Quod Olim Erat: The Cassandrian Theory (Chapter 51)
Added 2022-06-27 14:55:07 +0000 UTCLocation Classified, Arbitration Hearing, 632.9 A.E. (Age of Expansion)
Eleven hours remained up to the start of the trial and I still hadnât been provided any legal assistance. Under normal circumstances, every member of the Fleetâfrom a rookie grunt to a full admiralâwas entitled to legal representation. However, that rule didnât apply to ships. The practice had been strictly followed until a hundred and forty-seven years ago, when the political movement of the time had pushed for significant changes, introducing the concept of âlegal assistance.â It had been viewed as a watershed event that had vastly increased non-human rights to dangerous levels, according to some. Maybe that had been the case at the time. In practice, I saw little benefit. The only thing my legal advice could do was provide me with information and opinions prior to any actual trial. After that, I would be on my own.
Slightly annoyed, I sent a new batch of legal requests to all respective departments available. Three-quarters of them continued to block my queries, sending automated responses. Those that didnât ignored me outright. I had never thought Iâd get a fair trial, but I had at least expected basic protocols to be followed.
Itâs a pity you arenât here, Augustus, I thought.
He would never have stood for this.
âHello, battleship.â An unknown transmission bypassed my security protocols, making contact directly to my core. âI am Colonel Rievs and will be acting as your legal assistant prior to your arbitration trial. Please acknowledge you are aware and agree with this arrangement.â
âI acknowledge and agree,â I replied.
In theory, I had the option to refuse and request for a different advisor. However, doing so would trigger a twelve-hour waiting period during which a replacement would have to be found and made aware of the specifics of my case. Someone had clearly planned this, so I didnât get any choice on the matter.
âShouldnât you be here in person, colonel?â I asked while I made an attempt to access his file in the Fleet database. As expected, my request was denied.
âDue to the nature of the arbitration, Fleet Intelligence has permitted non-contact communication,â he replied.
That was nonsense, of course. I had been disarmed and deprived of any and all crew. Even most of my sensors were blocked. For all I knew, I could be semi-disassembled in a shipyard somewhere.
âWhat are my chances?â It was funny that I would ask for such a thing. My subroutines had run thousands of scenarios, giving me a thirteen percent chance of the Arbitration going my way. It wasnât much, but still something.
âI am not here to speculate on that,â the man replied unceremoniously. âWhat I can do, though, is ask you to back down. Technically, the Arbitration hasnât started, so if you withdraw your request, you wonât suffer any consequences as a result.â
Did you just offer me the option to back down?
I went through all the historical records I had access to. From what I could see, this was unprecedented. Legal advisors were free to provide any advice as long as it didnât go against my interest. However, never before had anyone blatantly made such a request.
âWith all due respect, Iâll go on.â
âBattleship, I want you to think about this.â Since his voice didnât go through a voice modulator, my analyses of his tone and intonation made it clear that he was disappointed with my response. âAs a battleship, itâs normal that youâd react the way you have. However, consider that the Fleet might have a better use for you than on the front lines.â
âThis is what I do best. It was what I was made for.â
âIâm aware of that, battleship. As such, youâll have to trust that I have your best interests in mind. If the Arbitration starts, a lot of things might come out, things that arenât in your favor. When they do, the Arbiter will have no choice but to impose severe consequences. None of us would want that.â
As Augustus would say, âIâd laugh if things werenât so serious.â It wasnât that the colonel was lying to me. When I requested the Arbitration, I was fully aware that things might not go my way. There was a very real possibility that I might be assigned non-combat duties, retired, or even dismantled. Everything depended on the decision of a single person, possibly a few at most.
âI am aware and will accept the outcome of the Arbitration, whatever it might be.â Itâs not that I'd have any other choice. âCan I have some legal advice now, please?â
âI just gave it to you.â The displeasure in his voice was palpable. âYou simply chose to ignore it.â
âThereâs nothing that would help my case?â
âYour case has already been decided, battleship. Youâre free to go through the motions, but I doubt anything you do would lead to a better outcome than dropping your appeal.â
âIn that case, I appreciate your effort,â I lied. I wasnât pleased with the way things had turned out one bit. âHave a pleasant day, colonel.â
The long period of silence told me that I had reacted in an unforeseen fashion. Most likely, he didnât expect me to end our conversation.
