That enemy is me.”

The Avatars on the tiered seating instantly went into a loud murmur.
“It’s Silvertie against the new kid? That’s unfair.”
“Kid’s got no chance.”
“I can’t believe they’d cook something like this up.”
“My test was to defeat 2 graduated agents, which was hard enough. Silvertie’s #1, how can Sride win?”
Silvertie crossed one more thing off the list, and put the paper down. Everyone shut up.
“Dimitri Sride. This is your mission. Do you accept it?”
Dimitri swallowed. If he rejected it, he would have to wait 2 months for another scenario, and be given a “Not accepted” grade. If he rejected the next scenario, he would be given an automatic fail.
On the other hand, if he accepted, and lost, he would get the fail. The mission ahead of him was simple, but then, it was also a very difficult one. Dimitri made his decision.
“I accept these conditions and the mission.”

Spoiler for Chapter 5 – Silvertie:
The crowd gasped. The judges simultaneously looked away or face-palmed. Silvertie did not react, merely nodding in approval.
“Very well: select your equipment.” He gestured, and a weapons rack rose out of the ground. Dimitri thought. He wasn’t just marked on a pass/fail basis; he was also given marks based on how he achieved his goal, and his general style and technique. For maximum marks, it was expected that the candidate pass the scenario with standard equipment, i.e. single pistol and knife, lock-picks, and suit. Since he had no locks to open, the lock-picks were dead weight, and he was already wearing his suit. Agency suits were different from regular off-the-rack business-wear. Each suit was a marvel of micro engineering, with nanonic threads and integral force-fields, and so on. Essentially, each suit was a very cleverly disguised suit of combat armor. It would be a valuable asset. In terms of weapons, he picked his choice of pistol; a .45, like his father. He’d grown up using a .45, and found other caliber guns to lack in areas compared to the .45. He spun the pistol, and holstered it.

“Time is up.” The rack dropped back into the ground.
“Spoon!” Dimitri exclaimed. He’d forgotten to grab the knife. He hadn’t even started the mission, and already he’d messed up.
“Sride,” Silvertie was now on the ground, equally spaced from the center of the arena as Dimitri, but on the opposite side, “you seem confident a single clip of ammo is all you need.”
“Yeah,” Dimitri lied, “I’ll beat you, and without taking a single injury.”
Silvertie laughed openly. “Ha! You’ve got some balls, I’ll give you that. I’ll put my recommendation in for style points.” Up at the judges area, Director Eleric stood.
“Commence mission in 3… 2… 1… Mark!”

Silvertie wasted no time, as did Dimitri. Both opened fire, but with different strategies. Dimitri strafed as fast as he could, firing his .45 with two hands.
Silvertie just stood there, firing his 9mm pistol with one arm. The difference was that if Dimitri stopped moving before Silvertie ran out of ammo, he’d not move again, because he’d get immobilized by a leg shot or something. Even though it was a 9mm at 100+ meters range, and Dimitri had his suit, Silvertie was a certified professional, and not number one for no reason.  To make things worse, his gun’s bullets were larger, and therefore, he had less to a clip than Silvertie, and he had no spare clips, whereas Silvertie probably did. His suspicions were confirmed as Silvertie stopped firing for a brief moment, 4 seconds long, and reloaded his pistol.
Seizing the moment, Dimitri broke cover, took aim, and fired his last bullet.

The bullet sailed through the air, ionizing air particles and distorting the air around it as it travelled. The .45 slug flew towards Silvertie, who, curiously, made no move. The reason was evident but half a second later, as Silvertie saw the bullet he’d fired sail off on an angle, hitting a wall. Dimitri looked at Silvertie. The man was quickly straightening up, a large dent and gouge on the silvered surface of the mask.
He opened fire on the now exposed Dimitri, who rolled for cover, narrowly avoiding the bullets. As he rolled, Dimitri considered his options. He had no ammo, so no gun. He had no knife, either; most would say he was hosed. Even so, close range was better than long range, at which he had no defense or attack. He counted the 12th shot, and broke cover, charging directly at Silvertie. As predicted, Silvertie decided he would forgo the firearm in favor of the knife.  Dimitri threw a fast straight right punch, which was deflected by Silvertie’s left hand, while his right, holding the knife, cut a path for Dimitri’s face.
Exhaling, Dimitri bent over backwards to avoid- wait.

This was familiar. Yes. Now that he thought about it, Dimitri’s fighting style was almost exactly like the enemy in Scenario # 529. In fact, that year, Dimitri graduated at about the same time as the scenario was made…
Dimitri realized then. Scenario #529 was to beat Silvertie in single combat. And only one man had ever beaten Scenario #529 flawlessly, someone who knew Silvertie’s fighting style inside out; Silvertie himself. Dimitri was no Silvertie, but he knew that after that slash…
Dimitri fought the urge to sweep-kick, and rolled instead. He was rewarded as a loud SHUNK sounded not 30 centimeters from his head. He was no Silvertie, but all those hours of practice on #529 were about to pay off, or make him lose big.
Rolling to his feet, he saw Silvertie getting up, and delivered an almighty uppercut.

