Yes, I just posted an AMA this morning, 10/5/15. Yes, the account name Mbabaoye is me. AMA đ
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Yes, I just posted an AMA this morning, 10/5/15. Yes, the account name Mbabaoye is me. AMA đ
The Quantum Thief, by Hannu Rajaniemi
This book is set in a far future time, where humanity has branched out biologically, and digitally, while spreading throughout the stars. Different enclaves, factions, and powers maintain an inter-connected balance. But on the fringes, as always, remain the criminals.  And the most legendary criminal of his time is locked up behind bars in one of the most advanced, and infuriating, prisons ever built.
Not for long, though. This is how Jean Le Flambuer’s story begins.
âŚ
(pg. 1)
As always, before the warmind and I shoot each other, I try to make small talk.
âPrisons are always the same, donât you think?â
I donât even know if it can hear me. It has no visible auditory organs, just eyes, human eyes, hundreds of them, in the ends of stalks that radiate from its body like some exotic fruit. It hovers on the other side of the glowing line that separates our cells. The huge silver Colt would look ridiculous in the grip of its twiglike manipulator limbs if it hadnât already shot me with it fourteen thousand times.
âPrisons are like airports used to be on Earth. No one wants to be here. No one really lives here. Weâre just passing through.â
Today, the Prisonâs walls are glass. There is a sun far above, almost like the real one but not quite right, paler. Millions of glass-walled, glass-floored cells stretch to infinity around me. The light filters through the transparent surfaces and makes rainbow colours on the floor. Apart from them, my cell is bare, and so am I: birth-naked, except for the gun. Sometimes, when you win, they let you change the little things. The warmind has been successful. It has zero-g flowers floating in its cell, red and purple and green bulbs growing out of bubbles of water, like cartoon versions of itself. Narcissistic bastard.
âIf we had toilets, the doors would open inwards. Nothing ever changes.â
All right, so I am starting to run out of material.
The warmind raises its weapon slowly. A ripple passes through its eyestalks. I wish it had a face: the stare of its moist forest of orbs is unnerving. Never mind. Itâs going to work this time. I tilt the gun upwards slightly, my body language and wrist movement suggesting the motion I would make if I was going to put up my gun. My every muscle screams cooperation. Come on. Fall for it. Honest. This time, we are going to be friendsâ
A fiery wink: the black pupil of its gun, flashing. My trigger finger jerks. There are two thunderclaps. And a bullet in my head.
You never get used to the feeling of hot metal, entering your skull and exiting through the back of your head. Itâs simulated in glorious detail. A burning train through your forehead, a warm spray of blood and brain on your shoulders and back, the sudden chill â and finally, the black, when things stop. The Archons of the Dilemma Prison want you to feel it. Itâs educational.
The Prison is all about education. And game theory: the mathematics of rational decision-making. When you are an immortal mind like the Archons, you have time to be obsessed with such things. And it is just like the Sobornost â the upload collective that rules the Inner Solar System â to put them in charge of their prisons.
We play the same game over and over again, in different forms. An archetypal game beloved by economists and mathematicians. Sometimes itâs chicken: we are racers on an endless highway, driving at each other at high speeds, deciding whether or not to turn away at the last minute. Sometimes we are soldiers trapped in trench warfare, facing each other across no-manâs-land. And sometimes they go back to basics and make us prisoners â old-fashioned prisoners, questioned by hard-eyed men â who have to choose between betrayal and the code of silence. Guns are the flavour of today. Iâm not looking forward to tomorrow.
I snap back to life like a rubber band, blinking. There is a discontinuity in my mind, a rough edge. The Archons change your neural makeup a little bit every time you come back. They claim that eventually Darwinâs whetstone will hone any prisoner into a rehabilitated cooperator.
If they shoot and I donât, Iâm screwed. If we both shoot, it hurts a little. If we cooperate, itâs Christmas for both of us. Except that there is always an incentive to pull the trigger. The theory is that as we meet again and again, cooperative behaviour will emerge.
A few million rounds more and Iâll be a Boy Scout.
Right.
My score after the last game is an ache in my bones. The warmind and I both defected. Two games to go, in this round. Not enough. Damn it.
You capture territory by playing against your neighbours. If, at the end of each round, your score is higher than that of your neighbours, you win, and are rewarded with duplicates of yourself that replace â and erase â the losers around you. Iâm not doing very well today â two double defections so far, both with the warmind â and if I donât turn this around, itâs oblivion for real.
