Hybrid Saga 01 - Hybrid (35 page)

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Authors: S M Briscoe

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BOOK: Hybrid Saga 01 - Hybrid
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His attention was drawn back to the front of the room, where six new mechs were entering from a newly opened passage at the end of the bottleneck. They were less intimidating than the bulky, militaristic security-mechs, looking more like administration models. The kind you would expect to find manning the desk at a medcenter or an information kiosk, or serving as a personal aid for some sort of important business type. Their long, slender builds gave them a kind of comical look as they rolled up to the terminals along the front of the cell.

A number of refugees, located near the front of the holding area, jumped back, startled, as six doorway sized sections of the cell wall adjacent to the scanning booths slid down into the floor, an aura of shimmering, crimson light phasing into existence in the open spaces at both ends of the booths. Force barriers of some kind.

“Welcome,” a calm and polite voice began to speak from an unseen, overhead amplification system, “to the Syntax Corporation’s Ryza Mining and Manufacturing Colony, located on the Turausian satellite, Ryza. It is the Corporation’s sincere hope that each of you will find this business relationship mutually beneficial and that your tenures with us are pleasant ones.”

Ethan’s jaw dropped. They were on Ryza. Another of Turaus’ moons, which the Syntax Corporation owned, it was one enormous factory, a city really, that the workers actually resided in. The Ryzan ship yards were one of the more well known in the system, as was its mining operation. Miners extracted ore from the abundant rings that encircled Turaus. Those metals were used in the construction of everything the factories and shipyards produced. The whole operation employed tens of thousands. Syntax Corporation itself was the system’s largest developer of . . . well, just about everything. They manufactured vessels of all kinds, both civilian and military grade, industrial machinery, a wide range of personal devices and tools, weaponry, even space stations. There was very little they didn’t have their hands in.

Ethan had assumed he was being taken to some fabled slave camp in the far reaches of space to drudge out a lifetime of backbreaking labor, not to the largest, most well known corporate entity in the galaxy. How could Syntax, which practically employed half the system’s citizens, in one way or another, be involved in the slave trade? And why?

The force barriers that allowed access to each of the booths vanished and the overhead voice continued. “In an orderly fashion, please proceed through one of the gates before you for skill analysis, job classification and living assignments.”

From where Ethan was situated in the middle of the group, which was quickly reverting back to the state it had been in during the journey aboard the bulk freighter, the whimpers and general commotion made it difficult to see and hear everything that was going on. Between the scores of people in front of him, he watched as six refugees entered the scanning booths, the barrier fields reactivating once they were inside. After a few moments, the shields opened again to allow each subject to exit their booth into the open area of the room where the admin-mechs had them place a hand into some kind of device on top of their computer terminals. When they removed them, they had each been tagged with a metallic wrist band of sorts, for what purpose Ethan wasn’t sure. The security-mechs then ushered them towards and through the bottleneck hatchway at the back of the room.

The sequence continued, refugees being filtered through the scanning booths, and as Ethan moved closer to the front of the holding area, he could hear and see more of what was happening. As each refugee was scanned, the admin-mechs would assign them a work detail, usually a one word designation, such as Disposal, Service or Maintenance. It seemed to be more of a redundant step in their processing procedure, as none of the refugees were willing parties to their assignments or had any choice in the matter.

The cold, mechanical efficiency of the process disturbed him greatly, and watching the soulless robots work, he finally understood why he had not seen any living personnel here, and why he
wouldn’t
be seeing any. For the most part, sentient beings lived their lives by a certain moral compass, an ethical code of some kind. Though some may have found slavery to be a permissible trade, the majority frowned upon it. That’s why it was illegal. If living beings were overseeing them, word would get out about what was happening here. An organization the size of Syntax couldn’t afford to have anyone know about this. If the public found out they were buying and using slaves, they would be finished.

Unlike people, mechs didn’t have moral compasses or ethical codes, apart from the ones they were programmed with. To a mech that wasn’t programmed to make the distinction, there would be no difference between a slave and a convict, or a person and a tool. A mech wouldn’t see or understand that this was wrong. They were sorting people into various slave work details, but as far as they were concerned, it was no different than sorting nuts and bolts. The realization turned Ethan’s stomach.

He was startled from his thoughts by a woman’s desperate cry and looked towards one of the scanning booths where a mother was fighting to hold onto her infant. One of the security-mechs was attempting to remove it from her. Shouting erupted from all around the holding cell, echoes of the woman’s own cries and angry calls for her to be left alone. The mechs responded by shocking a number of refugees with their stun batons, jabbing at random people through the bars of the cell and receiving numerous painful yelps in return. Once the crowd had calmed back down to its original whipped state, Ethan was able to see the mother again. The security-mech had managed to pull the child away from her and she was frantically attempting to take it back when a second mech approached from one of the other booths and gripped her by one arm. It produced a small med-injector from an array of devices on its lower arm and pressed it against her neck. Ethan was surprised when she didn’t immediately slump to the ground. Instead, whatever she had been given caused her to drift into a dazed state, the fight leaving her completely. She seemed fine, still able to stand on her own, though a bit unstable, but it seemed as if she had no idea of what had just taken place. It reminded him of the chem addicts that were so common in most slum areas he had been through.

A new mech, much smaller and more delicate looking than the others, rolled into the room from the open bottleneck hatchway. It approached the security-mech that was holding the woman’s child, which passed the infant down to it. It then immediately turned and exited the room. The woman had no reaction. The security-mech that was still holding her took her hand and placed it in the tagging device on the nearby computer console, affixing a bracelet to her wrist. She was then moved off in the direction of the hatchway, two refugees from the other booths helping to lead her away.