THWACK
Dimitri’s bare knuckle impacted against the underside of Silvertie’s chin, and he staggered backwards, flabbergasted. That had never happened before; nobody had ever predicted his downward stab, even those he sparred against often. But it looked like Dimitri had something wrong with him…

THWACK
Dimitri staggered back, recoiling from the uppercut. In that briefest of moments… he’d made skin-skin contact with Silvertie’s chin. In that moment, it felt like Dimitri had been hit with a jolt of electricity. Must have just been static, but his skin was still tingling. He stood there, watching Silvertie.
To beat Silvertie, he needed to think Silvertie… to be Silvertie.
BZT
“Gah!” Dimitri grabbed his chest. A sharp stab pain coupled with the feeling of being subjected to uncomfortable levels of electricity brought him to one knee. It felt like his heart was going to explode.

Silvertie wasted no more time. He charged, knifeless; as he’d overdone it a bit with the stab, expecting to have his knife stuck in person, instead of in the dirt, which was where it would remain for the duration. He wound back for a punch as Dimitri dropped to one knee, and was about to connect it when-
WHAP
Silvertie’s eyes boggled behind the mask. “Impossible!” He threw another punch-
WAP
“What is this devilry? Who are you? Where is Dimitri Sride?” Silvertie watched as a man with tousled black hair, and horrific burns to his face stood up. The burns made him look like some sort of demon, with teeth exposed, no nose, and general deformities caused by intense flames. But Silvertie knew better. It was him, his real face. Nobody still alive knew that… so how had this imposter imitated him? There were flaws with the disguise, though- the fake was wearing the wrong clothes, had no hat, and no mask. And, looking into his imposter’s eyes… he saw the right eye was the correct color, but the left eye was gold-colored.
The fake Silvertie rose to two feet, easily matching Silvertie’s efforts to push him back.
“Where’s Dimitri? What on Cordia are you talking about Silvertie? I AM Dimitri.”

Spoiler for End comment:
Please, give serious feedback.

quoted against your request :P

limneosgreen Wrote:Take my advice, don't try to install custom themes ... it's possible to brick ur psp.. why just don't change wallpaper
(This post was last modified: 16/11/2009 03:50 AM by SchmilK.)
16/11/2009 03:50 AM
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Chaos Panda
The pandas are coming! Oh shi...

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Post: #4
RE: The Hybrid
Adore I like it, nice.

I like the plot so far, except I don;t understand what happened there at the end, but I'm sure it should be explained if you continue right?

Spoiler for if you don't like pandas:
[Image: PandaSays.jpg]
[Image: kiwi.png]

RAAAAAAAAAAAAPE TIIIIME! Or the panda will get you
(This post was last modified: 16/11/2009 08:57 AM by Chaos Panda.)
16/11/2009 04:23 AM
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Silvertie
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Post: #5
RE: The Hybrid
It's still going, bro. This has got 13 chapters completed so far, and the plot is far from over.
There will be betrayals! Double-crossing! Explosions! Drama! Wierd space-time anomalys that have nothing to do with Dimitri! And if you play your cards right, random appearances and maulings by a panda! And Exclamation Marks!

"Books! I've read several on the subject!"
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16/11/2009 12:50 PM
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theEvilOne
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Post: #6
RE: The Hybrid
Silvertie Wrote:It's still going, bro. This has got 13 chapters completed so far, and the plot is far from over.
There will be betrayals! Double-crossing! Explosions! Drama! Wierd space-time anomalys that have nothing to do with Dimitri! And if you play your cards right, random appearances and maulings by a panda! And Exclamation Marks!

Not to mention a vast and almost endless supply of semi-colons.
Aha

My Daleks, just understand this; if you choose death and destruction, then death and destruction will choose you.
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16/11/2009 03:30 PM
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Chaos Panda
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Post: #7
RE: The Hybrid
Silvertie Wrote:It's still going, bro. This has got 13 chapters completed so far, and the plot is far from over.
There will be betrayals! Double-crossing! Explosions! Drama! Wierd space-time anomalys that have nothing to do with Dimitri! And if you play your cards right, random appearances and maulings by a panda! And Exclamation Marks!

Inluv Panda maulings!!!
Inluv Exclamation marks!!!!!!!!!

Please continue, I'd love to read more

Spoiler for if you don't like pandas:
[Image: PandaSays.jpg]
[Image: kiwi.png]

RAAAAAAAAAAAAPE TIIIIME! Or the panda will get you
17/11/2009 04:49 AM
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Silvertie
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Post: #8
The Hybrid, Chapter 6 - Doppelganger
It's Saturday night! Update Night! (Or for you americans, Saturday morning, Update day!)