I weigh my options. Two of the squares around mine â left and back â contain copies of the warmind. The one on the right has a woman in it: when I turn to face it, the wall between us vanishes, replaced by the blue line of death.
Her cell is as bare as mine. She is sitting in the middle, hugging her knees, wrapped in a black toga-like garment. I look at her curiously: I havenât seen her before. She has a deeply tanned skin that makes me think of Oort, an almond Asian face and a compact, powerful body. I smile at her and wave. She ignores me. Apparently, the Prison thinks that counts as mutual cooperation: I feel my point score go up a little, warm like a shot of whisky. The glass wall is back between us. Well, that was easy. But still not enough against the warmind.
âHey, loser,â someone says. âSheâs not interested. Better options around.â
There is another me in the remaining cell. He is wearing a white tennis shirt, shorts and oversized mirrorshades, lounging in a deck chair by a swimming pool. He has a book in his lap:Â Le Bouchon de cristal. One of my favorites, too.
âIt got you again,â he says, not bothering to look up. âAgain. What is that, three times in a row now? You should know by now that it always goes for tit-for-tat.â
âI almost got it this time.â
âThat whole false memory of cooperation thing is a good idea,â he says. âExcept, you know, it will never work. The warminds have non-standard occipital lobes, non-sequential dorsal stream. You canât fool it with visual illusions. Too bad the Archons donât give points for effort.â
I blink.
âWait a minute. How do you know that, but I donât?â
âDid you think you are the only le Flambeur in here? Iâve been around. Anyway, you need ten more points to beat it, so get over here and let me help you out.â
âRub it in, smartass.â I walk to the blue line, taking my first relieved breath of this round. He gets up as well, pulling his sleek automatic from beneath the book.
I point a forefinger at him. âBoom boom,â I say. âI cooperate.â
âVery funny,â he says and raises his gun, grinning.
My double reflection in his shades looks small and naked.
âHey. Hey. Weâre in this together, right?â And this is me thinking I had a sense of humor.
âGamblers and high rollers, isnât that who we are?â
Something clicks. Compelling smile, elaborate cell, putting me at ease, reminding me of myself but somehow not quite rightâ
âOh fuck.â
Every prison has its rumours and monsters and this place is no different. I heard this one from a zoku renegade I cooperated with for a while: the legend of the anomaly. The All-Defector. The thing that never cooperates and gets away with it. It found a glitch in the system so that it always appears as you. And if you canât trust yourself, who can you trust?
âOh yes,â says the All-Defector, and pulls the trigger.
At least itâs not the warmind, I think when the bright thunder comes.
And then things stop making sense.
…
Following the release, there will be a number of related items, and articles. Stay tuned.
Cuckoo Song, by Frances Hardinge.
The premise: Triss wakes up not feeling like herself. Her parents assure her that she is just ill, and had fallen in the “grimmer”, but will be all right. Yet the little girl cannot remember important details of her life, and is ravenously hungry all the time, causing her to eat and eat and eat to exhaustion, while never gaining any weight. And her sister claims she isn’t Triss, but a monster tricking them all…
Fascinating book. Gripped me from the start, and sets a claustrophic, paranoid mood. Really great stuff so far.
Added an excerpt from Ăbermensch. It is the entire first chapter, and a perfect introduction to that far future, dystopian, hard science fiction story.
Mistborn: The Final Empire, by Brandon Sanderson
This book is set in an apocolyptic fantasy world, where ash rains from the sky on lands nearly barren. An immortal tyrant, the Lord Ruler, has controlled the Final Empire for a thousand years, crushing any and all dissent. But when a famous thief, Kelsier, escapes a death sentence by escaping the dread prison known as the Pits of Hathsin, and returns bearing the full magical abilities of a Mistborn (rare figures which can increase their strength, speed, senses, and control metals, all through the ingestion of multiple rare metals in a vial of liquid. Mistings only have the ability to do one of those things), and recruits another young Mistborn, the gutterborn Vin, to his aide, a plot is hatched to finally bring the Final Empire down.
As part of their efforts, Vin is tasked with insinuating herself into the nobility, to help bring them down from the inside out. But when she finds out that Elend, a nobleman she has come to love, is threatened with assasination at the nobleman’s ball they are both attending, Vin rushes through the mansion to find him, before it is too late.
âŚ
(pg. 345)
You . . . must . . . give! she thought angrily, flaring her steel. Chips of stone fell around the window.