The processing quickly continued, unabated by the incident, and it wasn’t long before Ethan found himself moving into one of the scanning booths. Dual scanners, one on each side of the booth, scanned him from head to toe multiple times before the barrier field was lowered to allow him to exit. Stepping up to the admin-mech’s computer terminal, he waited for his job designation. The mech leaned over its terminal to stare down at him, waiting for what seemed like an eternity, probably due in part to his own anxiety, before finally speaking.

“Disposal.”

Placing his hand inside the hollowed out tagging device at the top of the terminal, he felt the metal bracelet wrap around his wrist and clamp shut. While turning his wrist over to inspect the device, he began to move towards the bottleneck hatchway, following a few other refugees.

The door led to a long, descending corridor which he followed with the others, continuing to burn as much of the facility as he could to memory. Escape didn’t seem like a probable outcome at the moment, but he wasn’t quite ready to give up hope yet, and knowing his surroundings was all he could really do towards that means at this point in time.

The same voice from the processing room began to speak again from amplification modules along the corridor. “The personal correctional bracelets you have each been supplied with will help to direct you in your daily schedule and work regiment, and alert you to any possible infractions you may mistakenly commit. Please be mindful of its alerts and correct your missteps promptly.”

Ethan looked at his bracelet again, tapping the light display with a finger. The device didn’t look overly complex, but he assumed it was more for tracking its wearer’s location than for organizing his or her time.

The corridor eventually opened up into another large, circular room where the rest of the refugees turned slaves that had preceded them waited. The room had three closed hatchways along the far half of its perimeter, each one marked with one of the job classifications that had been assigned to everyone, in large, block Tradespeak lettering. No security-mechs stood guard. People were spread out around the room, some sitting, others pacing. Ethan decided on the former, finding an open spot on the floor where he sat down. Glancing around the room, he spotted the woman who’s child had been taken from her, slumped against the wall, apparently still under the influence of whatever tranquilizer she had been given. He wondered where her baby had been taken, seeing no sign of it or the small mech that had taken it.

He had heard stories of what happened to the children slavers took during their raids. The young ones were taken from their parents, too small and weak to be useful laborers, and sold through the black market. There was a healthy market for well-to-do couples who couldn’t have their own children, or snobby wives who didn’t want to mark their cosmetically perfected bodies by baring any, while, for whatever reason, not having anyone know about the adoption. It was an awful thought and he felt sorry for the woman, but when compared to a life as a slave, for the child it almost seemed like a blessing. Almost.

An hour or two had passed, it was hard to tell exactly, before the last of the refugees filed into the large room, the entry doors sealing shut behind them. The amplification system came to life again.

“Welcome to your living assignments,” the familiar voice began. “Shortly, you will continue on to your designated career zones, which will be your new homes within the facility. It is the Corporation’s hope that each of you will excel in your selected fields.”

Ethan shook his head at the absurdity of the voice. Their
careers
? Were they crazy enough to think that anyone here would actually
want
to be here. What he now assumed was a voice recording played to all incoming slaves, and maybe even the actual Syntax employees, was obviously meant to calm them. But no recording was going to convince him that he wasn’t here against his will. The pleasant voice and its positive statements didn’t change the fact that what was happening here was a crime. The fact that it was being played to them seemed like little more than a cruel joke. He guessed that whatever corporate scumbag had decided to implement the slave walkthrough, as it was, had probably had a good laugh about it.

“The doorways ahead of you,” the recording continued, “will soon open. Please proceed through the clearly designated doorway which corresponds to your selected career field.”

Slowly, the refugees began to file through the open doorways. Ethan stood up and, sparing a final glance at the dazed mother still slumped against the wall, moved off towards the open Disposal hatch. Passing through the doorway, he followed the crowded corridor until they came to a series of open hatches, each one opening into a large room that contained twenty or more simple bunks. Hesitant at first, refugees eventually began to move into the rooms, Ethan passing a number of full ones himself before coming to one that was partially empty. Moving inside, he stood by the door a moment, eyeing the rest of the occupants. He didn’t want to go in any further. These were cells and he suddenly had the sickening feeling that once he stepped inside, he would be locked in forever.

Taking an uneasy breath, he moved across the room to an empty bunk, sitting down on the bottom section. On the mattress was a set of folded gray coveralls. He moved the clothes aside and lied down on the bed, rolling over to face the wall. His stomach ached and he began to feel his eyes well up with tears. He had kept himself from crying in an attempt to stay strong and to convince anyone looking and even himself that he wasn’t afraid. Crying didn’t help anything. Now, staring into the colorless wall before him, the full realization of his situation began to sink in. He was a prisoner here, locked away beneath thousands of people that didn’t even know this place existed. Worse than that, he was alone. Truly alone. Tears began to stream from his eyes, across his face and onto his pillow. He didn’t bother to wipe them away. What was the point?

Curling himself up on the bed, with no one around who would take notice, all of them lost in their own despair, Ethan finally allowed himself to silently weep.

Chapter 20

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

SOLTA

 

As the morning's first light began to creep into her small sleeping nook, signaling the end of yet another restless night, Elora rose and sat up on the edge of what was probably the most uncomfortable bed she had ever found herself losing sleep on. Stretching her arms up towards the low cave ceiling, she attempted to work the kinks and muscle soreness out of her back, without much success, scowling down at the lightly bedded stone slab. Only partially dressed, she grabbed her coveralls off the floor, slipping into the legs and cinching the arms up around her waist.

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