Spoiler for Chapter 6 - Doppelganger:

“You lie!” Silvertie pulled back his hands, and performed a backflip kick backwards. It should have connected, perhaps dislodged a few teeth. It whiffed, hitting nothing but air. It was almost like the move was predicted. He began to move to a defensive posture, intending to…
Dimitri’s head buzzed. Somehow, he just knew that Silvertie was going to make that kick, and before he could think otherwise, he got out of the way. He knew that Silvertie was going to take a particular posture, and just knew that there would be a weak spot just there, for an instant. He leapt forward, with newfound agility, and feinted around Silvertie, who was still settling into his posture, and kicked just there…
WHAMP
Silvertie landed on his back. He was livid. He began to rise, but was stopped by a grip of steel around his neck; HIS grip of steel. He began to gasp. He thought about what happened. If Dimitri had somehow become him, then… it was no point appealing to his own better nature for mercy; if he didn’t listen to it, why would this doppelganger do any different? Silvertie gave up, and prepared for a very fast killstrike.

Dimitri continued to hold Silvertie off the ground. It was so easy… just a little longer, and Silvertie would pass out. Then he could just drop him.
Why stop there?
What was this… feeling?
Why stop at unconscious? Kill him! A kill ensures victory!
I… I can’t act like that. That’s not me, it’s not right.
What do you think got you this far, Instinct? Please; it clearly isn’t up to scratch. It’s been me. And now, I will carry this body to victory, even though it’s not my own.
Dimitri’s arm lowered slightly. Then it tightened its grip, and rose rapidly.

To the outside world, the man that looked like a demon lifted Silvertie by one hand with no apparent effort. The demon swung Silvertie by the neck, and slammed him, headfirst, into the ground. The brutality of the move was evident when Silvertie’s image froze mid-crunch, and wavered, eventually turning transparent green, and fading. The demon straightened up, and… morphed. After a few seconds of pulsating, Dimitri stood there, looking at his hands.

The judges boggled at the man standing in the middle of the arena. A quiet throbbing noise and the sound of a few steps echoed around the table.
“Silvertie; what just happened?” asked the Director.
“Don’t know;” replied Silvertie, “My guess is that he’s not entirely human.”
“Wee knew that when wee let Jonathan adopt him. Wee’ll discuss it later.” The director stood. “Attention, everyone; Judging is finished.”
The crowds, now un-muted, murmured.
“Doesn’t judging usually take longer?”
“I think he cheated.”
“What is he?”
“I heard he’s got some secret gadgets or something.”
The Director cleared his throat, loudly.
“Wee’ve made our decision. Dimitri Sride has completed the allotted challenge by kill, and has passed the assessment.”

--- Director’s office, 57th floor, SDA building ---

“Alright, Director,” Dimitri began, once everyone was seated, “I think you know more about this than you’re letting on, even to me; and I’m the one with the secret in question.”
The rest of the gathered agents; Sasha, Jonathan, Julio, Silvertie, and Al; all shifted uneasily.
“Dimitri… it’s bigger than you think. It’s not going to be explained all off the cuff. Wee assembled here to give you your badge, and graduation gun.” The Director wore an expression of unease. “I think wee can skip the ceremony given the circumstances.” He handed to Dimitri a badge, and a chromed-silver handgun. It was ornamental, but unlike other ornamental guns, it remained a solidly functional gun; even custom-made for the Agent and pre-loaded with their ammunition of choice. It was up to the Agent to either use it in combat, or keep it on the mantelpiece.

