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Daedalus
Chapter 73: Smash his smug little face

Chapter 73: Smash his smug little face

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: 60,000 bitcreds

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So-Ra shimmied into her new bodysuit. One of the rich kids actually owned Axel Corporation, which made the top-of-the-line bodysuits. She was only permitted to wear her old one on weekends, but during the week, at the academy, she had to wear this one. Apparently, hers didn’t meet regulations.

Regulations. So-Ra gulped. She didn’t look forward to hearing that word over and over. That made her consider another one. She had initially thought Daedo, Vannier, Barran, etc., were their names. And that they were all just familiar with each other, calling one another by their first names. But no, she would now go by Kang, which suited her fine. Until she got to know someone really well, she didn’t like them using her given name.

The number of people who used her given name at the moment was one – her father. She hadn’t seen her mother in months; she was back in Korea refusing to follow her father on his mad escapades. Kang guessed her mother never followed any of her dreams having come from a family environment of suppression. It was one thing she had to hand her father – he wanted his daughter to be free to chase her dreams, even if it meant abandoning him.

Fortunately, it seemed this wouldn’t be the case, as long as her father stayed in the EU pro league. Russia was a possibility also; it wasn’t too far. Depending on how many creds he made. Travel wasn’t a problem; it was the cost of travel and paying for repairs that were.

All of Sunday was spent completing inductions. Vannier even gave her tests on some of the important rules. Daedo ran with her, and they jogged for five kilometres in the time it took the rest of the squad to run fifteen. She hadn’t had to do much physical training, and she certainly didn’t do it for fun. But she had always worked hard. The five kilometres weren’t difficult; she could have probably run another couple.

Sunday evening came upon her fast. Someone from the squad had booked a specialist robot to come implant a gen three, military-grade, cybernetic module after pulling out her gen two.

“We’re giving you our own foundation AI,” Daedo said.

“Okay,” Kang said. “Is it any good?” She hadn’t had an AI before; she just used apps from the net to do certain functions.

Daedo nodded. “Yes. Its initial tests show it faster than any of the other available on the market. But that’s not the most important thing. It comes down to how you nurture it. You need to guide it in what tasks to do for you, and how. Initially, it won’t know anything other than how to listen to you. After a while, whatever you’re an expert in, it will become one also. It learns from you – from whatever you spend your time doing. I think they do it this way so that when you’re nineteen, your AI is fully developed and ready to assist you in your chosen field.”

“So its not a preprogrammed PA?” Kang asked.

“It’s a PA with the ability to learn. It will be tailored for you, by you. You are the teacher and eventually a friend, and you won’t know what you did without it after a while.”

“And we’re doing this at the academy?”

“Yes. It’s one of those rules you love. It’s easier if the staff here monitors your launch; it saves us lots of reporting later.”

“Something confuses me,” she said

Daedo looked attentive, waiting for the question.

“Ikaros is your father, right?”

He nodded.

“And you are the boss?”

“Not really. I am the squad leader, and the squad owns most of the shares. My father works for Daedalus. When we make important decisions, everyone has a say.”

“Yeah, but … Oh, never mind.” Kang thought there was little point in arguing with him.

Daedo shrugged.

This kid was weird. Normally someone would want to know what she had to say. But he just shrugged. And that wasn’t the first time she’d noticed he was different.

“Okay, last awkward question,” Kang said.

Daedo nodded patiently.

She sighed inwardly. She wanted to ruffle his calm. Maybe if she choked him, he might lose control a little. Kang pushed the thought from her mind, “Why did you go to so much trouble to get me to join the squad and Daedalus? Seventy K is an auto truck worth of creds. You barely know me.”

Daedo looked thoughtful before saying, “Are you fishing for a compliment? You’re smart enough to work it out yourself.”

That was it. Kang wanted to smash his smug little face into the construct foam wall. She schooled her expression letting none of that show. Her brain was in overdrive. She had to come back with a cutting remark and quick.

“Oh, I know,” she said confidently. She placed a gentle hand on his cheek before walking away and saying over her shoulder, “I just wanted to see if you had the balls to say it.”

Kang had no idea what he was going to say, but her response was ambiguous enough to cover most bases. And the look on his face was priceless. It was a pity she didn’t have a handle on the bodysuit, or she could have captured the moment to replay later.

She had to work out where she was walking. She decided upon the foundry and went there. It was a good option. She wanted to get a closer look at the machinery in there anyway.

