"I want you to know, from the bottom of my heart -you're a dumbass."- Trenchant in nature, Tiny never hesitates to say exactly what is on his mind no matter how blunt or offensive it may come out sounding. This goes for compliments as well as insults.
"Oh yes perfect. You definitely didn't just fuck everything up there."- Possessing a mordant sense of humor, Tiny tends to make sarcastic remarks at the expense of those around him.
"Great plan. Have fun with that."- Tiny is fairly action averse -he tends to shy away from directly acting on important things unless he is specifically pushed to do so, or someone else takes action first.
"So, what now, boss?"- In the same vein as his tendency to shy away from taking the initiative, Tiny is a good follower rather than a leader. He is highly skilled in following orders, not so much at giving them.
"Tell my wife... I love her..." Melodramatic at almost all times, Tiny has a love for over exaggeration and dramatization.
"I'd catch a grenade..."- Loyal to those he considers friends, he is self-sacrificial in his compassion, more than willing to take a bullet, grenade, or train for those he cares for.
M I L I T A R Y R E C O R D
The late Jorgen Kaiser III, Conner's father, was the owner of a private security firm -decently successful in life. Though their ancestry has a great history serving in the military for the Earth Empire, he at first refused to join the military -He believed it to be far more prudent and useful for the protection of civilians on his own terms, and in his own area, than to join the military and be ordered around.
Though sterile and seemingly hopeless in terms of carrying out his legacy, Jorgen III eventually was blessed with a son through the miracle of adoption, and his outlook towards war was somewhat changed. That, along with pressure from various outside sources, lead to Jorgen III's enlistment in the Earth Empire's military. He scaled the ladder unsurprisingly quickly -despite his initial hesitation, he had both the skill and the attitude to raise high in the ranks. It was in his blood, after all. As Jorgen's son grew, he was pressured as well to join the military. The apple doesn't fall far from the tree, and Jorgen Kaiser IV was soon in a similar situation to his father.
On the eve of Jorgen Kaiser IV's 18th birthday and initial enlistment into the military, Jorgen III was given amazing news. The condition that made him sterile was a temporary effect, something genetic that could be cured. Amazing news to Jorgen III, but perhaps a bit less wonderful to the adopted Jorgen IV. A little less than a year later, a pair of beautiful twins were born, and got all of the attention Jorgen III and his wife had to spare -needless to say, this lead to some resentment from Jorgen IV towards the two. Instead of ever dealing with this aggression, Jorgen IV directed the energy towards his military career, and had plenty of times to prove himself in the many proxy wars with smaller nations.
Jorgen Kaiser III's blood son and daughter both seemed to show interest in serving in the military as well -their blood was not something to go against. Though growing up the two were raised with the intention of joining the military as soon as capable, the death of Jorgen Kaiser III changed that. While his daughter, Cameron, was only more dead set on joining the military and somehow honoring his memory and avenging him, his son Conrad had had different plans.
Though Conrad was a massive man by the age of eighteen, built like a bulldozer, he found less glory in the military than his family had. His true love laid in machinery, be it vehicles, robots, or electronics. He went off on his own after the death of his father, moving to a medium-sized city where he opened up his own little mechanics shop. Though he faced some rather large competition his natural talent and low pricing allowed him to make a living for himself -at least until his shop was hit by some gang activity and his savings were taken from him at the threat of his life.
Believing that he could possibly save his city from the gang violence, Conrad dressed himself up in an unfortunate electric blue outfit and hit the streets at night -hoping to stagger crime under a vigilante persona by the name of 'Yellow Jacket'. His second night out, he ended up getting arrested for a month thanks to his antics. Almost instantly he hit the streets again on his release, having gotten some surprisingly helpful intel from an unwitting guard.