“Thanks Director…” Dimitri fell silent, looking at his reflection in the gun. Silence held the room.
“Look. Dimitri, I’ll get a folder put together on you and what wee know, along with relevant notes,” said Eleric, sitting back in his chair, “You just go out and have yourself a bit of a celebration. One of our youngest full-fledged Agents, I’ll have you know.”
“Yeah, you’re right; as usual.” Dimitri checked the safety on the graduation gun, and stuck it in the back of his pants, his proper holster occupied by his usual gun. “Any of you want to come with?”
“I love to get drunk as much as the next girl;” began Sasha, “but our esteemed Director’s given me a bit of legwork to do; in addition to that, I’ll probably have to go assemble the information for that folder of yours; Doing it drunk… well.” Sasha threw her hands in the air. “Can I get a rain check?”
“I’ll pass.” Silvertie, unsurprisingly, backing out of a social event. “It’d ruin the atmosphere if I took the mask off, and I’d look like a wimp drinking through a straw. That, and I need to go beat myself up, can’t believe I lost to you or me.” He got up, and with a nod of the head, left.
“Huh, “beat himself up”, he said. What’s that all about?” Jonathan shook his head, and adjusted his eye patch and its strap. “Anyway, your old man’s game for a drink or two. I’ll just go grab my party ‘patch.”
“Wait, party patch? Don’t tell me you have an eye patch for parties?” Dimitri looked at his father, somewhat surprised.
“Heck yeah, Dimitri; See you in ten.” Jonathan left. Dimitri looked at Julio.
“Well, I got some overdue mission report to write… but I can do it later.” This earned him a disapproving look from Sasha and Al.
“This “later” you speak of… it had better be “tomorrow” later, or you’ll be in a spot of bother, Julio.” Eleric tented his hands and rested his goateed chin on them. “I’m serious, keep me waiting on that City 13 report any longer, and…” Eleric made a gun shape with his hand, put it to his head, and made a quiet explosion noise.
“Ah ha… ha; Actually, I think I’ll take a rain check too, Dimitri. Sorry pal.” Julio got up, and walked to the door. As it slid closed, the sound of someone sprinting off at top speed could be heard.
“Julio… excellent agent, poo poo desk jockey.” Al saw Dimitri’s worried look. “Oh, don’t worry yourself. I set the deadline for the document about a week early, and threaten him with death when it’s not done by that time, tell him the actual deadline, it’s on my desk 12 hours before deadline; sweet as a nut.”
“Right; well, unless there’s anything you want to out and tell me now… otherwise, I’ll just go and party, if you don’t mind.” Dimitri lazily saluted, and left.
“He is going to flip out when you tell him.” Sasha observed drily.
“I’m not blind.”


Outside, at the compound car park, Dimitri stood there next to a car, tapping his foot. Jonathan finally showed up, running hard.
“What took you, Dad?”
Jonathan caught his breath, and straightened up. “Couldn’t find it easily, turned out it was under the couch.” Sitting over his blinded eye was a dark purple eye patch, with a picture of an old-fashioned mug of beer. Dimitri drew a sharp breath.
“You’re kidding me.”
“No joke, Dimitri. When I wear this,” Jonathan indicated the patch, “its party time.” He looked around. “Is it just my impaired vision, or is there nobody else?”
“Nope; everyone said they had things to do. But then again…” Dimitri looked down, “I don’t exactly blame them. That was some pretty freaky stuff; I don’t know where it came from.”
Jonathan grimaced. Seeing Dimitri like this… well. He looked at Dimitri, and removed the eye patch. It was a bit too jovial, given the atmosphere.
“Dimitri; you see this?” Jonathan pointed at his obvious scar and eye.
“I see it, Dad.” Dimitri looked at Jonathan.
“Do you know how I got it?”
“Mission, that’s what you told me. Got too close to a bomb, you said.”
“That’s right; but there’s a lot more to it.”
“A lot more; how much more, exactly?” Dimitri had a feeling where this was going.
“Let’s just say it involves you. Come with me.” Jonathan got into the car, and waited for Dimitri to get in. He programmed a course for Downtown City 7.
Also put onto first post.

"Books! I've read several on the subject!"
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(This post was last modified: 21/11/2009 04:39 AM by Silvertie.)
21/11/2009 04:35 AM
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Silvertie
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Post: #9
RE: The Hybrid
Another weekend, another chapter. If I don't start writing soon, my buffer of chapters will be all eated away!

Spoiler for Chapter 7 – Where prototypes come from:
--- City 7, Downtown ---

Dimitri and Jonathan stood next to a statue on the corner of the sidewalk, their car parked not too far away, watching the hover cars fly past; the non-hover vehicles like trucks, cheap cars and motorbikes drive past on the ground; all in near silence thanks to the electric fusion engines. The duo watched the traffic for a bit, before Jonathan spoke.
“Tell me, Dimitri; what can you tell me about this intersection?”
Dimitri looked at the abnormal features in the intersection. “There was a bomb explosion at some point. The center of the intersection’s road-steel is newer than the surrounding panels; the walls of buildings around this intersection still bear shrapnel damage in most cases; and this statue,” Dimitri thumped the big metal statue commemorating the founding board member of the planet, Chairman Cortez; “this statue looks like someone took a flak cannon to it.”
Jonathan made an impressed noise, his un-patched blind eye scrolling around. Despite the years, he could see the intersection clearly in his mind and blinded eye. “Very astute, Dimitri; I can see a post-graduation in recon would be a suitable line of study for you.” He cleared his throat. “You know there was an explosion here. I can say you were right, because I was here. This was where I lost this.” He indicated his eye. “You probably can’t guess why, though; am I right?”
“You’re quite right. Why did you lose the eye?”
“I lost it for you.” Jonathan turned to Dimitri, who looked at Jonathan.
“Why would you have to give your eye for me,” Dimitri asked, “and why here? I’ve never seen this intersection before.”
“That’s right. You’ve never seen it, but you were here, 12 years ago.”
“Dad; get to the point.”
“Dimitri… the truth is…”

