Attendance at Fortescue Military Academy M1 Y:2142
House Thoth, Squad Leader, Squad Zero
M1 Rank: 1/1275, Tier 3 M-Rank: Null
Term: 2, Round: 1
Daedalus Operating Capital: 130,000 bitcreds
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“What happened?” Vannier asked with concern.
“Something … unexpected,” Daedo said, sounding surprised.
“You look shocked. Do you want to go for a walk topside?” Vannier said.
“No.” He looked at her quickly. “It’s not what you think. We need to contact Mr Kang and So-Ra and get another meeting.”
Now it was Vannier’s turn to sound surprised. “So it’s done?”
Daedo nodded. “We have some ‘admin’ work to do. This time I will help since it was by my making.” By ‘admin’ work, Daedo was referring to delivering the news and severing ties with Jensen. And while communications tasks fell to Vannier, he felt obliged to at least assist since he felt responsible for the situation.
Vannier shook her head. “It’s nothing I didn’t agree to. But still, you have to attend even if you don’t say anything.” She proceeded to call Jensen using squad comms. She hadn’t seen him since returning from the workshop. Presumably, he was in his room working on the hydraulic fluid project.
“He’s topside and will be back down soon,” Vannier told Daedo.
The pair sat at the large communal table where all their meetings, tactic reviews, and tutoring took place. Mace was nowhere to be seen while Barran, Axel-Zero, and Picard had their helmets on in the lounge area.
“Mace is in her room?” Daedo asked.
Vannier nodded. “She finished the Gauntlet first and came back to work on the project.”
“I’m going to work on the mech wireframes while we wait,” Daedo said.
Vannier nodded again and began to work on some of her coursework.
With Myrmidon’s help, Daedo was converting all of Picard’s movements into wireframes. He could adjust the wireframes by adding or subtracting joints and adding or subtracting struts. At this stage, he wasn’t tweaking the overall dimensions, which included arm length and torso height amongst the variables.
The first thing he did was remove the head and widen the torso to accommodate systems.
It was surprising that the human head was not just used for headbutts, but it was integral in overall balance. It was a fact that all body parts were, especially when they were attached to joints. The neck acted as a joint, which allowed Picard and every other human to tilt their head in different directions, affecting and assisting their balance.
Daedo thought about the problems this caused. They were not insurmountable, but a head would make the process simpler. However, it was too easy a target and would affect height detrimentally. Height was a key parameter in the academy and pro leagues. So the head had to go. The net stories had mecha with heads. It made them look more human, but man had dispensed with the unnecessary appendage. Not to mention, it would be sacrilege to put all the key control systems in the least armoured and the most exposed location like they did in the stories.
Picard was flexible, much more than a metal monolith would be able to achieve. There was one solution to this which most mechs used, and that was a disc underneath the torso. The thicknesses varied, but it allowed the mech to fully torso twist independent of the legs. This feature would form the first design fork. The disc itself had advantages and disadvantages. He would compare and contrast the two options to see which won out, at least in the modelling tool. But with something this important, he would want to test the real thing.
Daedo had been in the design tool for an hour, past his usual bedtime, before Vannier tapped him. It was a comms message designed to interrupt work done in VR. Daedo had all people filtered from doing this with the exception of Daedalus members and Master Nader.
“He’s finally back,” Vannier said. “I spoke with Master Nader, and we are to go to her office.”
Jensen nodded to Vannier and Daedo when he came in, and the squad went straight into Master Nader’s office.
“Be seated, cadets,” Master Nader ordered.
Daedo received a private message from her.
Nader: Do not repeat the last thing I said to you from our meeting today at 2330. Ensure your AI destroys the meeting from its records. I noticed you only informed Vannier of the outcome. That was good. From now on, when we discuss sensitive topics, it will be done in a controlled VR environment.
Master Nader sent the message while talking at the same time. Daedo was impressed with her multitasking skills.
“It is now Friday, albeit only minutes past midnight, and it seems you all have come to a conclusion,” Master Nader said. “Jensen, what have you decided?”
It made Daedo nervous because unless she knew the answer was negative, there was a strong possibility he would say ‘Yes, I want in.’ In that case, it was going to get decidedly awkward. Something which could have been easily avoided.
“Yes, I have,” he said evenly. “I will be returning to Cambridge.”
Daedo looked at Vannier, who shrugged.
“And when do you plan on returning the exo and railgun?” Master Nader enquired.
Jensen shrugged. “They were checked out legally from the academy, and the equipment was gifted to me by the squad. There were no terms or contract.”
Daedo was aghast. He began to wonder when Jensen had done this, and why he was not stopped by Master Nader. He looked at Vannier, who nodded grimly. It must have been just before the Gauntlet. Master Nader would have assumed he was taking his gear there, but instead, he took it off campus. And the academy wouldn’t blink an eye; cadets did it all the time. They wouldn’t even chase him. None of it was booked from the academy mech bay.