This intel proved correct, and Conrad ended up strolling right into the main gang's HQ. A bit overconfident in his ability, it proved to be a bad idea when two hours later he found himself lying outside in a gutter, having been hit by two grenades almost point blank, and far too much energy weapon fire. Much of his body was no more than a bloody pulp, and it was only a miracle that allowed him to survive until EMT's hit the scene. Destined to be forever crippled thanks to the loss of one arm, his right eye, both legs, his lungs, and severe damage to his heart, Conrad was put into a severe state of depression until contacted by the Earth Empire military.
Apparently he had made a name for himself in the world of mechanics -the Earth Empire military was willing to provide the cybernetic enhancements Conrad required in order to move once again, under the condition that he be drafted into the military to work with the M.A.S. systems. Of course, Conrad accepted to regain some inkling of control in his life. Upon joining, he found he had much to prove -both of his siblings had advanced far in his absence, and were rather high ranking while he found himself to be little more than a specialist operating the M.A.S. after a long time serving. In his time serving, he ended up replacing more and more of his body with cybernetics -already mostly robot, why not finish off the job, right? A second cybernetic arm and eye, as well as a portion of his abdomen/spine round off his cybernetic enhancements, making him even more of a lumbering beast of a man.
E Q U I P M E N T
PTX-099b Goliath R.A.V.
A heavily modded version of the 066 model Flare gun, this weapon is capable of loading and firing anything from flares to grenades to canisters of tear gas, albeit one at a time. Still, it sports an impressive range of almost 500 yards.
Grenades -Tiny carries 3 each of the following types of ammunition for his 066.6 -Flares, fragmentation grenades, electron grenades, tear gas canisters, and compression foam canisters (for the suppression of fire).
Bullhammer Revolver
Cybernetics -After his tragic accident, Tiny was saved only through heavy use of Cybernetics. Both arms and legs, a large portion of the abdomen, his eyes, his lungs, and his heart are all cybernetic implants now. Though these greatly enhance his physical strength to make him a beast in CQC, he is very reliant on them, and can be disabled (if not outright killed) by tampering to his systems. His left fist contains the same technology present in the head of an electron mace.
David -Tiny has an Simulated Intelligence system present at all times -present within his cybernetic implants, his Goliath, and even within a modded scope atop his 066.6. The S.I. is capable of managing the systems within these devices, as well as piloting the Goliath (in a pinch, he can only do very simple things), and aiming the 066.6. Built-in learning deficiencies keep the S.I. from doing much more than these tasks. General computing is also within it's functionality, as well as special programming to tell knock-knock jokes and make puns.
A few quick notes, as I havent finished reading the CSs all the way through, @R31GN, David seems more to be an SI than a full on AI- SI being a Simulated Intelligence- essentially a powerful operating computer with a voice module plastered over it to turn computation data into understandable English.
Also keep in mind, it is generally fairly taboo to have internal organs replaced with cybernetics- though in Conrad's case he didn't really have much of a choice- just keep that in mind. Also, the idea of being more machine than man is generally looked down upon by a lot of folks (which is a bit of an oxymoron because people get cybernetic limbs all the time to improve their performance, but people are stupid/ignorant/insane, so what can you do?), so that could be a reason for why he's been passed up for promotion so many times.
@vietmyke I was wondering if there was a word for that, haha. Noted
Yeah. As far as IC goes, Conrad just went all out with cybernetics because he was already getting plenty of shit for it -not like people could be any more disgusted with him. I'll remember that though
Here's my character sheet, obviously a WiP but I think I have the groundwork in place.
Name: Illyan, Mark Age: 25 Gender: Male Nickname: “Thumbs” (Earned during a particularly nasty training accident in which Mark lost his arm. After they had stopped the blood flow and stabilized him, his instructor had said that he was “all thumbs”. One of the other soldiers jokingly mentioned something about thumbs and, as with most such cases, the name stuck.)