Then, with a crack of sound, the rose window burst free from the stone wall. It fell backward into the dark night, and Vin shot out behind it.
Cool mist enveloped her. She Pulled slightly against the door inside the room, keeping herself from going out too far, then Pushed mightily against the falling window. The enormous dark-glassed window tumbled beneath her, churning the mists as Vin shot away from it. Straight up, toward the roof.
The window crashed to the ground just as Vin flew up over the edge of the rooftop, her dress fluttering madly in the wind. She landed on the bronze-plated roof with a thump, falling to a crouch. The metal was cool beneath her toes and fingers.
Tin flared, illuminating the night. She could see nothing out of the ordinary.
She burned bronze, using it as Marsh had taught her, searching for signs of Allomancy. There werenât anyâthe assassins had a Smoker with them.
I canât search the entire building! Vin thought, desperately, flaring her bronze. Where are they?
Then, oddly, she thought she sensed something. An Allomantic pulse in the night. Faint. Hidden. But enough.
Vin rose to dash across the rooftop, trusting her instincts. As she ran, she flared pewter and grabbed her dress near the neck, then ripped the garment down the front with a single yank. She pulled her coin pouch and metal vials from a hidden pocket, and thenâstill runningâshe ripped the dress, petticoats, and attached leggings free, tossing it all aside. Her corset and gloves went next. Underneath, she wore a thin, sleeveless white shift and a pair of white shorts.
She dashed frantically. I canât be too late, she thought. Please. I canât.
Figures resolved in the mists ahead. They stood beside an angled rooftop skylight; Vin had passed several similar ones as she ran. One of the figures pointed toward the skylight, a weapon glittering in its hand.
Vin cried out, Pushing herself off the bronze roof in an arcing jump. She landed in the very center of the surprised group of people, then thrust her coin pouch upward, ripping it in two.
Coins sprayed into the air, reflecting light from the window below. As the glistening shower of metal fell around Vin, she Pushed. Coins zipped away from her like a swarm of insects, each one leaving a trail in the mist. Figures cried out as coins hit flesh, and several of the dark forms dropped.
Several did not. Some of the coins snapped away, Pushed aside by invisible Allomantic hands. Four people remained standing: Two of them wore mistcloaks; one of them was familiar.
Shan Elariel. Vin didnât need to see the cloak to understand; there was only one reason a woman as important as Shan would come on an assassination like this. She was a Mistborn.
âYou?â Shan asked in shock. She wore a black outfit of trousers and shirt, her dark hair pulled back, her mistcloak worn almost stylishly.
Two Mistborn, Vin thought. Not good. She scrambled away, ducking as one of the assassins swung a dueling cane at her.
Vin slid across the rooftop, then Pulled herself to a brief halt, spinning with one hand resting against the cold bronze. She reached out and Pulled against the few coins that hadnât escaped out into the night, yanking them back into her hand.
âKill her!â Shan snapped. The two men Vin had felled lay groaning on the rooftop. They werenât dead; in fact, one was climbing unsteadily to his feet.
Thugs, Vin thought. The other two are probably Coinshots.
As if to prove her right, one of the men tried to Push away Vinâs vial of metals. Fortunately, there werenât enough metals in the vial to give him a very good anchor, and she kept hold of it easily.
Shan turned her attention back to the skylight.
No you donât! Vin thought, dashing forward again.
The Coinshot cried out as she approached. Vin flipped a coin and shot it at him. He, of course, Pushed backâbut Vin anchored herself against the bronze roof and flared Steel, Pushing with a firm effort.
The manâs own Steelpushâtransmitted from the coin, to Vin, to the roofâlaunched him out into the air. He cried out, shooting off into the darkness. He was only a Misting, and couldnât Pull himself back to the rooftop.
The other Coinshot tried to spray Vin with coins, but she deflected them with ease. Unfortunately, he wasnât as foolish as his companion, and he released the coins soon after Pushing them. However, it was obvious that he couldnât hit her. Why did he keepâ
The other Mistborn! Vin thought, ducking to a roll as a figure leaped from the dark mists, glass knives flashing in the air.
Vin just barely got out of the way, flaring pewter to give herself balance. She came to her feet beside the wounded Thug, who stood on obviously weak legs. With another flare of pewter, Vin slammed her shoulder into the manâs chest, shoving him to the side.