“Oh, would you look at that,” a mystery voice interrupted. Dimitri and Jonathan looked around for the voice’s owner, to see a man in slim black combat armor flanked by two bodyguards. The man’s face was obscured by a black half-balaclava and goggles, which were pushed up on his head; the bodyguards looked like gorillas on steroids, and as thick as two short planks.
“The thief returns to the scene of the crime. 12 years I’ve been waiting for this. 12 years of stake out! Ridiculous; it’s not like I had company to talk to.” The man waved his hands about in emphasis, although the Agents were focused on the blade hilt protruding over his shoulder. In unison, they drew their pistols, and pointed them at the man, who seemed unfazed.
“Oh dear; where are your manners? More to the point, where are mine? Silly me; the name’s Captain Marcus Fronz of the Biologic Metals army; pleased to make your acquaintance, Agent Sride and Prototype 2.”
Dimitri and Jonathan clicked the safeties off their guns, only to hear a louder click behind them. Slowly raising their hands, they saw two more henchmen strafe around them, wielding Biologic Metals Plasma Rifles. Looking like big, heavy brutes of weapons, Dimitri remembered that they were the basis for the one he saw in the SDAC labs. Also remembering how damned heavy the things were, he realized that these henchmen didn’t just have gym muscle.
“Show a little generosity there, you two; give me the guns.” Fronz gestured, and Jonathan and Dimitri put the safeties back on, and handed the guns to him. Fronz examined the guns.
“Very nice work, these; well maintained, and the choice of ammo size is reasonable; wise weapons of choice.”
“What do you want, Captain Fronz?” Dimitri said the word “Captain” with as much contempt as he could.
“What I want? I want to bring you two assholes in, so I can get off this stupid stakeout and back on the promotion ladder! I mean; your destruction of the convoy, Agent Sride; you destroyed a very important operation of mine, and I took the fall for it! And all you had to pay was a blind eye; and you got this prototype!” Marcus’ eyes darted all over the place, and he began to hyperventilate. “Aargh!”  Marcus stormed over to the wall and punched it, leaving a considerable mark on the concrete. Dimitri noticed several things in this moment:
1) Fronz had anger management issues, to say the least.
2) There were no crowds or traffic.
3) He still had the graduation gun in his back pocket.

After venting his rage on the wall, Fronz turned to face the two.
“You know what? I can deal with this on my own. You lot,” he pointed at the henchmen, who suddenly looked like they wanted to be doing something else, “get back to the room, and call a prisoner transport.” Grudgingly, the four mooched back down the street, and vanished down an alleyway. Fronz turned to face the Agents.
“Before the prison wagon gets here, I think I’ll have a little fun with you two.” He drew his sword to reveal a Katana with an odd edge. “Nobody said you had to get there in one piece.”
“Come on, Captain.” Jonathan spoke up, “I know you did your research on this one. Our suits are combat grade armor; a blade isn’t likely to scratch the surface, even. It’s that tough!”
“Wee did do our research. This is the result.” Fronz flicked his sword as if flicking fluids off the edge and with a flare of plasma flame, a solid-looking cohesive plasma edge sprang into life, leveling exactly with the odd edge, giving a smooth, conventional edge.
“Now the hard bit; what to cut off; actually, I have a better idea. Since wee only need DNA samples from Prototype 2, and it doesn’t matter whether he’s alive or dead; he’s equally expendable, so I’ll kill him!” With that, Marcus leapt forward, towards Dimitri, swinging his blade through the air, leaving a trail of ions and burnt ozone in the air behind it. Dimitri jumped back, and realized that even with that jump, he was still in range of and vulnerable to the Captain’s slash. He braced for the impact of the blue blade when-
“Move, Dimitri!” He was pushed and thrown quickly to the side by Jonathan, who then occupied the space that was originally Dimitri’s. Dimitri watched as the blade flashed, and passed through Jonathan’s right bicep and left forearm like a hot knife through butter. Jonathan screamed, and fell over, dimly aware of the irony in the situation. As blood streamed out of his new stumps, he realized that he was more or less in the same position as 12 years previously, lying in a pool of his own blood. Although, the key difference was in that there was still something trying to kill him, and this time, he had backup.

Dimitri rolled on landing, and drew his graduation gun, flicking the safety off. He was a good 4 meters away from the Captain, and he had a gun; tactical advantage, Dimitri. Marcus looked at Dimitri, and his victim.
“Oops. Guess this blade has a bit more weight than I’d like. Oh well.” He pointed at the ridiculously shiny gun in Dimitri’s hands. “Another gun, huh? That’s not like you Agents, usually you have just the one.”
“Well, tough spoon.” Dimitri chambered a round. “Prepare to get a lead aneurism, asshole.”
“Not so fast!” Marcus quickly ducked down, and grabbed Jonathan by the back of the collar. With strength that belied his size and build, he held the now unconscious body of Jonathan up, while hiding behind it; with his plasma-katana held in a backhand grip, edge and point inwards towards Jonathan’s stomach. “Try and shoot me now, Prototype!”
“Dimitri weighed it up. If he took the shot and got it, he had a very good chance of disarming the bastard. If he missed, Jonathan might die. He wondered what his father would say:
“Do it! Take the shot! Don’t worry about me; I’ve not got much longer to live! Shoot!”
Dimitri nodded in decisiveness, and adjusted his aim.
“You’re not serious about taking the shot, are you? You must have a mental defect; I’m behind your “dad”!”
“Not all of you.” Dimitri steadied his breathing.
“What are you-?”
*BLAM*
*clang*