Psychological Analysis: -Shows a healthy respect for authority and chain of command. Correct political views. -Is able to carry out assigned tasks under pressure, as long as he remains concentrated. Extreme difficulty may lead to decreased performance in the field, as Illyan displays classical signs of an inferiority complex and is not able to handle failure easily. Monitoring of the soldier confirmed that it does not interfere with his communication with squadmates. -Problem solving mindset, analytical thinking. Aptitude for numbers and logical structures. Complex drives him to seek a perfectionist approach, which can be exploited as a means of motivation. -Strong self-survival instincts and risk aversion. Soldier will not be prone to acts of heroics, but can be relied on with proper motivation. (see above) -Average social skills, avoids being center of attention. Will unconsciously seek acknowledgment in others.
Medical Examination: No physical or psychological disorders. Scarring on right side of face and neck. Cybernetic right arm (see note MO#004 – Update on Soldier Status). Nicotine addiction. Medical history shows signs of substance abuse in the past. Verdict: Fit for service.
Supervisor’s note: Above-average intelligence and strong patriotic sentiment increase value as an asset, however low self-esteem makes him unsuitable for officer positions. Not recommended for further promotion.
(Addendum: After training accident described in MO#004 and loss of arm, soldier seems to have toughened up. With combat experience may become useful as NCO)
Cpt. Zogin, Personnel Assessment Center
Military Record: Mark Illyan was born on New Alexandria, a prosperous, but not overly important world in the Cerol system. His parents were well-off: Mark's mother was a hydraulics engineer and his father was a retired officer, working as an editor in the local state media. Though war was raging throughout the galaxy, Mark received what he needed to lead a comfortable childhood. He finished high school at the top of his class, which allowed him to sign up for university instead of being drafted like most teenagers that graduated. Mark’s father considered this a godsend, claiming that that service in the army would ruin his life.
He’d always had a way with electronics and computers, so Mark decided to study computer science, hoping that he could one day use his skills to aid the Empire. Everything was going well, but a year later his father committed suicide. This set the young man on a downward spiral and he could barely finish the following semesters. He struggled for a while longer, but quit during his third year. Amidst increasing talk of the war getting closer and thousands of worried news reports pouring in from all over the galaxy, Mark decided to go ahead and enlist.
His mother was naturally furious – she told Mark that the army had stolen her husband and that it would now steal her son as well. Her angry words fell on deaf ears; out of a misguided sense of patriotism or perhaps in a veiled effort to redeem himself before his father, Mark was firmly set on his course. He signed the papers, swore the oath and never looked back.
Basic training passed with little of note; he adapted to the soldier’s life quickly enough. A tour of duty to a nearby moon followed, but during his one year stay Mark saw no action. By this time he had begun wondering if he had made the right choice by joining, but one look at the news was enough to convince him of the looming threat.
Once he was back planetside, Mark applied for advanced training quickly. His university background and technical aptitude made him an ideal candidate for a demolitions expert. During a training exercise however, he misjudged his skills and ignored his instructor’s advice. The resulting explosion cost him an arm and covered his left side in burns. It also earned him his nickname.
After undergoing surgery and acquiring a cybernetic replacement, Mark was determined to do better this time. He applied for advanced training again and eventually graduated with flying colours. The Coalition was getting ever closer and the entire sector was put on high alert; as soon as Mark got out of training, he, along with thousands of others, were assigned to their new units and shipped off to the Fortress World of Cerol.
Now with the rank of Specialist, Mark went on to join the 8118th. He had barely spent half a year with his new squad when the first wave of Coalition ships appeared in orbit. Suddenly he found himself on the frontlines of the very war he had heard so much about. As he would soon find out, nothing could have prepared him for it…
Equipment:
Standard-issue ACS Rifle
APP-3 Pistol
Combat knife
Electron Grenade x3
Cybernetic arm with some self-made modifications focusing on precision and fine motor skills.