The man stumbled maladroitly, still holding his bleeding side. Then he tripped and fell right into the skylight. The fine, tinted glass shattered as he fell, and Vinâs tin-enhanced ears could hear cries of surprise from below, followed by a crash as the Thug hit the ground.
Vin looked up, smiling evilly at the stunned Shan. Behind her, the second Mistbornâa manâswore quietly.
âYou . . . You . . .â Shan sputtered, her eyes flaring dangerously with anger in the night.
Take the warning, Elend, Vin thought, and escape. Itâs time for me to go.
She couldnât face two Mistborn at onceâshe couldnât even beat Kelsier most nights. Flaring Steel, Vin launched herself backward. Shan took a step forward andâlooking determinedâPushed herself after Vin. The second Mistborn joined her.
Bloody hell! Vin thought, spinning in the air and Pulling herself to the rooftopâs edge near where she had broken the rose window. Below, figures scrambled about, lanterns brightening the mists. Lord Venture probably thought that the fuss meant his son was dead. He was in for a surprise.
Vin launched herself into the air again, jumping out into the misty void. She could hear the two Mistborn land behind her, then push off as well.
This isnât good, Vin thought with trepidation as she hurled through the misty air currents. She didnât have any coins left, nor did she have daggersâand she faced two trained Mistborn.
She burned iron, searching frantically for an anchor in the night. A line of blue, moving slowly, appeared beneath her to the right.
Vin yanked on the line, changing her trajectory. She shot downward, the Venture grounds wall appearing as a dark shadow beneath her. Her anchor was the breastplate of an unfortunate guard, who lay atop the wall, holding frantically to a tooth in the battlements to keep himself from being pulled up toward Vin.
Vin slammed feet-first into the man, then spun in the misty air, flipping to land on the cool stone. The guard collapsed to the stone, then cried out, desperately grabbing his stone anchor as another Allomantic force Pulled against him.
Sorry, friend, Vin thought, kicking the manâs hand free from the battlement tooth. He immediately snapped upward, yanked into the air as if pulled by a powerful tether.
The sound of bodies colliding sounded from the darkness above, and Vin saw a pair of forms drop limply to the Venture courtyard. Vin smiled, dashing along the wall. I sure hope that was Shan.
Vin jumped up, landing atop the gatehouse. Near the keep, people were scattering, climbing in carriages to flee.
And so the house war starts, Vin thought. Didnât think Iâd be the one to officially begin it.
A figure plummeted toward her from the mists above. Vin cried out, flaring pewter and jumping to the side. Shan landed dexterouslyâmistcloak tassels billowingâatop the gatehouse. She had both daggers out, and her eyes burned with anger.
Vin jumped to the side, rolling off the gatehouse and landing on the walltop below. A pair of guards jumped back in alarm, surprised to see a half-naked girl fall into their midst. Shan dropped to the wall behind them, then Pushed, throwing one of the guards in Vinâs direction.
The man cried out as Vin Pushed against his breastplate as wellâbut he was far heavier than she, and she was thrown backward. She Pulled on the guard to slow herself, and the man crashed down to the walltop. Vin landed lithely beside him, then grabbed his staff as it rolled free from his hand.
Shan attacked in a flash of spinning daggers, and Vin was forced to jump backward again. Sheâs so good! Vin thought with anxiety. Vin herself had barely trained with daggers; now she wished sheâd asked Kelsier for a little more practice. She swung the staff, but sheâd never used one of the weapons before, and her attack was laughable.
Shan slashed, and Vin felt a flare of pain in her cheek as she dodged. She dropped the staff in shock, reaching up to her face and feeling blood. She stumbled back, seeing the smile on Shanâs face.
And then Vin remembered the vial. The one she still carriedâthe one Kelsier had given her.
Atium.
She didnât bother to grab it from the place she had tucked it at her waist. She burned steel, Pushing it out into the air in front of her. Then, she immediately burned iron and yanked on the bead of atium. The vial shattered, the bead heading back toward Vin. She caught it in her mouth, swallowing the lump and forcing it down.
Shan paused. Then, before Vin could do anything, she downed a vial of her own.
Of course she has atium!
But, how much did she have? Kelsier hadnât given Vin muchâonly enough for about thirty seconds. Shan jumped forward, smiling, her long black hair flaring in the air. Vin gritted her teeth. She didnât have much choice.
She burned atium. Immediately, Shanâs form shot forth dozens of phantom atium shadows. It was a Mistborn standoff: The first one who ran out of atium would be vulnerable. You couldnât escape an opponent who knew exactly what you were going to do.
