Absorption Read online




  Dedication

  I would like to dedicate this novel to the two most important women in my life, my wife Dale and my mother Charlotte.

  Acknowledgements

  I would like to thank everyone who has helped me with this manuscript through three separate writer’s workshops and many rounds of critiques, but most of all I would like to thank Noah K. Mullette-Gillman for the final and most crucial round of editing and advice.

  Table of Contents

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 1

  The young girl's eyes looked identical, but when she glanced around the room the left didn’t keep up with the right.

  Second Lieutenant Brett Johnson said, “Keep practicing. Your eyes will move together by the time school starts.”

  “Okay,” Lydia replied tonelessly. He didn’t expect her to jump for joy. Her parents had been murdered and her home town destroyed a few days before. Even so, there might be another reason for the lack of enthusiasm. Her immune system had accepted the new eye – but if her mind rejected it there would be trouble.

  “How do you like your new eye?”

  The corners of her mouth flickered up for a moment. “It’s wayout. I can see in the dark.”

  A moment later she explained seriously, “Infer red vision.”

  “Most people call it infravision,” he told her with a smile, but his mind was elsewhere. So the eye wasn’t the problem. He continued to study her solemn face, which was dotted with freckles and shielded by a mop of red hair.

  Brett had no training in pediatric emotional therapy, and no authorization to perform it, but Lydia’s flat affect bothered him more than a natural display of grief. The tired looking grey-haired woman waiting outside was now responsible for the girl. How deep did their bond go?

  “Do you talk with your grandmother a lot?”

  The child replied, “Sometimes. She cries sometimes, thinks I don’t know.”

  Brett asked, “Maybe your school could find you someone else to talk to.”

  She shook her head. “I don’t like either of the counselors.”

  “Talk to me,” he suggested.

  She looked at him. Brett wondered how he looked through her eyes – new and old.

  She declared, “You have too many muscles to be a doctor.”

  “That’s exactly what they told me in medical school. At first I was supposed to enroll in goon school.”

  Brett let his face go slack, hunched over, and dangled his arms, a parody of a muscular and brainless goon.

  Lydia giggled, and flashed the first smile he had seen from her.

  “Unfortunately the classes were filled up already, so I decided to be a nuclear physicist. I got the course numbers mixed up though, and when I got my degree I realized I had learned a lot about eyes and stuff, but only a little physics.”

  The smile vanished. What she needed right now wasn’t a clown. Brett cursed his approach. Lydia burst into tears.

  She didn’t seem to blame him though. When he awkwardly moved closer, she buried her face in his lab coat and cried into it. The computer on Brett’s belt chimed. He didn’t have much time to get ready for his appointment with Colonel Easting. Lydia nestled her face into his chest, sobbing and gripping him tighter. The heck with it – Easting didn’t like him anyway.

  He pulled tissues from the container on the wall when her sobbing slowed down. She shook her head mutely when he tried again to talk with her about what she’d been through. Intuition told him not to push.

  Brett held the ophthalmoscope up to each eye in turn. The pupils of both eyes contracted equally in response to light. The bionic eye wouldn’t be harmed by bright light, but imitated a natural one anyway. An unchanging pupil might seem odd to people facing Lydia, even if they couldn’t quite pinpoint the problem. Some red blood vessels were more visible in the natural eye since she had been crying, and both eyes were surrounded by red tissue.

  Brett was performing the post operative examination with local tools. Even before this war, the equipment manufactured here had not been as advanced as that from Old York. All the medical equipment available from the ship was already in use.

  “Lydia, I’d like to talk with you again.”

  She looked doubtful. “It’s hard for grandma to take me back and forth.”

  It had only been a couple of days since the massacre. The grandmother might have lost others besides her daughter.

  Brett told her, “Please talkie 777-888. Tell them you want to talk to Lieutenant Brett Johnson. There are other Bretts besides me. You’ll have to tell them it’s an emergency, because it’s a little extra work for them to connect a landline based talkie to my belt computer.”

  Brett hoped he hadn’t confused her. It seemed children here knew how to use talkies, even ones attached to walls which required local currency in the form of metallic coins.

  “Won’t I get you in trouble?”

  This question was so sensible he almost admitted the possibility, but Brett had never known his father, and his mother had had problems with alcohol and drugs. Losing two normal happy parents might be even worse than that, and he didn’t know if Lydia would open to anyone else.

  “The truth is I’m going to be pretty bored for awhile. Please call me as soon as you can.”

  She nodded. Brett put a hand under each of Lydia’s arms, and lifted her off the examining table. Brett’s last patient of the day reunited with her grandmother outside. He put the stethoscope in the sterilizer, shut off the lights, and removed the paper from the portable examination table.