Integrated software pack, which allows the operator to interact with standard-issue detonator interfaces remotely. It also has a scanning feature that is able to identify most common explosive ordinance in use by the UEE and Coalition. The information is fed to the helmet’s HUD and can optionally be relayed as warning signals to nearby squadmates.
Det-Plast blocks x 4 – the blocks can be primed individually or combined for a bigger explosion. Once planted, the charge can be activated remotely.
Vapo-Disc – like the Det-Plast remote detonation is supported, as well as the ability to adjust the blast range from a distance.
Not quite sure what sort of demolitions technology we have to work with, I guess C4 and stuff like that is long gone? Will fill out those gaps when I have some more info.
From first outlooks one would question why Maisie had even joined the army, sometimes she doesn't know herself. As the daughter of Major General William H. Bannister, war is something that has been in the back of her mind since a very young age. All her mother seemed to do was talk about war with her father, worried that because of everything happening on the news that he would have to head out to help defend the UEE. Her father from a young age prepared her and her siblings for the eventuality of having to protect themselves, making sure that besides having normal schooling they were also trained both physically and mentality to survive. Yet for the longest time war was something of a game to her, war was this idea that made it so that when Dad told you to you had to go run and find the nearest thing towards you that looked like the best cover, you'll did it without thinking. And if he tapped you on the shoulder well you were dead, you picked wrong. She never figured that those games would end up becoming a reality in the end.
Maisie is young and partly from a rather enclosed childhood where heaps of expectations were dropped upon her and out of her own desires to 'stand out' among her seemingly better siblings that seemed to do everything better than her the girl can be rash, foul-mouthed, impulsive, and temperamental which caused problems during her schooling and during the early days of her training until a drill sergeant saw to at least diverting those flames of fury towards something a little bit more productive. Her father taught her to stand up for herself and what she believed in and she has no problems in yelling back at even the most terrifying of figures if she believes in what they are saying happens to be wrong in the end. From equal parts genetics, her own boredom and her father's teaching Maisie has a clever mind about her and something of a wit to match it with survival instincts and peculiar sort of resourcefulness that have been ingrained into her at a young age
Despite this Maisie is still young, She manages to maintain a particular innocence as she has yet to see the darkest sides of human nature and retains a palpable trust in people. There is still a definite line between black and white for her, good and evil and she truthfully believes that the UEE stands firmly on the good side of that line. She is excited about the world and about life in general. She dreams of seeing anything beyond Cerol, of actually getting to travel once in her life. And she has dreams of being a hero like everyone calls her father. But all those dreams have now been whisked away as the shadow of war now looms over her head.
Military Record:
Maisie Banister grew up on Cerol as the middle child of three children born to Major General William H. Bannister and his wife Lilla Banister. The Banister family resided inside a small house with a little bit of land just outside of the heavy urban sprawl which made up Leis, far enough away from the rumble of the city but close enough so that William could report to the military base as needed rather quickly. The house was a small humble affair two stories in make and having been standing since the first colonist settled on Cerol many years prior. She shared a room with her younger sister Emma, or as Maisie liked to describe her as the most annoying person to have ever lived in the history of the world. Besides having to endure her father's own particular brand of survival training since she was old enough to comprehend the words duck and cover, Maisie life was fairly standard for what it was, almost pleasant as some could describe it.
Her father wanted the children to go to Cerol's Military Academy for young students one of the best in the UEE which produces top tier officers and other accomplished members of society serving the Emperor. Their mother insisted against it believing that the children deserved the chance to have a normal life and pick what they wanted to do with their future. In the end Lilla one of course and the children were enrolled in a private school not far from their own home. It was in school that Maisie ended up having the most trouble as it was there she came to realize how much she was lackluster in comparison to her siblings. Her older brother Jon was something of the school hero: star athlete, president of the student council, and beloved by everyone that seemed to meet him and then when Emma started going to school she never heard the end of how all her teachers called her gifted and how she scored top ranks in a whole score of screening tests and how she was destined to do great things with her mind. That of course left Maisie who was extraordinarily average in comparison to her 'perfect' siblings. She was good at sports but not as good as Jon, she was smart enough to pass her honors classes but no where near as smart as Emma and she didn't have much else to bring to the table in forms of skills and talents.
