The Reclaimed
By Eli Wilkinson
From
the Journals of Dr. Wilhelm Cushing, Director of Science, New Arcadia
Department of Research and Development. 2634 C.E. (estimated date)
On the day that the world fell
And splintered went our moon
The plants burned as if in hell
And all exposed smelled doom
Survived did we the lucky few
Deep under the rock falls reach
Until the Lord did make us new
And took us to the beach
For arise, arise New Arcadia Brave
The people need us strong
We build over what was our grave
To lead a world gone wrong
Celia Cushing (Age:
12)
*Note:
Talk to her about the dangers of blind Patriotism.
Chapter
1
“It’s been
seven months…” Vice Chairman William Lawrence bemoaned as his gaze rolled up to
look at the splintered Moon.
“Our
records indicate that the base was subterranean even before the calamity, Sir.
It will take some time to find the correct chamber.” A nearby researcher piped
in. An uneasy silence settled in as everyone on the hill could tell that
William was not amused for he knew that this was his reality and he didn’t need
some sniveling little scientist correcting his every gripe. It didn’t take a genius to know that William would
rather be at the front lines with his troops but the cease fire his father
agreed on with the neighboring city states meant his talents were required
elsewhere. William was not much of a scientist, nor did he particularly like
their presence, but one thing William excelled at was achieving results. Many an
archeologist met his wrath and was sent packing back to the
Silhouetted by
the late summer sun the drones marched in perfect rows of four, tools in hand,
mindlessly trudging down the dilapidated road of a civilization long gone. Sunset
is quickly drawing closer and soon the day shift drones would be put to rest
and recharge. Replaced by a horde of new unfortunate souls who had lost their
lives and now even in death have lost their liberty. The control unit around
their necks makes sure of that. The last thing many enemy soldiers have seen is
the vast red glow of the drone's cloaks overtaking them like a wild fire.
William
found comfort in watching the waves of glowing lights march at his whim from
atop the hill where he placed his headquarters. He personally disliked the
grotesque appearance of the Class C worker drones. Many of whom were patched
together from various parts of people and in some cases in lieu of hands,
having tools or weapons grafted directly to the flesh and bone. The Vice
Chairman much preferred the Class A drones like his assistant, CK-253, who
hardly had any scars and possessed some limited vocal capabilities. Privately,
he also appreciates the presence of his pleasure drone, known only as BB, who
fulfills his needs whenever he desires. For it had been 3 years since the
passing of his wife Caroline and though he planned to someday remarry, his
responsibilities recovering technology of the world before the calamity occupied
him too much to truly give it much thought.
What
did constantly run through his mind was the relief knowing the control unit
also prohibited the drone from remembering their past lives. For if they did
remember, surely the drones would never willingly endure the demands put on
them. It was no secret that the drones had become the backbone of the
City-State. Because of them there was no need for a class of working poor.
Every living child got the best education and every adult a position of leisure
or management. Even here, almost 400 miles from the grand city, very few living
adults were required to work. Those who did were only there to ensure the
drones stayed on task, managed recharging stations, or were merely there to
transport damaged drones back to the main drone manufacturing facility on the
west shore of the
Normally
a shift change was hardly a reason for the Vice Chairman to inspect the workers
but today is a special day, for a new batch of new and improved worker drones
had arrived on the Battle Hawk, a massive armored airship of steel and gas. Its
massive steam powered propellers hissing as hundreds of drones marched out of
the main hangar and towards the dig site. These drones came directly from
science director Dr. Wilhelm Cushing and were rumored to be intellectually
superior and more durable, capable of working days without recharge. Soon all drones would receive the same
upgrade, a move that Vice Chair Lawrence was uneasy about. It isn’t that he
didn’t trust Dr. Cushing, for it was his work that allowed the creation of the
drone army in the first place. But such an improvement could temporarily
interrupt progress and not to mention the bleeding heart liberals back in the
city would soon start to debate the morality of their usage with the drones
becoming more and more like the living.