After a few minutes checking the power rating and mixing capabilities of the foundry, she had worked out that even though it was one of the expensive Hitachi smaller models, it was worth it. Although it was classed as a micro-industrial foundry, it could smelt almost anything she could think of.

Vannier approached her. “Kang? I didn’t want to interrupt, but I just needed to go through next week’s schedule. There is going to be some adjustment for you. Especially since you’re starting in term two. But I wanted you to know that we’re all here for you.”

If you stumble upon this narrative on Amazon, be aware that it has been stolen from Royal Road. Please report it.

“That’s very kind,” Kang said, trying not to sound sarcastic. That was all she needed – spoilt rich kids worrying about her and fawning over her. “I know how to work hard,” she added, biting back on the sarcastic comment that rose to her lips about how she knew much more about hard work than they did. She looked at the schedule. “What’s the obstacle course? And why is it at six a.m. every day?”

“Oh, it’s the best start to the day,” Vannier said. “Although, that round is quite hard. I can show you a recording of my last attempt if you like? Or better yet, I can ask Picard for hers; she is the go-to for strategy in this event.”

After watching a short first-person vid, Kang began to wonder what she’d gotten herself into. “This is the worst event, right?” She asked Vannier.

Vannier looked thoughtful and then said, “It depends who you are. Barran loves it. Daedo struggled at first, but he’s getting better. Don’t tell him, but I think he’ll pass me soon; he’s improving faster than I am.”

Kang harumphed. “I can beat Daedo; he wasn’t that fast in the run this morning.”

Vannier struggled with a response. “Ah … look … this isn’t going to be easy for you. In fact, I’m worried. How about you stow the attitude and focus on getting up to par?”

Kang felt like Vannier had slapped her in the face. At first, she was angry and wanted to strike back, but then she thought about it, Vannier hadn’t said anything nasty. She was plain-talking rather than pussyfooting. Which was something Kang appreciated. “Okay,” she said sheepishly before getting more serious. “Show me vids of the Gauntlet, arena, and martial combat.”

After taking in the information about the academy subjects, Kang thanked Vannier. “Okay, I sort of know what I’m in for now. Of all things, the academic subjects will be the easiest, I think. Although they look pretty advanced.”

Kang had a similar schedule as the rest of the squad with her tutoring focusing on AI nurturing. Daedo was insistent that the entire squad’s AI capability needed to improve, and Kang was starting from zero.

“Don’t worry about tech studies,” Vannier said. “You can work on the exo armour as your project. Picard will need your help with the swordlance and shield material compound; you could use them as well.”

“Alright, at least that’s one subject down,” Kang said. She was sure she’d be able to use compounds she had already designed for both projects.

“We have new exos next week, I’ve given your measurements to Daedo, and he’s making it now. As soon as it’s ready, we’re heading back to the academy.”

Kang nodded and opened up the design studio app Daedo had given her. She quickly filled in the formulae for the three items Vannier asked for: A compound for the shields that lowered the weight slightly and increased its kinetic soaking potential; The swordlance was tweaked so it would be dense with keen edges; Lastly, the plates for the exo. Due to the mesh beneath, she exchanged the current ceramics with a metal alloy compound that would absorb twice as much damage with the weight restrictions given to her.

She thought about the designs for a moment. They were off the top of her head, due to her experience from the pro league and many months of tweaking. She could improve them, but that would require more thinking and many rounds of testing and tweaking. These at least would give the squad an immediate lift in quality and would buy her time to get on top of the schedule that was just handed to her.

A few hours later, Kang gave birth to her AI, and she followed the squad’s instructions rather than the academy tutes. Her room was tiny, but the common area for the squad was quite large. She was used to sleeping in small spaces, so none of that worried her. She was glad she could have some privacy; although small, the room was for her alone. It had a sonic shower and space for her exo and equipment. Clothes weren’t an option; cadets wore bodysuits unless showering. Fortunately, the Axel top-of-the-line model had excellent self-cleaning properties.

For the rest of the night, she played with her AI until she fell asleep.

At 0545, an alarm sounded. Kang almost fell out of bed. She swore and began to wonder why she agreed to come to the academy. If she had stayed on the pro league circuit, she could sleep in. She was a firm believer in sleep. Sleep was good.

It seemed like the squad was taking turns to babysit her. Picard was encouraging and pushing her all the way to the obstacle course.

“Remember to pace yourself. Remember to breathe. I’ll run with you today; we’re allowed to go two at a time,” Picard said happily.