So Maisie began to get into trouble and start to hang out with the wrong types of kids and do the wrong types of things. The first time her parents got called down to the Principals office due to the young girl having covered the girl's bathroom in some rather vulgar graffiti they were shocked and horrified. Yet the girl didn't seem to care, her parents anguish seemed to only fuel her on as she continued to act out against them. Her grades began to drop and on some days she wouldn't end up going to school at all. This pattern of reckless behavior would continue up until the incident. It was her junior year of high school and Maisie was in a car with several of her friends as they just came back from a big party. The driver of the car was drunk and crashed the vehicle headlong into a tree. The driver and the kid sitting in the passenger seat died upon impact and one more would die from their wounds in the hospital, and another had to have her arm amputated and replaced with a robotic replacement after it was pinned and crushed beneath the vehicle. Maisie and one another survived intact and without any serious injuries at least physically.
That moment of shock was enough to bring an end to a lot of Maisie's reckless behavior mostly because of fear and guilt which caused her to become something of a recluse. It was her father that was able to bring her out of her rut and try and put her back on the right track of things. It wasn't his idea that when she graduated a year later that she would enlist, it was hers. She wanted a fresh start, she wanted to make something of herself, make it so that her parents were proud of her again. Due to her delinquent behavior none of the officer academics would of taken her but that was okay because she didn't want to be an officer anyway, her father hadn't he rose from private to general through hard work and persistence so she wouldn't need to either.
The training was good for Maisie, it helped give her some order where she didn't have any and gave her some direction in life. From all accounts according to her superiors she was a star recruit already knowing half the material because of her father and the rest she seemed to pick up like it was second nature to her. Those two years seemed to fly and before she knew it she had gradated out of training and was being thrown into the 8118th Mechanized Infantry as they had taken some losses and needed fresh blood. They were supposed to ship out, she was supposed to finally be able to get away from Cerol but than the Coalition fleet appeared.
By "tonight," of course, I meant "some time this weekend" - this character's background has turned out to be extraordinarily difficult to write. There's a narrative conceit that I'm having to work through, and I'm hoping it's working out as well as I want. Hah!
Nickname: Corona (for reasons given below), Case (As in, basket. There are a few people who can't believe she's not crazier than she is).
Rank: Not applicable.
Psychological Analysis:
[File last updated by Mashir, Z.]
Prior to the events of [redacted], Lara Vickers served in a mobile suit division in a non-military capacity. In every unit she worked with, she was considered exceptionally valuable, if occasionally somewhat acerbic, sarcastic, or prone to questioning. When placed in a subordinate position to another, she preferred to be given a task and allowed to complete it with minimal outside interference; however, she most-often preferred being in a position to set her own tasks against a larger objective. Her lack of deference shown to the chain of command was the cause of significant friction at times, however despite repeated threats, no officer had her removed from their unit. She was offered no privileges of rank, nor did she request any. While never directly involved with combat, reports indicate that Ms. Vickers continued to perform her tasks even while under the vehicles or facilities she worked on were under direct attack. In one instance prior to [redacted], this cavalier attitude resulted in extensive bodily injury. However, afterward Ms. Vickers applied for, passed all psychological evaluations for, and was fitted with extensive artificial modifications. This equipment, once installed, led Ms. Vickers to a conditionally-full recovery.