“What’s next,
CK? Soon these drones will need to eat and sleep like the living. Can you
imagine that? The cost of that?! Where do we draw the line? A slave is a slave
and that’s all they should ever be. Don’t you agree?”
“Don’t give me
that look. You know damn well what I am talking about.” He laughs. “I forget
sometimes that you are one of them. Just a bunch of bells and whistles grafted
onto a carcass. An empty shell of the woman you used to be. A shame really, you
used to have such fire about you. Maybe after the upgrade my father ordered,
you will truly understand me. Come. We are going to the excavation site to
check out the new wares.”
“Yes, sir.” Her only response. She had understood his words, but something stopped her from responding. The more she dwelled on it; the only word that came to mind was “sadness”, whatever that meant.
“The Chairman wants a report by days
end, Gentlemen. Please tell me you have got something good for me. Lives are at
stake.” The Vice Chairman busts out as he approaches the site foreman and his
archeological consultant.
“Some aircraft parts. It’s a metal
alloy we’re not familiar with. Lighter weight and absorbs radio signals. Figure
there is 4 or 5 old beat up birds under there.” Replied the Foreman.
“We able to reverse engineer them?
Any fully salvageable?” The Vice Chair was quick to hop on the subject.
“And fuel them with what? Corn gas? Steam?
These birds are parts. Just stealth metal and rusted junk we wouldn’t know what
it was for.” This was clearly not the answer the Foreman wanted to give the
Vice Chairman but he was an honest man trying his best.
“And any sign of the weapon?” The
Vice Chair diverted towards the consultant.
“No sir. The aircraft are proof we
are near where we want to dig. But an old base like this could have tunnels and
underground bunkers. There is no telling where to dig. One would think the
aircraft could transport what you are looking for. If we broaden the dig from
this spot we may yet find a service tunnel or clue.” The Archeologist answered.
“Fine, do it. I’m not happy
gentlemen. If you can’t do it, I will find someone who will. We wouldn’t want
your children to be transferred to the remedial schools, would we?” The Vice
Chairman turned away and began to walk down towards the hard working drones
further down the hill. “Results or reassignment!”
The two men who had made significant
progress could do nothing but shrug and sigh. Each knew that it would take a
miracle to please their boss and like many before them reassignment seemed a
forgone conclusion. “I wish he had something better to do.” The Foreman
conceded.
“Agreed. I’d give my left foot for a
map right about now.” The Archeologist slinked away, massaging the back of his
head and nearly getting run over by the large cart of rock being pushed up the
hill.
“Keep
your head up! They don’t say sorry when they run you over!” The Foreman laughed
to himself as he began redirecting his drone assistants. “Fire up the lights,
get the torches and cut these aircraft down into reasonable pieces and send
these to R&D immediately. Also alert the crew down the hill that they are
about to get company.”
“Report!” The Vice Chairman belts
out as he trots into the lowest and largest of the dig sites.
“Ah Vice Chairman, I am pleased to
report that the new drones are working at peak efficiency. They work harder,
dig faster, and hate to sound amusing here, but honestly, they smell better
too.” A lesser Lieutenant pipes in as he emerges from his tent, a warm drink in
hand.
“I did not ask for the olfactory report
but I would agree.” The Vice Chairman laughs briefly before remembering his
place and drawing a serious tone once more. “I meant report on recovery
progress.”
“Well the previous shift just
uncovered access to a large ammunition and weapons cache. The current shift is
working to open the bunker for full recovery. We estimate that there are
hundreds of side arms and rifles in there. But we have to dig cautiously as
some small explosives were also discovered. We would not want to set off the
entire bunker and waste everything.”
“And large explosives?” The Vice
Chairman asks as his eyes drift down to the workers removing the large sections
of stone and dirt.
“Negative. I can’t imagine them being kept this close to
the surface.” The over confident Lieutenant takes a long sip of his beverage as
he turns back to the workers.