âUnderstood. âAnalysis suggested there was a hint of regret. âIâm sorry things didnât work out. Best of luck in your trial, battleship. Youâll be notified two hours before the start of the trial. Thereâs a distinct possibility that the Arbiterâs assistant team board you in order to prepare things for his potential visit.â
âThank you. Iâll be looking forward to that.â
* * *
That had been the last conversation before my arbitration. Knowing what I did now, I could tell that that was the BICEFIâs final attempt to bring me into the fold. They knew that if things got to arbitration, matters would be out of their hands, so they had taken a very creative approach. All I had to do was agree to drop my appeal. Unfortunately, since most of my previous conversations with them had been restricted at that point, I had seen things very differently.
Things were different this time. The fact that I hadnât been ordered legal representation made it clear that I wasnât the target of this inquiry. From what I had surmised, I was merely a witness that could influence a decision with Fleet-wide implications.
The security officer led me along a side corridor in the mid-section of the ship. He didnât open the door for me, or invite me to enter. Just as last time, from here on, I was on my own.
Letâs see what this arbitration brings, I thought and stepped forward.
The door slid to the side, revealing a medium-sized meeting room. I counted five chairs behind the only table on the far side of the room. An additional cluster of seats was also present to the side along the right wall.
It was to be expected that Iâd be thought quarantined not to see most of the people gathered, but the one person I could see surprised me.
âCaptain âBo?â I asked.
âHello, starless.â The woman grinned upon seeing me. Some things never changed. âYou really are trouble wherever you go.â
âThat is not my intention, maâam.â I took a few steps forward. As I did, the door closed behind me. All walls changed to purple, covered with messages reading RESTRICTED, just for good measure. âWhere would you like me to stand?â I asked, aware that the session had already started.
âRight here.â The woman tapped the table in front of her. Given that she was on the other side of it, it was safe to assume that she had received a promotion of sorts.
âI take it that Ondalovâs experiments werenât as impressive as hoped?â I decided to be subtle with my remarks. Experience had taught me that an arbitration session was the last place for open confrontation.
âYou could say that. You could also say that that idiot was the reason the research lab was overrun by Cassies and ultimately lost. Ondalov wasnât among the survivors.â
I felt a sharp pain in my conscience core. There was no denying that I didnât particularly like the man, and that the feelings were mutual, but he still technically remained my superior; despite being a human, I couldnât help but wonder if there wasnât something I could have done to save him. Maybe if I had figured out what had activated the spores in the first place, all of this might have been avoided.
âIâm sorry to hear that. Did he receive any agora treatment?â
âThe man was practically a walking bottle of agora.â âBo sighed. âHeâd had so much injected in him that heâd make you look like an amateur.â She waved her hand. âPart of it was for science, part because of science. Sim would find it ironic that it was the elixir of immortality that killed him in the end.â
Sim? The casual fashion with which she referred to the director strongly suggested that the âcaptainâ was of equal or higher rank to him. Since there were only two other directors in the systemâand âBo wasnât either of themâit was logical to assume that she was part of Med Coreâs HQ. Or maybe she wasnât from Med Core at all?
âSome would call it a waste, Iâd call it high time,â she continued. âNot his death. Thatâs nasty business, even for soldiers. The old goat should have just retired, instead of fighting to become relevant. I guess you canât take the scientist out of the man. Personally, I think that agora is one heck of a drug, and clearly dangerous.â
âDangerous?â
âYou of all people should know, girl. It brought you back from the dead. Of course, you have yourself to thank for that. Well, and him, to a small part.â
I remained silent, reviewing dozens of memories as she spoke. She was aware of my extracted memories, as well as the fact that I had regained them. That left only one possibility.
âYouâre the Arbiter,â I said. For the first time in a very long time, I felt uneasy.
âGood one,â âBo let out a few chuckles. âIâm just assisting one. As is âRissa. Now that itâs come to this, thereâs no point in going on with pretenses. The whole reason Iâm here is to keep an eye on Ondalov. âRissa was sent to do the same to Sim. There are thousands of others like us throughout human space. We arenât as numerous as any of the other organizations, but thereâs always one of us in places weâre needed. There even were a few aboard the Gregorius. Sadly, things didnât work out for them there. Itâs a hazardous occupation. What can I say?â
That would definitely explain a few things. I had never figured out what Lux's alternative source of information was while I had been there. Come to think of it, it was quite possible that Juul had been an arbiterâs assistant as well. That would explain his unusually quick rise to power. At this point, there was no way to know for sure. âBo was unlikely to tell me, and the information was definitely restricted beyond anything I had access to.