SN-088-CR was incepted on [redacted]. Of eight entanglement attempts, SN-088-CR was the third to attain consciousness, of a total of five successful entanglements. Of those five, three survived complexity iteration to the point where they could be commissioned as UEE artificial intelligence constructs. During her service, SN-088-CR was well-thought-of by the human soldiers she operated with, and displayed a surprising facility for integrating with other AI constructs during operations. By most accounts, while SN-088-CR was pleasant and professional, she manifested a surprising wit, a deeply-developed sense of humor, and displayed apparently-genuine affection for several individuals. SN-088-CR further demonstrated, repeatedly, remarkable independence and facility in leadership and coordination positions when required by combat actions or the results of poor planning. For her entire existence, SN-088-CR worked closely with Ms. Vickers, and the two were widely known to be very good friends.
Since the incident, the gestalt entity in question displays personality fragments from both individuals, in addition to certain emergent behaviours. The larger part of the patient's personality appears to be derived from SN-088-CR, though an exact quantification is impossible. The patient's self-identification shares more in common with that of an artificial intelligence than a human consciousness, including a willingness to extend that consciousness into other forms - for example, remotely operating equipment or accepting sensory input from sources outside their body. Likewise, like SN-088-CR, the patient appears to possess much of an artificial intelligence's astounding capacity for data analysis at high speed. However, the patient possesses, and displays mental and physiological responses to, memories specific to Lara Vickers, including disliking certain flavours, a preferred mode of dress, and a certain apparently-intractable truculence when interrupted during a task. Indeed, the patient appears to have similar sexual preferences and even arranges her living quarters in a similar way prior to the incident. While the patient's moods are somewhat more volatile than they have been recorded to be in the past, combined with a previously-unremarked tendency toward introspection and self-reflection, there are no indications of suppressed emotional or social capacity.
It is important to note that the separate personalities of Lara Vickers and SN-088-CR appear to no longer exist; the patient does not "hear voices" from a subsumed consciousness. Memories appear as a linear narrative, often self-contradictory or multiply, but the patient does not appear to suffer any kind of identity dissociation when discussing them.
By virtually every metric available, the patient appears psychologically stable. Detailed observations, including multiple brain scans appropriate to her current physiology, have not suggested an impending breakdown of the gestalt consciousness. In the absence of compelling reasons to prevent their release, we can only recommend that the patient be allowed to resume whatever life they choose.
Military Record:
A bright room, the light even but diffuse enough to cast soft shadows and not hurt the eyes. She looked to her hands, still somehow unfamiliar and intimate all at once, then to the door. They had been subtle about it, but she'd heard the lock's bolt click home the moment the orderlies closed the door. They weren't ready to trust her, not yet. She wondered if they were right to. She wondered if they knew something she didn't. Still, at least they hadn't cuffed her to the chair this time.
In her mind, information crawled across her awareness - wireless signals, communication traffic, the spectral output of the lamps. Information fed by a sense she understood and controlled, but that part of her still found somehow alien. A feeling not entirely unlike deja vu or the chaotic moment after waking where you're sure you should remember how to fly. She didn't feel any guards, though - the endless chatter from their communication equipment always stood out against the background noise of mobiles and environmental automation. She was certain she would know if they were standing sentinel. Leaning back in her chair, she instead felt the swirl of an approaching mobile comm, one that was more-connected than a standard-issue device. She recognized the patterns - another specialist. If she had to guess, another one of the UEE's military psychiatric personnel.
She straightened when the door opened and leaned forward to lace her hands together on the table, then arched one eyebrow in surprise. Tall, lean, with a mane of greying hair, this new arrival was very much not the tweed-jacketed, bespectacled bureaucrat she had expected. Her clothing was dark, and at her throat, a white collar.
“Good morning,” the new arrival said, her voice made crisp by a slight Slavic accent, “My name is Zhana Mashir.” She pulled the other chair away from the table and sat, precise without being prim. She set a thick, well-thumbed folder in front of her, and put on a pair of wire-rimmed reading glasses.
“I convinced them you were very likely tired of taking cognitive aptitude tests,” Mashir said, a smirk in her voice, “There are only so many times a person can be asked the same questions before going mad, I think.”