“Do you always wake up this chirpy?” Kang asked.

“Kang, I am never chirpy. I am Picard the warrior – grrr.” Picard laughed.

“Are you using the swordlance?” Kang asked before they were about to start. They were going first – apparently to give her enough time to finish.

“Last term I didn’t, but this term I’m in the vanguard with Barran,” Picard said. “Alright, are you ready?”

“No,” Kang said in a panicked voice.

Picard pushed her onto the course. “Let’s go, K-pop!”

Kang knew from the induction that nicknames were not allowed. Cadets had to use the proper designation for each other. At the time, she thought that was a silly rule. Now she was in total agreement.

She struggled for breath and composure but found the will to accuse Picard. “No nicknames! That’s a breach.”

Picard just laughed. She was evil, Kang was sure. She looked for the record feature on her bodysuit; she would catch Picard if she called her K-pop again.

After fifty minutes of gruelling running, climbing, jumping, dodging, and falling, Kang was flat out on her back. Everyone had passed her. And much to her chagrin, she found out that Picard was running with thirty kilos of extra weight and had still slowed down for her. Pushing her all the way.

“Stand,” Picard ordered. “You can’t breathe properly lying down. The fastest way to recover is to stand and walk around.”

“But this is so much easier,” Kang argued breathlessly.

Picard proceeded to pull her to her feet like she weighed nothing. Kang thought about it for a moment. She weighed thirty kilos. Picard had basically run the obstacle course carrying her.

“Okay, okay. I can stand by myself,” Kang protested as Picard held her up. It was embarrassing because the rest of the squad was waiting. She looked at Daedo to ensure he didn’t have a smug look on his face, but he had his helmet on; probably doing some work because he was sick of waiting for her. “Where to next?” she asked between breaths. She was too tired to remember the schedule and too sore to open it.

“For you, warm down and then breakfast,” Picard said. “We don’t want you cramping, and we need to repair your micro muscle tears.”

Kang watched as the other cadets did some sort of arcane stretching and balancing, possibly yoga.

“Take off your bodysuit and jump in the cold pool,” Picard ordered, and Kang did so. The bodysuit’s thermal properties would make the cold pool virtually useless. Kang was slightly embarrassed to be down to her underwear, but no one seemed to care.

“It's freezing!” she yelled when Picard pushed her all the way in.

“Okay, now the hot one,” Picard said.

“Phew!” Kang said before realising it was too hot. She swore.

“Okay, cold again,” Picard quipped.

“Are you a fucking sadist?” Kang asked too loudly.

Picard shook her head, but she still smiled.

“I knew it!” Kang protested as Picard pushed her in again. “Okay, do that once more, and I will floor you!”

“Martial combat is at 1115. You are welcome to try.” Picard actually gave her an evil grin. “Over here! This robot will massage you.” Then, a little more gently, she said, “It’s all downhill from here. I promise.”

Picard wasn’t lying. The robot was fairly gentle except for on the calves. When she was done, Kang put her bodysuit back on and followed Picard to breakfast.

“How was the obstacle course?” Daedo asked. He was pretending to be kind, but Kang saw through it.

She tried her best to be diplomatic. “It was really hard, but nothing I wasn’t warned about. I’m not used to this type of thing, so you will have to be patient while I catch up.”

“Kang,” Daedo said quietly, although everyone could hear; for some reason, all the cadets were quiet when Daedo spoke. They talked over one another all the time, but when he said something, they listened. It seemed they took the squad leader title very seriously. “Did you know that Picard won a scholarship to attend?”

“She isn’t some rich kid,” Vannier added, smiling as she poked Axel-Zero.

“Hey, you’re just as rich as me!” Axel-Zero protested.

“Daedo isn’t from a wealthy family either,” Barran said. “If it wasn’t for CyberMech, he would be dirt poor.”

“Eh, that may be an exaggeration and a little rude,” Vannier corrected Barran.

Kang looked at Picard, who gave her a small smile and nodded, and then to Daedo, who shrugged. He might not be a rich kid, but he was still super smug. She sighed and came to a conclusion. “Okay. Since I’m family and will be living with you lot for the foreseeable future, it might be a good idea to get to know you.”

Vannier grinned. “Perfect. Each meal we can tell you our life story.”

“We pretty much know yours,” Barran added.

“And the next person to call me K-pop will die horribly,” Kang said, staring at Picard who looked the picture of innocence.