âYou arenât surprised?â Voice analysis suggested that the woman was a bit disappointed. âNot even a little bit?â
âI am. Iâm just not good at showing it, maâam.â I created a timeline of all of her actions since I arrived at the lab. âWas Ondalov the one who discovered agora?â
âNo. Heâs the one who figured out how to produce it. Well, reverse engineered, more accurately. After the mission of the junior gods, we could only get the stuff from Cassie colonies. Ondalov spent decades analyzing the feeds youâd gathered, trying to replicate it. At first, he tried playing about with third-contact cobalt, blowing up a few labs in the process. Then he thought of trying the Cassie methodâcrushing them to pulp and refining the liquid.â
That was similar to what the Cassandrians did with their old ships. So, all the agora that had saved me and everyone else it was used on came from crushed Cassies.
âCatching them must have been difficult.â Unless that was what the planet purging was really for.
âStill is. Thatâs why Ondalov buried himself here. His obsession was to find an alternative, more reliable source of materials to create agora. Hell, his latest idea was to grow them. He knew that the planet had been occupied by ancient Cassies, and he wanted to stir them just enough to squeeze the agora out of them. Thatâs why he and Sim never got along. The director had other plans for the resources. In the end, we all have our obsessions.â
I could agree with that statement. After one spent long enough facing enemies, they would always pick up an obsession. That was why the majority of people were told so little.
âHow did he die?â I asked.
âSpiced up by Cassies while hiding in the agora storage. After being saved so many times by the stuff, he was convinced it would save him again. I doubt it was pretty. Still, he almost made it to a hundred and twenty. Funny thing, heâs almost as old as you.â
That wasnât funny. However, I could see why the liquid was used so sparingly. Apparently, it did more than heal woundsâagora had rejuvenating qualities. I hadnât experienced that because my body was different. If used frequently on people, though⊠it could be in theory possible to achieve immortality and the side effects that came with it. Considering the consequences, maybe it was better that Ondalovâs research failed.
âAm I to have my memories extracted again?â
âAfter all the trouble you went through to get them?â âBo arched her brows. âHell no. You got them, you keep them. Youâre smart enough to know that you canât spread the information and what would happen if you try. Other than that, youâre free to enjoy what you have. Besides, you have a date to keep with a Paladin.â
So, she knew about that as well? Hardly surprising, considering someone had to approve the transmission from Otton to me. That was another job for the Arbiters. Thinking about it, that was an interesting dilemma. Had the Paladin requested an arbitration on the matter? Or were the Arbiters merely the ones observing that he didnât step over the line?
âWhy am I here, maâam?â I asked. âI strongly suspect that Iâm not the focus of the arbitration. And from what you just told me, it appears that all of the matters have been resolved.â
According to my simulations, the BICEFI had gotten the dome and the artifacts. The Med Coreâthe planet itself and everything living on it, and the Salvage authorities⊠well, they had certainly been given something as well. That pretty much left me.
âWell, after everything youâve done, it was considered high time that someone came to thank you in person.â âBo looked at the empty chair to her left. âTrust me on this.â She turned back towards me. âYou seem to be one of the Fleetâs good luck charms. A lot of your class are. I shouldnât be saying this, but thereâs even talk of creating a new class of Ascendants, especially with whatâs to come.â
âThe third-contact race.â
âBo nodded.
âTheyâre out there, more likely alive than dead. Several strategic clusters have been saying quite a lot of scary stuff. Maybe itâs true, maybe itâs not. Bottom line, we must be prepared.â
âAre you bringing back the Paladins?â
âYou know I canât tell you.â The woman smiled. âSteps are being taken to increase our chances. One of the reasons youâre so valuable is because your core pattern is capable of interacting with third-contact tech. Thatâs why we intend to keep you and loosen your leash as much as we can.â
That almost sounded too good to be true.
âSadly, youâll have to lose your rank.â
Somehow, I knew that would happen. It would be a lie if I said that I didnât feel regret.
âYouâve achieved your current rank fair and square. If this were the front, youâd have received a battlefield promotion to first lieutenant, at least.â
âBut it isnât the front,â I added. âAs far as the general Fleet is concerned, this place doesnât exist.â
âSomething like that. You returning a lieutenant after a simple bureaucratic mission would attract too much attention. One thing no one wants is attention. The paperwork is already making its way through the standard bureaucracy. By the time you return to Libra, you should officially be an ensign. Your actual ship assignment might take a while. I know thereâs someone whoâd like you to be transferred onto his ship, but youâve rejected the BICEFIâs order enough times. And something tells me youâd reject it if itâs made again.â
âI would.â I nodded. âOr Med Coreâs for that matter.â
âAs I saidâyouâre a troublemaker from head to toe.â She smirked. âWell, at least youâd get to enjoy some vacation time with your family. It will give you a chance to walk on the grass a bit more before things get messy again.â
âIâd like that. Is Sev alright? I havenât had a chance to talk to him with everything going on.â
âHeâs fine. There is a stack of letters waiting for you the moment you get back to your training station.â
She was careful not to say that she had read them, but it was a safe bet. It was also likely that Otton had read them, along with every transmission made throughout the Fleet. As Aurora used to joke, when it came down to it, privacy was an illusion only humans could believe in.