Not ten yards off a large, physically imposing
drone stops working and stands up straight to listen.
“And why is that, Lieutenant?”
“Well, Sir, if something was to
happen and a large explosive were to go off, it would be better contained
deeper in the bedrock. Less likely to start a chain reaction with the other
weapons bunkers. Can you imagine all the rockets for them beat up aircraft
going off at the same time? This place would be a crater. But I am sure your
experts have pointed this out by now.”
“Point well taken, Lieutenant. And
yes, they have in their own way. I just wanted to see if you could tell it to
me straight. Do you have a name?”
“
“Not anymore. Report to day shift
day after tomorrow. I reward loyalty and results Lieutenant Danbury, 1st
Class.” The Vice Chairman offers his hand.
“Thank you, Sir!”
“YOU THERE! DRONE! GET BACK TO
WORK!”
A moment of dead air as everyone
turns to the now furious Vice Chairman. “Did you not hear me, Drone?! Back to
work!”
“…No…” A deep familiar voice creaks
out of the silence.
“
“IM-234 a class B labor drone.
Arrived today on the Battle Hawk.”
“Since when can class B drones
speak? I think we have a spy amongst us!” A telescoping rod unclips from the
Vice Chairman’s belt as he marches right up to drone who still keeps his back
to the officers. It crackles with an electric snap as it flips out to full
length. "Speak. Who are you?"
"Who... are... I? No..."
IM-234 looks down quizzically as if the answer is at the tip of his tongue but
the answer eludes him. His eyes dance as his mind pictures fragments of thought
as if in a haze.
"I demand an answer. That is an
order!" The rod now rests just millimeters from the back of IM-234's
skull. Wisps of electricity dancing over the probes end as the now impatient
Vice Chairman begins to tremor with rage.
One.
Two.
Three.
ZAP! Followed by another. Followed by
another as the crackling echoes through the dig site. IM-234's electrified
muscles are forced to contract and before long the large figure is down on the
ground twitched in agony as the Vice Chairman lays in a fourth and fifth. CK
watches from up the hill with familiarity and pity for the newly minted Drone.
It is not the first time she has watched the Vice Chairmen get off to agonizing
a poor defenseless drone but this time, the drone screamed back in pain, much
like her and her Class A brethren. She could see it in William’s face that he
wasn't finished yet as he gleefully went in for the final ZAP. This one was
personal as the probe end stayed firm on the middle of the spine leaving IM-234's
arms and legs desperately trying to ground themselves and not flail about.
It was then that something happened
that the Vice Chairman hadn’t accounted for. Instead of succumbing to the pain
that was so joyfully exerted onto him, IM-234 used it to focus his mind. Images
of what was didn’t matter right now, survival did, freedom more so. Fighting
the pain a fist rises up to the control unit, then the other. Feeling his fists
clench tighter and tighter with each shock the units casing began to bend, then
break at the seams. A spark and the red light went out. What was once a distant
thought seemed clear. Actions that were once forced became natural.
"STOP!!!" The echoing
scream bursts from IM as his fists pound down and dig in firm and he rises to
his hands and knees. The probe end deactivates.
"Who sent you? The Louisians? The
Federalists? The Plainspeople? Who?" The Vice Chairman now holding the
probe end in the sight of the still hooded, still slouched over figure.
"I used to call myself plains
person. Long ago. Before the war. Before the nightmare began." Now sitting
up IM-234 finally sees with awoken eyes the disturbing nature of his current
state of being. "My God, my arm. This is not my arm. Where is my arm!? And
this leg... What am I? WHO am I?"
"Good question." Violently
grabbing the hood of the beaten down drone the Vice Chairman flings him
upright. IM-234's once respectable and handsome face comes into clear view.
Minus the scar across the eye, that had been replaced, the drone looked the
same as the day the Vice Chairman killed the man who became the drone. His
expression of shock, recognition, and dismay that such a man had been reclaimed
was evident to
"You... What have you done to
me now?!" IM-234 demands as he struggles with all his might to rise to his
feet.