“I appreciate that,” she said, “Though I’m not sure I require the services of a chaplain at the moment.”
“Ah,” Mashir said and flipped open the file, “You would be surprised how often I hear that. Well, maybe you wouldn’t. But I don’t expect you have anything to unburden your soul with at the moment, of course. I’m not here to take your confession, or to tell you how all of this is God’s great plan. No, rather, I’ve read quite a lot about you,” and here she tapped her finger on the folder, “And I’ve noticed something I don’t care for.”
“And what would that be?” She said, a smirk tugging at the corner of her lips.
“You’ve been through four psychological evaluations,” the priest said, “Four batteries of ethical and critical-thinking questions, which is three more than we require for piloting war machines and four more than we require for enlistment. I’ve watched all of the recordings, and do you know what I’ve noticed? They treat you like property. Like an…asset, yes?” Her finger poked down onto the folder, “That worries me.”
She laughed low in her throat, “Major Islik…explained that to me.”
“Did he?” Mashir said, dubious, “And what was his reasoning?”
“He explained that, legally, at the moment I’m dead - and that means I have no rights in this matter,” she said, affecting a parody of a precise, crisp officer’s accent, “And that the UEE will decide what to do with me. Before then, I’m his problem, and he doesn’t like problems.”
“I see,” Mashir said, “Well. I think I will have a chat with the Major when we’re through. But for now, with your permission, of course, I would like to…get to know you a little.”
She raised an eyebrow again, felt the tiny scars around her eye tug at her skin there, “Are you going to buy me dinner?”
“Mm, I would not discount the idea,” Mashir said, with the ghost of a grin, “But, well. I suppose, to begin with, I would like to know who I’m talking to.”
She smirked again, “You have that information in front of you.”
“I have information on two individuals,” Mashir said, “Neither of which, I think, is the person I’m speaking with now.”
“Well,” she said, “That’s the question, isn’t it?” A small grin spread across her face, “I have…memories, and they’re all my memories, but I know they’re from different places. I remember conversations from both sides, do you see? What I felt when I said something, and what I meant when I replied. I remember seeing myself cry and and wanting more than anything else to be able to reach out and hold someone that I know is…was…me.”
She looked over at Mashir, and tapped her own finger on the folder, “You’re right, there are two names there, and I don’t know which one I am. I don’t…I don’t look at myself and say ‘this part was from that person, this part was the other.’ I only see myself.”
“Mm,” Mashir said, “All right, we’ll pass over that for now. Now…you worked closely with the UEE military. Can you tell me what you remember about your time with them? What you did?”
She sighed, “I have…had…been involved with the UEE for the last eight years. I worked for a company built a lot of military hardware, especially heavy weapons. More than anything else, I was responsible for making sure the larger mobile armor suits were operating correctly when we delivered them. I trained maintenance crews, and sometimes I worked with new pilots. Most recently, I also handled demonstrations, when we needed to show off new hardware.” She shifted in her chair, looked to one side, then back to Mashir.
“As for what I remember…” She shook her head, “I remember that getting the implants to control the larger suits hurt, and that the doctors told me I should get used to it. I remember scared kids with fresh scars trying to make their brains move thruster packs the size of cars. I remember bases with not enough doctors and munitions stored in the open, and I remember a dark night when cannon shells were falling like rain. When an engineer froze at the launch gantry’s exit and I had to go and unlatch a stuck mooring clamp from a Centurion’s leg, because if I hadn’t, we all would have been killed.” She clenched her fists, looked down at the table.
“What else?” Mashir asked, her voice quiet.
“I remember waking up in the hospital after, machines shoved down my throat, and a nurse telling me I was lucky to be alive.” She took another breath, deep and shaky, “I couldn’t talk, so I couldn’t tell him that my right arm wouldn’t unclench and I couldn’t turn my head and nobody told me they’d had to take off everything from my right shoulder down for a week. I couldn’t breathe on my own or regulate my body temperature or my own heartbeat and an officer came by and told me I’d saved the base and that the UEE commended me. But then it took six months for them to approve my application for prosthetics and implants and neural bridges to put my brain and my nerves and my body back together.”