Vin scrambled backward, keeping an eye on Shan. The noblewoman stalked forward, her phantoms forming an insane bubble of translucent motion around her. She seemed calm. Secure.
She has plenty of atium, Vin thought, feeling her own storage burn away. I need to get away.
A shadowy length of wood suddenly shot through Vinâs chest. She ducked to the side just as the real arrowâapparently made with no arrowheadâpassed through the air where she had been standing. She glanced toward the gate-house, where several soldiers were raising bows.
She cursed, glancing to the side, into the mists. As she did so, she caught a smile from Shan.
Sheâs just waiting for my atium to burn out. She wants me to runâshe knows she can chase me down.
There was only one other option: attack.
Shan frowned in surprise as Vin dashed forward, phantom arrows snapping against the stones just before their real counterparts arrived. Vin dodged between two arrowsâher atium enhanced mind knowing exactly how to moveâpassing so close that she could feel the missiles in the air to either side of her.
Shan swung her daggers, and Vin twisted to the side, dodging one slice and blocking the other with her forearm, earning a deep gash. Her own blood flew in the air as she spunâeach droplet tossing out a translucent atium imageâand flared pewter, punching Shan square in the stomach.
Shan grunted in pain, bending slightly, but she didnât fall.
Atiumâs almost gone, Vin thought desperately. Only a few seconds left.
So, she extinguished her atium early, exposing herself.
Shan smiled wickedly, coming up from her crouch, right-hand dagger swinging confidently. She assumed that Vin had run out of atiumâand therefore assumed that she was exposed. Vulnerable.
At that moment, Vin burned her last bit of atium. Shan paused just briefly in confusion, giving Vin an opening as a phantom arrow streaked through the mists overhead.
Vin caught the real arrow as it followedâthe grainy wood burning her fingersâthen rammed it down into Shanâs chest. The shaft snapped in Vinâs hand, leaving about an inch protruding from Shanâs body. The woman stumbled backward, staying on her feet.
Damn pewter, Vin thought, ripping a sword from a sheath beside the unconscious soldier at her feet. She jumped forward, gritting her teeth in determination, and Shanâstill dazedâraised a hand to Push against the sword.
Vin let the weapon goâit was just a distractionâas she slammed the second half of the broken arrow into Shanâs chest just beside its counterpart.
This time, Shan dropped. She tried to rise, but one of the shafts must have done some serious damage to her heart, for her face paled. She struggled for a moment, then fell lifeless to the stones.
Vin stood, breathing deeply as she wiped the blood from her cheekâonly to realize that her bloody arm was just making her face worse. Behind her, the soldiers called out, nocking more arrows.
Vin glanced back toward the keep, bidding farewell to Elend, then Pushed herself out into the night.
…
Making good progress writing the new far future, dystopian, hard science fiction story. There are some great opportunities to expand the scope coming soon. Also: more than halfway through the triple editing pass of the fantasy/myth/fae story.
Will be adding an excerpt from Ăbermensch to that section, shortly.
Halo: The Fall of Reach, by Eric Nylund
This book is set in the 26th century, as a technologically advanced humanity continues to spread throughout the stars. But trouble is brewing, as political dissidents and wayward colonies chafe under UNSC (United Nations Space Command) rule. To combat this undercurrent of rebellion, and prepare for an unstoppable alien threat looming, hidden, on the horizon, gifted children are drafted into a top secret military program with the goal of creating supersoldiers: faster, stronger, and more deadly by far than normal humans.
After intensive training, and surviving the brutal augmentation procedure, the inagaural group of young supersoldiers are set to be put through their paces. Their commanding officer, Chief Mendez, and their creator, Dr. Halsey, now head towards the location of their latest advanced training engagement.
âŚ
(pg. 114)
Mendez drove them off the base and onto winding mountain roads. âReach was first colonized for its rich titanium deposits,â Mendez told her. âThere are mines in these mountains thousands of meters deep. The UNSC uses them for storage.â
âI presume you do not have my Spartans taking inventory today, Chief?â
âNo, maâam. We just need the privacy.â
Mendez drove the Warthog past a manned guardhouse and into a large tunnel that sloped steeply underground.