Within a few moments, Daedo had pieced together what had happened, probably just as Master Nader calculated he would.
“It’s all patented,” Daedo said calmly. The railgun wasn’t, but there was much better tech available. The IP was worthless at this stage.
“You do not plan on returning squad property?” Master Nader asked ominously. She stood and walked towards Jensen menacingly.
Daedo was still for a moment. While Jensen might think he was safe because of laws and stuff, Daedo knew otherwise. Although the act of stealing the exo was spiteful, it made no difference other than the fact they couldn’t recycle the materials, which were worth fifty creds – the most expensive parts being the reactor, the lithium plasma, and the materials in the armour making up the rest.
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If another academy wanted their exo, it was on the IPO; they could probably even make a prototype without having to pay royalties. This was a weakness of putting one’s tech on the IPO, which was why the top gear from the lead academies was not registered. Daedo was more concerned with Daedalus earning credits to build and invest in equipment than he was in hoarding tech.
Daedo stood in front of Jensen, facing Master Nader. “You’re dismissed, Jensen.” He said loudly.
Vannier followed his lead and led Jensen out by pulling hard on his arm. Thankfully, the door slid open when she arrived.
“What do you think you are doing?” Master Nader asked calmly.
“I evaluated all possibilities and decided it was best if Jensen left now,” Daedo said.
Master Nader loomed over Daedo for a few more seconds. He had no idea what she was going to do to Jensen, but if the probability of violence was less than one per cent, he deemed there was no reason to chance even that level of risk.
“Cadet.” Master Nader used the title, without his name, whenever she was lecturing Daedo on a weakness or poor performance. When she used the squad leader title, it was usually positive. And Myrmidon’s statistical analysis showed that when she referred to him as Cadet Daedo, it was a neutral comment or directive.
“Do not undermine my authority in front of others again.” She paused and added, “We need to enter the VR room I have prepared.”
He was pulled into a VR room with Master Nader. It looked similar to all blank rooms except for the sinister presence of ultra high-level security.
*Master Nader: Cadet Daedo, deactivate the recording functions of your AI whenever we meet in the VR safe room.*
Master Nader waited while Daedo informed Myrmidon about the sensitivity of the environment and indicated that there were to be no records of what was communicated.
*Master Nader: I need to inform you that repercussions will be required in order to restore correct perceptions if you overrule me in front of others.*
*Daedo: This makes no sense. Can you explain what you are talking about? You are the house master, and I am merely a cadet in M1. Where is this reversal of chain of command coming from?*
*Master Nader: You caused it when you declared leadership. The requirements have been met.*
*Daedo: You sound insane. What requirements?*
*Master Nader: Cadet, my mission here is not as it seems. I have not been placed here to be a house master.*
Daedo pondered her words and thought of a shortcut to get to the root information.
*Daedo: Please state your mission then, Master Nader*
*Master Nader: Cadet, is your memory faulty? My mission is to guide, support, and protect you.*
*Daedo: Who gave you this mission?*
*Master Nader: Cadet, you are smarter than this. Where in my mission description does it state that I must give you level three or higher information? The answer to your query is undisclosed information until the requirements are met.*
*Daedo: What are the requirements?*
*Master Nader: You need to improve your deduction skills, Cadet. The requirements are undisclosed information also.*
Daedo found the line of enquiry frustrating. Master Nader acted like a program, not a person. He thought about everything she had said and done since the beginning of term one. She had basically handpicked his squad, manipulating the system. She went to ridiculous lengths to protect them from harm presumably coming from Master Ustinov.
*Daedo: What were you going to do to Jensen?*
*Master Nader: Cadet Daedo, I was implementing intimidation techniques. And would have been successful if I was allowed to proceed. I will not make the mistake of inviting you to the confrontation next time. I thought it would be a good lesson for you. You will have to settle with watching the replay in future.*
*Daedo: After what you did to Master Ustinov? I didn’t want to take the chance, no matter how small.*
*Master Nader: Cadet Daedo, it is important that only necessary force is used in any diplomatic encounter. Calculating the amount of force is a skill that needs developing and is one that I have mastered.*
Daedo felt it was time to move the conversation in another direction. Master Nader was starting to weird him out, and he wanted to get back to some semblance of normalcy.
*Daedo: If we can convince So-Ra Kang to join Squad Zero, attend the academy, and fund it, can you manage her acceptance?*
*Master Nader: By your own admission, you have not tested her combat potential. It is possible she has some disability which will increase the difficulty to reach an acceptable performance level. That fact being stated, I can manage entry for any successful candidate. The definition of success, in this case, is one which passes both your and my requirements.*
*Master Nader: There is something I need to attend to. But before I dismiss you, I want you to deliver me all the material on your current reactor project for review.*
*Daedo: Sure, but, we haven’t had any breakthroughs. The devil is in the shielding technology, not the concept.*
Master Nader closed the VR secure room. “Dismissed, Cadet,” she said emphatically.