  This little town had been too small for a hospital, even smaller than the destroyed town nearby, so the town hall had been emptied for their use. Brett could still see squares of a slightly different color than the rest of the polished hardwood floor. What kind of furniture could that be from? Filing cabinets! Even before the war, Roundhouse had kept many of their records on paper. He envisioned his examining room as it must have been previously, filled with filing cabinets, not too well lit but at least well ventilated. Someone had done a good job of dusting it after removing them. After the worst part of the emergency more supplies had arrived, enough to turn this room into an examination room, though without running water.

  Under the doctor’s coat he wore civilian clothing. Colonel Easting would want to see a uniform, but he wouldn’t want Brett to be late. There was no pleasing some people, so Brett decided not to take the time to change. He headed towards the lift, actually a primitive elevator, which would take him to Easting’s office. He pushed the button beside it.

  “You’re late – and out of uniform.”

  “Sorry, sir.”

  Brett knew any attempted explanation would only wind the martinet up further.

  The officer continued, “Have you finished dismantling your unauthorized apparatus yet?”

  “Sir, the materials involved are trivial, and we might learn –”

  “There’s no real evidence the nanomachines play an important part in this war. Determining
what we might learn from them is a job for military intelligence, and they say they don’t need your help. Anyway, they may be dangerous to fool around with.”

  “I see, sir. They’re not dangerous enough to worry about militarily, which is one good reason not to examine them. And they might be dangerous to test, which is another.”

  “Alright, wiseass, you missed my middle point. MI doesn’t want your help. Get rid of the damned thing.”

  “Yes sir.”

  The Colonel continued. “We have to be careful about wasted supplies. The locals could get many of the things they’re asking us themselves.”

  What could Brett do about that? The man had to know he had used hardly anything in his research. Before he could acknowledge the Colonel’s latest gem of wisdom, the computer on his belt started double beeping, emitting pairs of beeps with several seconds between each pair.

  Ah yes, he had asked Lydia to say it was an emergency, and call as soon as she could, though he hadn’t expected to hear from her quite so soon. If he ignored it, the Colonel would wonder why he was neglecting an emergency. If he requested privacy the Colonel would wonder what personal matter could justify the interruption.

  Brett lifted the thick plastic rectangle off of his belt. It was about nine inches long, and slightly less than an inch thick. Both sides were covered in dark grey plastic which resisted finger prints. Along the edge lay a tiny camera lens, a fingerprint scanner, an audio input grid, and a clip with a tiny ear piece. All of these items were duplicated on the back screen, which was otherwise identical to the front screen. The device was both light and durable; probably worth whatever it cost the military.

  Brett pulled out the little earpiece, so at least his tormentor would only hear one half the conversation.

  “Doctor? This is Lydia. Now that I have a biomic eye, am I a cyberborg?”

  This was no time to worry about pronunciation. “I believe that is the case.”

  Brett aimed for a tone businesslike enough to avoid arousing Easting’s curiosity, but gentle enough not to hurt Lydia’s feelings.

  “I want to become a crime fighting superhero like Seymour the Cyborg. Can you install a laser weapon in my finger too?”

  “I’m sorry but Colonel Easting has just spoken to me about supplies we’re not permitted to offer civilians. I don’t think we can appeal, because he’s a busy and important man. I’ll be happy to help you find some substitutes on the civilian market though.”

  He hoped she wouldn’t be disappointed if he got her a flashlight, magnifying glass, and toy detective kit.

  “Wayout! Grandma says she’ll help me bake you wafette’s too.”

  Brett didn’t like sweets that much, but he wanted to see Lydia again. “That sounds great. I really appreciate your attitude and so will the Colonel.”

  “Is he listening to you now? He can’t hear me, can he?”

  Perhaps she had potential as a detective cyborg. “That’s correct. I don’t want to keep him waiting, and he doesn’t have time for details.”

  Hopefully the Colonel would take the hint.

  “OK, bye. Talk to you later.”

  After Lydia had disconnected, Brett made a preemptive strike before he could be questioned. “Sir, you were exactly right. When I was firm she realized Space Force supplies were not necessary for her purpose.”

  “Good job, Lieutenant. I’ll whip you into shape yet. Whatever other problems you may have, I’ve heard good things about your medical skills.”

  Brett already knew that, but his boss had to be in a much improved mood to admit it. Maybe he could actually get something he wanted today.

  “Thank you, sir,” he said crisply, as if a kind word from Eastings meant a lot to him. Then he continued, “I’ve heard the Unificationists recorded their own atrocity, and broadcast the video to several cities.”

  Eastings’ bushy eyebrows crowded downward, nearer his nose. “Why are you interested in that? Because the hive mind was involved?”

  Stupid people were ingenious, Brett mused, always oblivious unless it was actually convenient for you that they be so. Brett had no reply.

  “Why’re you so convinced the hive mind plays a bigger role that the experts think? Something psychological in your childhood?”

  Clearly Eastings would be no help, but at least Brett wouldn’t let him change the subject.