"Stay down, General. I don't
want to have to embarrass you again. They should have let you rot in that field.
Tell me, did you meet your God?" William draws near while still keeping
the probe dangerously close to his prisoners face.
"I wouldn't know. You're men
were too eager to gather up the pieces. They needed a real man in this army.
Not a coward like you." A failed attempt to spit on the Vice Chairman brought
William's electro rod down to his side with a chuckle. IM-234 could see from
the corners of his eyes that the Vice Chairman's guards had arrived and several
weapons were now fixed on him.
"So you remember all the
details then?"
"I remember you crashing one of
your aircraft into my base while not abiding by the rules of combat. Then
mowing down those of us who survived."
"It was pilot error on a
routine reconnaissance mission. At least that's what the report says. You see
it is harder to prove any such violations if every witness is dead. My men
already were. Yours, well I... I guess I could say they are my men now. If
you're here then surely they all got put into circulation."
"You bastard! Those men and
women had families!" Even with a strong gesture up to his feet, IM could
hear the clutching of the rifles aimed his way.
"Not after I got done with the
town. I told you. No witnesses. Don't worry in the 2 years since, the place is
prosperous. It is actually the 2nd largest producer of corn for New Arcadia.
Not to bother you with the details. You could have prospered with us had you
just joined with us."
"We would rather die than be
subservient to you."
"And you would be correct. This
tells me your memory recall is not just limited to the moment before I put a
slug in that pretty eye of yours. Interesting. Now the real question, are you
an outlier?" Now overly confident with his personal guard now present, he
circles IM inspecting every scar and nuanced movement by the weakened drone.
"I should destroy you right now and every fiber of my being wishes nothing
more than to watch you burn. But you have information I now need. Is this some
new Plainspeople tactic or… something else? Huh."
"If you don't destroy me now, I
will be the last thing you ever see."
"Don't worry. Your time will
come. Sooner than later. Sentries!" A flick of a wrist and a point of a
finger and IM-234 was bound and being dragged up the hill towards the Battle
Hawk, struggling the whole way. "
"Yes, Sir?" The young
Lieutenant snapped to the Vice Chairman's side.
"Monitor all the new drones.
Report to my office in New Arcadia if you find any further defectives."
"Will do, Sir." A salute
and nod later and the now 1st Class Lieutenant was already down the hill,
getting the observing drones back to work. While in their nature to work when
commanded, the fact they stopped showed a window of individuality to these
drones. A fact the young officer was sure was going to lead to further issues.
"Show times over folks. Back to the dig!" The best he could muster.
The drone’s hesitation was not lost
on the Vice Chairman either. He did not envy his new loyal Lieutenant, should
there be an uprising of any sort the good man would the first in harms way. Not
that it really bothered him though. He signed up for it and everyone has their
time, he thought. And it wasn't like anyone in this society went to waste.
"Foreman! I am taking the
Battle Hawk back to
"Yes sir." All the foreman
could muster in disbelief and quiet relief as the Vice Chairman, CK, and his
bodyguards vanished up the hill and into the hanger of the massive airship.
“You asked for a miracle.” The
archeologist mused. “How’s that for a distraction?”
“It bought us a couple days. But I
share his concern. We should keep the old drones working as well. Just incase.”
The Foreman ordered.
“Agreed. A drone with a soul… today certainly hasn’t
been boring.” The archeologist takes a swig from his flask, offering it to the
foreman who takes it and makes it a double.
“Hardly the word I would use.” The
Foreman closes his tent flap and vanishes into his schematics.
Suddenly, the loud hiss of the
Battle Hawk’s steam powered propellers floods the dig site, the gusts blowing
open tent flaps, sending loose papers (including the foreman’s schematics much
to his chagrin) flying. Before long the
massive ship had risen off the rocky terrain and headed off away from the now
settled sun. The loud drumming of its steam engines fading into the distance as
the