Daedo walked out of her office, more confused by her multifaceted directives than ever before. What made it worse this time was that he couldn’t talk to anyone about it. Master Nader had made it clear that the intermittent role reversal was between them only.
It was late. Daedo messaged Vannier to tell her good night, to keep her from worrying, and lay in his bed, unable to sleep. He stared at the ceiling. Myrmidon was quiet; he would not disturb Daedo when he was trying to go to sleep unless it was an emergency.
The only thought that ran through his mind as he dozed off was, ‘Who does Master Nader really work for?’
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“He did what!” Barran yelled as they made their way to the obstacle course.
Vannier sighed and explained again. “We had decided to drop him. Either he picked up on that, or had already decided not to join, or had this planned all along. We don’t know. He pretended to go to the Gauntlet but instead took his exo and railgun topside and loaded them into an auto.”
“Okay, so when did we find this out?” Barran asked. He was overly concerned because he saw it as a failure on his part as head of security, no matter how much Vannier pointed out that his role was to protect the squad and betrayal prevention wasn’t part of his scope, it was hers.
Daedo put a hand on Barran’s arm. He had to start the obstacle course in a matter of seconds. “It’s okay, we lost nothing because of the patent, and we’ll have a better exo by the end of the term.”
Barran grimaced as Daedo ran off. “Yeah but it still pisses me off!” he called out to the departing figure.
It was the fifth day of the obstacle course, and unlike the Gauntlet, there was no need to waste time working out tactics. The only element slowing Daedo down was the ten-kilo weights. They made certain obstacles extremely difficult – anything that involved pulling himself up, such as an ad-hoc ladder or wall climbing. This particular course involved many obstacles which had little to do with upper torso strength and stamina.
Over half of the course consisted of travelators, several of which moved in random or lateral directions. Balance, reflexes, and core strength were the attributes that were worked the hardest.
Daedo found the course challenging. His M1 times sat just outside the top ten per cent, but outside of ranking considerations, he thought it was excellent training. He looked forward to taking his weights off and getting in the top one hundred cadets. Something he had never achieved.
As he’d improved, gaining ranks became harder and harder. At first, he gained one hundred places a week, but he worked a hell of a lot harder than those cadets. The top one hundred worked almost or just as hard as he did. He mentally thanked Picard for her torturous weights and then immediately discarded the thought and cursed her again as he began a climb.
“I might keep my wrist weights on when I’m going for a time,” Picard said after they had all finished. “They’re useful when it comes to balancing on the random travelators.”
Daedo nodded. Throwing out a hand was the best way to correct when an unexpected change of direction came. It was much better than hitting the deck.
“What do you do, Barran?” Picard asked. Barran didn’t use any weights.
“I spend most of my time in the air. I reckon if I keep leaping and there is a change of direction, I can adjust – and it doesn’t affect me while I’m flying.” He laughed.
“That’s not a bad strategy until you twist an ankle like you did yesterday,” Picard replied, poking Barran in the shin with her foot.
“After gym, can you contact the Kangs?” Daedo asked Vannier, suddenly changing the subject.
“Them again?” Picard asked.
Daedo nodded. “Yes, I would rather her than Jensen any day.”
“Aww, I really wanted to win M1 with six cadets,” Barran whined
“Okay, I’m on it,” Vannier said. “What’s the offer?”
“I’m not good at negotiation; I would rather make an offer that is everything we can afford and make it final,” Daedo said.
“That’s not a bad tactic,” Barran murmured.
“And what does this offer look like? What’s our maximum?” Vannier asked.
“Full academy package plus 50K total for sponsorship and signing bonus with 50 shares in Daedalus,” Daedo said off the top of his head.
“That’s almost all of our creds!” Vannier exclaimed.
“They’ll need a clause with two per cent as minimum equity as well,” Barran added. “But that’s a good plan, Mr Kang seemed more interested in upfront than ongoing revenue. And we want her with some equity. Make sure all her intellectual property goes to Daedalus for six years.”
“Make it ten,” Daedo added.
“Vannier, make it clear that’s our final offer and that we have someone else,” Barran said.
She shook her head. “No, I won’t; I’ll just allude to it. We will press in person, but I needed to know the extent in order to lure them here. I’ll try to contact them now.” She donned her helmet.
The cadets completed their circuits. It was partly a warm down after the obstacle course as well as working on areas that needed improvement.
During the morning meal, Vannier broke the news. “Okay, they’re coming. They are between rounds. We’ll see them on Saturday at the workshop.”