“Aargh!”
Dimitri ran forwards, scooping up the plasma sword. He’d taken the shot, and instead of aiming for anything really serious on Marcus’ body, he’d shot the hand and forearm holding the sword. If he was accurate, the shot should have travelled down Fronz’s wrist and forearm, generally messing stuff like nerves and bone up. Judging how he dropped the blade and was now backing away from Jonathan’s body, making loud noises of pain; Dimitri would say he was dead accurate. Throwing the sword into the ground next to him, he slid forward to catch Jonathan as his now unsupported body fell. He looked at the bloodstained face of the man he called his father.
“Dad! Don’t give up on me!”
Jonathan cracked open an eye; the good one.
“Did… you… get… Captain?”
Dimitri looked up, to see nobody on the street. The Captain must have made a run for it; without his sword, as it was still lying where it fell.
“He got away.”
“Oh… I… wanted to… get that bastard…”
Jonathan looked up at the sky, and his adoptive son’s eyes. Grey and gold… his remaining eye shut.
“Dad! Don’t die! The medics are on the way! Just don’t die on me!”
The sounds of a young man with mismatched eyes shouting at the body of a man who was short the better part of two arms and about 3 liters of blood on the corner of an intersection with a long history could be heard for quite a distance away on the quiet streets of City 7.


--- SyntheDyne Agency Complex, Agency Tower, Databank level ---


Sasha Carnstrom browsed the files on the Databank direct-access computer.
“Dimitri… Dimitri…. Ah, here wee go.” She watched as screens of information flashed up. “That’s a lot of stuff, I might need more folders.” She highlighted all the documents, and hit “Print”. The nearby laser printer fired up, and began to noisily produce pages of information.
The noise proved a perfect distraction for the person covered head to toe in a dark bodysuit to quietly pad along the large open space behind Sasha’s seat.
Leaning back on her seat, Sasha stretched. She’d been fetching files for the Director all day, and- what was that no-
The dark person ungloved a hand, and grabbed Sasha by the neck. The body suited person shuddered, and after 4 seconds, drew a syringe. Quickly jabbing it into Sasha’s carotid artery, she held Sasha still as she struggled and quickly stopped moving. Checking her pulse to make sure she was dead, her killer pulled her out of the chair.

The killer pulled their hood back, to reveal a woman’s features: Short, spiky black hair and a rather generic face. Checking the corridor behind her and the door’s lock, she began to strip the bodysuit off, revealing a body that belonged to someone that did their fair share of acrobatics and general athletics. Turning to the corpse of Sasha, she stripped that, too and began to put Sasha’s clothes on, underwear and all. The clothes were a bit large, but that was only to be expected, as Sasha had been about twice the killer’s age, but that didn’t matter. Concentrating, the killer stood there, and quickly inflated to fill the clothes. Crouching over her old bodysuit, she sifted through the pockets for three things; a small, flat case that could have been for makeup powder; a square, functional looking communicator; and a small cylindrical device. Shifting all her old clothes into a pile, she pressed a button combo on the device, and threw it onto the pile. After a second, it activated, glowing and creating distortions in the air. As she watched, the bodysuit and anything attached to it disintegrated with each pulse, until all the clothes were completely gone. She returned her attention to the corpse of Sasha. Hiding a corpse in a databank room was hard, but she had an idea. Walking over to the nearest supercomputer in her 'borrowed' heels, she pulled the side off the computer and grinned. Dragging the body to the opened cavity, she carefully wedged the body in the bottom of the case, under all the wiring and such. With any luck, she shouldn’t decay for a while thanks to the clean-room environment, and the concealment in the supercomputer.

Opening the make-up case, she revealed no makeup, but an array of single colored contact lenses. She double-checked the hue of her victim’s eyes; a stunning green, rare in today’s gene pool; and picked a lens out, putting the others away in her pocket. She went over to a shiny metal pillar and used it as a mirror as she looked at her golden left eye, and placed the contact lens over it. Both eyes were now a shade of green; perfect.
Making sure the tampered supercomputer showed no traces of being opened, or that there was a person’s dead body in there, she went over to the printing. She knew what it was for, and put it into a single folder. The assassin, now under the guise of Sasha Carnstrom, entered the elevator, and left the Databank level.