The road wound down in a spiral, deeper into sold granite. Mendez said, âDo you remember the Navyâs first experiments with powered exoskeletons?â
âIâm not sure I see the connection between this place, my Spartans, and the exoskeleton projects,â Dr. Halsey replied, frowning, âbut Iâll play along a bit further. Yes, I know all about the Mark I prototypes. We had to scrap the concept and redesign battle armor from the ground up for the MJOLNIR project. The Mark Is consumed enormous energy. Either they had to be plugged into a generator or use inefficient broadcast powerâneither option is practical on a battlefield.â
Mendez decelerated slightly as he approached a speed bump. The Warthogâs massive tires thudded over the obstacle.
âThey used the units that werenât scrapped,â Dr. Halsey continued, âas dock loaders to move heavy equipment.â She cocked one eyebrow. âOr might they have been dumped in a place like this?â
âThere are dozens of the suits here.â
âYou havenât put my Spartans in some of those antiques?â
âNo. Their trainers are using them for their own safety,â Mendez replied. âWhen the Spartans recovered from microgravity therapy, they were eager to get back to their routine. However, we experienced some ââ He paused, searching for the right word. â . . . difficulties.â
He glanced at his passenger. His face was grim. âTheir first day back, three trainers were accidentally killed during hand-to-hand combat exercises.â
Dr. Halsey cocked an eyebrow. âThen they are faster and stronger than we anticipated?â
âThat,â Mendez replied, âwould be understating the situation.â
The tunnel opened into a large cavern. There were lights scattered on the walls, overhead a hundred meters up on the ceiling, and along the floor, but they did little to dissipate the overwhelming darkness.
Mendez parked the Warthog next to a small, prefabricated building. He jumped out and helped Dr. Halsey step from the vehicle. âThis way, please.â Mendez gestured to the room. âWeâll have a better view from inside.â
The building had three glass walls and several monitors marked MOTION, INFRARED, DOPPLER, and PASSIVE. Mendez pushed a button and the room climbed a track along the wall until they were twenty meters off the floor.
Mendez keyed a microphone and spoke: âLights.â
Floodlights snapped on and illuminated a section of the cavern the size of a football field. In the center stood a concrete bunker. Three men in the primitive Mark I power armor stood on top. Six more stood evenly spaced around the perimeter. A red banner had been planted in the center of the bunker.
âCapture the flag?â Dr. Halsey asked. âPast all that heavy armor?â
âYes. The trainers in those exoskeletons can run at thirty-two KPH, lift two tons, and have a thirty-millimeter minigun mounted on self-targeting armaturesâstun rounds, of course. Theyâre also equipped with the latest motion sensors and IR scopes. And needless to say, their armor is impervious to standard light weapons. It would take two or three platoons of conventional Marines to take that bunker.â
Mendez spoke again in the microphone, and his voice echoed off the cavern walls: âStart the drill.â
Sixty seconds ticked by. Nothing happened. One hundred twenty seconds. âWhere are the Spartans?â Dr. Halsey asked.
âTheyâre here,â Mendez replied. Dr. Halsey caught a glimpse of motion in the dark: a shadow against shadows, a familiar silhouette.
âKelly?â she whispered.
The trainers turned and fired at the shadow, but it moved with almost supernatural quickness. Even the self-targeting systems couldnât track it.
From above, a man free-rappelled down from the girders and gantries overhead. The newcomer landed behind one of the perimeter guards, quiet as a cat. He punched the guardâs armor twice, denting the heavy plates, then dropped low and swept the targetâs legs out from under him. The guard sprawled on the ground.
The Spartan attached his rappelling line to the trainer. A moment later the writhing guard shot upward, into the darkness.
Two other guards turned to attack.
The Spartan dodged, rolled, and melted into the shadows.
Dr. Halsey realized the trainerâs exoskeleton wasnât being pulled upâit was being used as a counterweight.
Two more Spartans, dangling from the other end of that rope, dropped unnoticed into the center of the bunker. Dr. Halsey immediately recognized one of them, although he was dressed entirely in black, save his open eye slitsâNumber 117. John.
John landed, braced, and kicked one guard. The man landed in a heap . . . eight meters away. The other Spartan jumped off the bunker; he flipped end over end, evading the stun rounds that filled the air. He threw himself at the farthest guard and they skidded together into the shadows. The guardâs gun strobed once, and then it was dark again. On top of the bunker, John was a blur of slashing motions. A second guardâs exosuit erupted in a fountain of hydraulic fluid and then collapsed under the armorâs weight.