  “I don’t see a copy on our network,” Brett told him.

  “The effect on morale is still being evaluated.”

  “My personal morale would go way up if I knew what happened and why.”

  Maybe he could smuggle the recording home somehow?

  “The video is being kept confidential, both for the sake of the natives, and the people back home.”

  Brett nodded. “A good thing too sir. Something like that makes it look like we’re in the middle of a war zone! Now that I think of it though–”

  “That will be all. Dismissed.”

  He headed back towards his makeshift office. Walking through musty and ill lit wooden hallways, he stumbled over a crack where two wooden planks didn’t join smoothly. Wood was not a luxury here. Trees from Old Earth apparently did very well. Metal was the expensive material, partly because Roundhouse was relatively poor in iron, but partly because most of the conveniently mineable metal had been taken, and imperfectly recycled, as civilizations rose and fell. Hopefully the Space Force would help put a stop to the latter.

  The locked drawers of his massive wooden (oak?) desk presumably held the stuff of some town hall bureaucrat, but he didn’t mind. He appreciated the adjoining empty room with only one entrance, which gave him somewhere to set up experimental apparatus. It didn’t take up much space. Just a small pump attached to clear plastic tubes filled with saline solution circulating at about the speed blood flowed, and heated to body temperature. A sample of nanomachines obtained by Brett circulated inside the tubes as well.

  Although Oceanian technology had long been banned as too dangerous for use on the Federalist Worlds, Brett felt military intelligence hadn’t studied it’s characteristics as a military threat sufficiently. After reading a study where some idiot had dried out the delicate nanomachines and chemically prepared them for viewing under an electron microscope, then pronounced them tiny pieces of useless junk, Brett really hoped somebody was doing better science that was still too secret to talk about. He had no way of knowing though, and life had taught him not to count on the commonsense of strangers.

  Brett pulled the computer off his belt. Despite its size, the machine possessed fair computing capacity, and could communicate with his ship’s computer wirelessly, when he dwelt aboard. A few days ago he had used it to determine the frequencies the nanomachines transmitted and received upon. Since then he had done some programming in his spare time.

  Brett started the transmission sequence. First his computer lay silent, recording electromagnetic activity, but detecting none from the nannies. Then it started broadcasting, alternating between a monotone and silence. Filtering out its own activity, it detected a scattered response from some of the nanomachines for a few seconds, which soon died out. This repeated when it began broadcasting random static. The last minute consisted of playing back a recording of neural activity from the human brain. To this there came a weak response, dying down gradually over about twenty five seconds.

  Now Brett released a measured volume of sugar dissolved in saline solution into the tube. Sugar could carry energy to cells of the human body, and now he would try and confirm it helped power these nanomachines as well.

  He tapped his computer, making it repeat the sequence. The response was only slightly longer and more emphatic during the first two phases, but it lasted throughout the entire minute of the final phase.

  Could the nanomachines function less well if a soldier’s blood sugar became low as he became tired? Possibly, but Brett had something better.

  This time his computer played back the signals it received from the machines themselves. Bursts of fre
netic activity alternated with baffled silence. Brett had a way to confound the machines.

  That was something, at least. Not much of a start on reverse engineering the damned things though. The things needed to be imaged while floating in saline solution, perhaps with the help of a laser high energy enough to distinguish the details, but low enough not to destroy them. Or perhaps it couldn’t be done, if individual atoms made up the smallest components, the Heisenberg uncertainty principle might come into play.

  He shouldn’t be the one who had to do this. More primitive versions of Oceanian technology were used for military research in a carefully controlled environment as a collaborative tool. If anyone there had switched from building other weapons to studying the technology itself, Brett hadn’t heard of it. Until a few years ago, even some elected politicians had been talking about Oceanian technology as the next step in human evolution.

  Of course the so called ‘Unificationist’ rebels had asked Oceania to send the technology, and bore a heavy burden of guilt for starting this war. Having seen the hive mind in action though, Brett remained convinced that those Unificationists who became part of it were now less that human. He could only imagine the sort of groupthink that would allow the rest of the Unificationists to deny to themselves their horrible blunder. Apart from anything else, there was something deeply wrong with anyone who would even think it made sense to surrender their individuality to a group mind.

  Enough futile speculation. Brett would tap into the planetary computer net and get the video recording of the rape of Skulton. Or not, there lay another difficulty many less technologically advanced planets encountered. Despite the expense of interstellar commerce, the most sophisticated parts of advanced computers could be sold, while interfaced and casings were assembled locally. In the end the well-off had fine computers, but the world as a whole failed to build up the technologies and massive economies of scale that enabled most people to own computers on Old York.

  He headed for the stairs. Not everyone now in the building had shuttled down from the Firestorm. In the last couple of days some volunteers and support personnel had arrived from elsewhere. At the very least, he had seen a local security guard in the lobby.