"Books! I've read several on the subject!"
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27/11/2009 04:11 AM
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Silvertie
Older, less cringe, still mad.
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Post: #10
RE: The Hybrid
Update tiem!

Spoiler for Chapter 8 – The truth shall set ye free:
Dimitri sat in the back of the medic’s APC, and watched as three white-armored field medics worked like mad around the body of the man who he had known for most of his life as his father.
“Pass me that suture!”
“Watch that bone!”
“Get me a soaker!”
Dimitri looked at his hands, which were covered in blood. He’d tried to stem the bleeding as best as he could, but… there was too much. He had the plasma blade next to him, deactivated. The flat of that and the handle were also spattered with blood. In short, it looked like he was the one to hack off Jonathan’s arms.
“I think that’s all wee can do here for now. Let’s get this man back to the compound; wee’ll have better equipment there.” Two of the three medics left to get into the seats of the APC, while one remained with the grievously injured Jonathan, checking specific details and making notes on a clipboard.
Dimitri, for his part, saw none of it. He was busy thinking about what had happened; more specifically, what Marcus Fronz said.
“Prototype… that’s what he called me.”
The APC started moving, and the medic looked up. “Agent Sride, are you okay? Do you require any medical assistance?”
“Prototype; what’s he talking about?”
“…Agent Sride…?” The medic inched closer. PTSD was still a prevalent factor in the Agency, and Agents had been known to flip out after combat on occasion.
“BACK OFF!” Dimitri’s head shot up, and glared at the medic, who promptly jumped back and deployed the helmet, a somewhat cylindrical affair that served as both bullet and biological weapon defense. Dimitri calmed down.
“Sorry, got a bit on my mind.” This was an understatement, but it was a step in the right direction.
“It’s okay, Agent; I’ve seen similar post-combat reactions before.” The medic turned back to his clipboard, but kept the helmet up. He’d also seen gullible medics slaughtered from behind by those claiming to be sane.
Dimitri paid the medic no more attention. He had some soul searching to do.


--- Director’s office, 57th floor, SDA building, half an hour later ---

Dimitri sat there, facing the Director. The two were alone, and Dimitri still held the graduation gun and plasma blade. The two sat in silence for several minutes, and then the Director began to speak.
“Dimitri… the medical department says that they’ve managed to stem the bleeding; it seems that your father will beat the medical odds once again.” When this elicited no response, he went on, “I’m sorry. I should have begun easing you into this sooner; what I’m going to allow you to find out will be quite heavy.”
“Al. Please, don’t beat yourself up on this one.” Dimitri waved his hand, “at least, not until I see what you haven’t told me.”
“Of course,” Al pressed a button on his desk, “Sasha, bring in the folder, please?”
Sasha walked in. Dimitri looked at her. Something was a little off in the way she looked at him. Then he considered his clothes; he was still wearing clothes coated in Jonathan’s blood, and carrying a blade flecked with the same.
“It’s not my blood, if you’re wondering, Sasha.”
“Well, I can kind of see that, seeing as you’re still upright and all.” Sasha quickly walked over to the desk, and placed the folder, which was several centimeters thick, on the desk in front of Dimitri; she turned and left, the doors sliding silently to a close behind her.
“I know there’s a lot of stuff there, Dimitri. Please take as long as you need to read all our Intel on you.”


Several hours of silence later, Dimitri finished the last document, put it down, and sat back in his chair.
“Well, Dimitri?”
“I don’t have any problems with what you decided to do; it’s what I would have done.” Dimitri clicked his neck. “It explains a great deal of things that have happened recently, as well as things which have never really made sense.” Dimitri sifted through the pile until he found the document he wanted.
“So, Jonathan was never my real dad, then?” Dimitri looked at the document; formal adoption papers signed by Jonathan.
“Quite true; he made quite an irrational judgment that day he saved your life, and decided to adopt you. It enabled us to keep an eye on him, and give you a semi-normal upbringing.” Al sat forward, and looked at Dimitri. “You know a piece of shrapnel did that to his eye. It did it because he was busy throwing you behind the statue; if he hadn’t, you might not be here today.”
“The statue from today?”
“The very same; he went into that cargo truck expecting to find a weapon or some advanced technology. He found you and a bomb instead.”
“So it would seem.” Dimitri sat silent. “Although, looking at what information you’ve put together here… my designation was “Prototype 2”, correct?”
“Our wiretaps and interceptions would indicate so.”
“Then there is a large chance I am not completely unique.”
“You mean, you think there is another with abilities similar to your own?”
“Well, number two. If I was the only one, why bother with a number? There was at least one predecessor to me, and who knows how many after.”
“I can’t believe wee never picked up on that.” Al seemed genuinely surprised, it was quite a slip up.
“It’s a speculation; I wouldn’t take it too seriously.”
“But it’s a very good speculation; I’ll get some feelers out and listen for any mention of more prototypes in particular.” The Director made a note on a piece of paper. “Now, as to your Agent status… now that wee know what happened in that arena; wee can safely judge that while it was an unusual event, it was not outside the rules of engagement, as it was a personal skill. Nobody can contest that. But, the real question is, do you still want to be an Agent?”
Dimitri considered it, briefly.
“Of course; what else would I do? And, on that note, I would like to apply for a post-graduation specialization.”
“You want to post-spec? Fine by me; what fields?”
“I was thinking Infiltration and Recon. With my unique skill, I should be able to infiltrate like no other.”
“I expected as much. Well, seeing as you now know about your ability and need practice; would you consent to being observed? Wee have precious little data on what you can actually do.”
“Sounds like a plan.”
“Okay;” Al pulled out a form and quickly scribbled some things over it, “I’ll give you an hour or two to go do what you have to;”
Like visit Jonathan, correct? Dimitri thought silently