The last guard on the bunker turned to fire at John. Halsey gripped the edge of her chair. âHeâs at point blank range! Even stun rounds can kill at that distance!â
As the guardâs gun fired, John sidestepped. The stun rounds slashed through the air, a clean miss. John grabbed the weaponâs armatureâtwistedâand with a screech of stressed metal, wrenched it free of the exoskeleton. He fired directly into the manâs chest and sent him tumbling off the bunker. The remaining quartet of perimeter guards turned and sprayed the area with suppression fire. A heartbeat later, the lights went out. Mendez cursed and keyed the mike. âBackups. Hit the backup lights now!â
A dozen amber floods flickered to life. Not a Spartan was in sight, but the nine trainers were either unconscious or lay immobile in inert battle armor.
The red flag was gone. âShow me that again,â Dr. Halsey said unbelievingly. âYou recorded all that, didnât you?â âOf course.â Mendez tapped a button but the monitors played backâstatic. âDamn it. They got to the cameras, too,â he muttered, impressed. âEvery time we find a new place to hide them, they disable the recording devices.â Dr. Halsey leaned against the glass wall staring at the carnage below. âVery well, Chief Mendez, what else do I need to know?â
âYour Spartans can run at bursts of up to fifty-five KPH,â he explained. âKelly can run a little faster, I think. They will only get quicker as they adjust to the âalterationsâ weâve made to their bodies. They can lift three times their body weightâwhich, I might add, is almost double the norm due to their increased muscle density. And they can virtually see in the dark.â
Dr. Halsey pondered this new data. âThey should not be performing so well. There must be unexplained synergistic effects brought on by the combined modifications. What are their reaction times?â
âAlmost impossible to chart. We estimate it at twenty milliseconds,â Mendez replied. He shook his head, then added, âI believe itâs significantly faster in combat situations, when their adrenaline is pumping.â
âAny physiological or mental instabilities?â
âNone. They work like no team Iâve ever seen before. Damn near telepathic, if you ask me. They were dropped in these caves yesterday, and I donât know where they got black suits or the rope that for that maneuver, but I can guarantee they havenât left this room. They improvise and improve and adapt.
âAnd,â he added, âtheylike it. The tougher the challenge, the harder the fight . . . the better their morale becomes.â
Dr. Halsey watched as the first trainer stirred and struggled to get out of his inert armor. âThey might as well have been killed,â she murmured. âBut can the Spartans kill, Chief? Kill on purpose? Are they ready for real combat?â
Mendez looked away and paused before he spoke. âYes. If we ordered them to, they would kill quite efficiently.â His body stiffened. âMay I ask what âreal combatâ you mean, maâam?â
She clasped her hands and wrung them nervously. âSomething has happened, Chief. Something ONI and the Admiralty never expected. The brass wants to deploy the Spartans. They want to test them in a real combat mission.â
âTheyâre as ready for that as I can make them,â Mendez said. He narrowed his dark eyes. âBut this is far ahead of your schedule. What happened? Iâve heard rumors there was some heavy action near Harvest colony.â
âYour rumors are out-of-date, Chief,â she said, and a chill crept into her voice. âThereâs no more fighting at Harvest. There is no more Harvest.â
Dr. Halsey punched the descent button, and the observation room slowly lowered to the floor.
âGet them out of this hole,â she said crisply. âI want them ready to muster at 0400. We have a briefing at 0600 tomorrow aboard the Pioneer . Weâre taking them on a mission ONI has been saving for the right crew and the right time. This is it.â
âYes, maâam,â Mendez replied.
âTomorrow we see if all the pain theyâve been through has been worth it.â
…
The Three-Body Problem, by Cixin Liu.
The premise: All over the world, leaders in various scientific fields are dying under mysterious circumstances. In China, two scientists, Ye Wenjie and Wang Miao, are at the center of a conspiracy that goes beyond human understanding, facing off against an inscrutable alien intelligence that has already displayed the incalculable power, flickering the cosmic background radiation of the universe just to serve a warning. But it may be in a virtual reality game, called Three Body, that the first answers to what is truly at stake might be found.
I am interested, but unsure. The opening, set during the Chinese Communist Revolution, was riveting. Then it meandered somewhat, but the action picked up as soon as Wang Miao gets into the virtual reality game Three Body. He just figured out why the game alternates between Chaotic Era’s where the sun rises and sets without rythmn (freezing or burning the world to death) and Stable Era’s which follow cyclical rules like our own. I can’t wait to find out what happens next đ