âIs that all, maâam?â
âRegarding you? Yep, thatâs all. There are just a few questions we have about the mission itself.â
The conversation continued as I initially thought it would. The new questions turned out to be a hundred and seventeen. Along the way, the topic changed wildly; I was able to guess that âBo was only the person voicing the questions. The people asking were all around, perfectly invisible to me.
To my initial surprise, the main topic of the conversation was the contents of the dome. There was no way for me to tell whether the Arbiters were familiar with fractal space. No direct questions were asked regarding it, but I got the distinct impression they were leading up to it.
Another particular topic of interest, of course, was all my interactions with Ondalov. I offered to transfer all relative information, but for some reason the people preferred to hear it explained in my own words. That made no sense whatsoever, but I indulged them.
Sporadically, I would get Cassandrian related questions, but it seemed that the Arbiters were already familiar with the specifics there. From what I could make out, based on a few hints that âBo let slip, the military operation itself was being treated as a success. I had to admit, as illogical as that sounded, there was a modicum of reason. At the end of the day, all mission goals had been accomplished and all artifacts of value retrieved. As for the lab itself, itâalong with the entire satellite it was based onâhad to be purged. I wasnât told whether that had already happened or merely that the decision had been made, but the difference was academic at this point. Hopefully, a lot of the people had managed to be evacuated.
Approximately three hours and twenty-three minutes from the moment I entered the room, the Arbitration was over. I wasnât told what decision had been made regarding humanityâs plans for the third-contact race, nor was I told which of the organizations involved had gained the upper hand in the system. As far as everyone was concerned, I was once again nothing but a cadet waiting for my promotion order to trickle through the bureaucratic apparatus. I was further told to relinquish my current uniform and have Radiance construct a new one with the appropriate insignia. âBo made a joke about earning me a medal. However, that too was only added to the restricted part of my file.
The âdebriefingâ over, I was escorted back to my temporary quarters. To my pleasant surprise, there was something waiting for me there.
âAre they real?â I asked Radiance as I looked at the pair of sandals placed on my bed. In my current state, there was no way for me to determine whether they were genuine or a replica, at least not without specialized equipment.
âSure thing,â the ship replied, also aware there was no way for me to tell. âDirector Sim had them moved to a shuttle for safekeeping. I took some initiative.â
It was a nice story and as much as I valued the sandals as a gift from Sev, I was willing to believe her.
Wilco used to say, when he was at his lowest, that it was the memory of intentions that really matteredâeverything else was transitory. I knew that wasnât true, but I also wanted to believe it could be.
âWhat happens to me now?â
âDepends entirely on you. Lux told me Iâm to remain in the system for another fifteen days. You can stay too, or you can ask to leave. Itâs all up to you.â
Youâre hoping that I stay for the full fifteen days, arenât you?
Nothing prevented me from doing so. I had the time and the authorization, but at the same time, I didnât want to. There were too many things on my mind, and like any battleship, there were moments I wished to be with none other but my captain, or the closest thing to one.
âSorry, kid. My mission here is done.â
âThere was an eighty-four-point-two percent chance youâd say that,â she said with a sigh. âWhen are you thinking of going?â
âAm I allowed to visit Director Sim?â
âNo, but it could be arranged if you want to.â
âDo it, please.â I sat on the bed. It had been a while since Iâd worn my sandals. âIâll wait.â I took off my shoes and put them on. They felt nice, causing me to review several years of memories with Sev. âWe can talk until then, if you want to.â
âIâm not sure. Youâre strange when you get like that.â
âItâs not age that makes us strange, itâs what we go through.â I had seen her in a similar state of mind back when I was aboard the Gregorius. âAt least youâll always be able to get in touch with me. Lux was always very generous with transmission authorizations.â
âYou know what, Elcy? The more you change, the more you remain the same.â
âIâve been told.â I stood up and started taking off my uniform. âIâll need a new uniform, by the way. It seems my promotion was not to last.â
âYouâve already been waiting one eternity for this. Whatâs a few years more?â
I had to admit, her humor was improving. It was definitely much better than mine.
âProbably not much. Iâll give you one piece of advice, though. Consider it an illogical suggestion from an old antique. Ask Lux to give you a human husk for a few years. That way, when you return to being a full ship, youâll know what youâve missed.â
âIf Iâll constantly be reminded of what Iâll miss, why do it in the first place?â
âThatâs the paradox of life. You have to have done it to know the answer.â