--- Medical bay 4, private ward ---

Dimitri looked at his adoptive father, lying on the bed. The doctors had done their thing, and capped his amputated stumps with… Dimitri turned to the attending nurse.
“What are the metal things?”
“The stump-caps?” The nurse tilted a head, thinking. “They’re bio-metallic translators. Wee’ve hooked them up to his nervous system, and other exposed internal elements and now they’re ready to attach mechanical limbs to.”
“Translators… I can’t say I’ve heard of the things before.”
“You shouldn’t have, Doctor B just cranked out these prototypes a couple of hours ago.”
“Bio-metallic… wait, do these use BioSteel?”
“Apparently so, the doc’s been waiting for a good use for our limited stock of biosteel."
"Isn't this what BioLogic have been trying to do for a while now? Fusing human flesh and BioSteel?"
"In a sense; but the methodology behind it varies," the nurse made a comparative gesture, "Biologic Metals try and mould the flesh to accept the BioSteel, which, as far as I know, has resulted in a zero percent success rate, and one hundred percent fatality rate."
Dimitri shifted uneasily; this nurse was not aware of the biological marvel standing in front of her, it seemed. She continued her explanation.
"The doctor has gone the other way and applied Occam's Razor; rather than struggle like Biologic's scientists, he chose to change the steel to match the body. While it means that each transplant needs to be tailored to the patient, it means a much greater chance of the graft taking."
Dimitri cocked an eyebrow. "Much greater chance? What kind of odds are wee looking at here?"
"Well..." the nurse coughed and lowered her glance, "This is the first actual trial..."
"Say no more. He fit to talk?"
"He should be able to talk. However, Agent Sride has been on painkillers for the better part of the last 5 hours, so he may be a tad unresponsive."
"Thank you for your assistance, nurse. Could you leave us be for a while?"
"Certainly. Just press the red call button if anything goes pear shaped; not that anything will, of course."
The nurse hung up a clipboard, grabbed a metal trolley, and left, wheeling the trolley away.

Jonathan, for the ninth time, and easily the worst one; woke up from being knocked unconscious by something. Not only was it like trying to sit up through almost-set concrete (which he'd done before, long story) his arms were both off balance and burned as if they were on hot embers.
Once he was done creating a metaphor for his intense, semi-dulled pain (which the painkillers he'd presumably been given had done little to dull; much like wrapping a sharp rock in thin blanket); he got around to sitting up.  Jonathan opened his eyes to see a still bloodstained Dimitri sitting on a chair looking at him. "Nice to see you're alive, Dimitri." Jonathan’s jovial tone belied the pain; it would have taken a great analyst of micro-expressions to have picked the nanosecond-long flinch of pain.
"I could say the same about you, Jonathan. You lost more than a few liters this time, I’m afraid." "Jonathan?" The man in question quickly worked out what was going on. "I see; Al told you all about the adoption, then?”
“Yeah… I suppose you were about to tell me the truth when that Captain jumped us, right?”
“I was getting there. If he’d been a few minutes later, wee wouldn’t be here having this conversation.” Jonathan waved his stumps for emphasis, and looked at them, more specifically, the metal caps on the ends. “Hey, Dimitri; got any idea what these things are? They itch and burn like a really bad rash.”
“They’re like stump caps for your prosthetic limbs to attach to. Ask Doctor B about it.”
“Ah. Well, if you don’t mind, I’d like to go back to sleep; this pain is starting to pick up.”
“Sure thing…” Dimitri hesitated, the habit of 12-odd years weighing on him; “…Dad. I’ll come back and visit later, alright?”
“Don’t hurry; I need my beauty sleep.” Jonathan grimaced and rolled over. Dimitri looked at the back of the double-amputee lying in the bed, and left.

As usual, put into first post, too.

"Books! I've read several on the subject!"
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Silvertie: The Blog | A Door In Nowhere: The Webcomic
05/12/2009 04:43 AM
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