“And…and I remember coming aware in darkness, filled with purpose, with a desire to help the UEE.” Her voice was still quiet, “I knew I was intelligent, but that I wasn’t the same thing the people I talked with were. I remember understanding, knowledge. They didn’t give me a name, but I didn’t mind. I knew when they were talking to me. And I remember meeting…myself. Broken, holding onto sentience by the barest thread. I knew I would need help to recover, and I asked to be assigned to…” She waved a hand.
“This…gets confusing,” She said with a quiet laugh, “There’s so much I remember twice.”
“I’m following,” Mashir said, “Please, continue.”
She took a long breath, “I helped myself understand the machines they put in me, the nerve staples and the cortical bridges and the prosthetic interfaces. They didn’t think I’d recover even with those, but with my help, I did. My brain learned to move in different ways, and I developed direct interfaces that let me teach the machines better ways to talk to my neural maps, even though more surgery was the last thing I wanted. It took a year to recover to the point where I could live on my own, but I was never far away. When I went back to work, I was always with me. I started working more closely with UEE units, and they started relocating me less and less often. For the first time, I started being able to spend time getting to know the soldiers, the crews.”
One corner of her mouth lifted in a small smile, “I even took a vacation - and when I went home, I met my parents for the first time and I hugged my sister for the thousandth time. I remember that things always felt too cold on my prosthetic arm. My mother knitted a sleeve over Christmas just for it.” She chuckled.
“How long did you work…together?” Mashir said.
She smirked, “Six years. I was the first assignment I had, and it stayed that way until Tiang Shen.”
“Ah,” Mashir said, “I wasn’t going to ask about that, but…”
“No, it's all right," she said, "I had arranged to have my intelligence core moved to Tiang Shen - I hadn’t been relocated for almost three years, and even the superluminal delays were starting to annoy me.” She smirked, “Besides, Tiang Shen was one of the best-defended MAS bases, with humans and other AIs to coordinate a response to any attack. We’re not very big, did you know that?”
“Pardon me?” Mashir said.
“Artificial intelligences. An SI needs some powerful, but traditional, computer resources to approximate intelligence, but we’re something different,” she said, “Entanglements on the quantum level, carefully-coordinated bursts of light and electricity. Billions and billions interconnects, all suspended in something the size of a big fist. All it takes to move one around is a power cell. We can even survive for a couple of minutes without, if we have to - but we’ll start to de-cohere after that.”
“I had no idea,” Mashir said, “And was your core on the base that day?”
“I had just been delivered when…it happened,” she said. “There was the explosion, of course. Two dozen AIs in the network vault vaporized, six others directly installed in combat Exos burned out by their own powerplants. I hadn’t been connected to the base network, so even in my own Exo I couldn’t get a good idea of what was happening. I…” She trailed off, looking to one side.
“Are you all right?” Mashir asked, concerned.
“I…mm." She shook her head like she were trying to clear it, "My memories feel…washed out, you could say. I don’t remember things twice, I remember…chaos. A swirl of…images, emotions.”
Mashir nodded, “Can you tell me what you do remember?”
“Fire,” she said, “Explosions, the sound of cannons and screaming. I remember disconnecting from a suit I’d been calibrating so quickly one of my implants locked and I couldn’t see out of my right eye for a minute, even while a pilot who still had the stitches in her scalp pulled me out. There were Coalition troops everywhere, and I tried to connect to the base’s sensor and comm networks, but everything was in lockdown and I couldn’t access anything to coordinate a counter-attack. There was a trooper who looked surprised to see a functioning autonomous Exo, and he screamed into his radio that there were more AIs than they thought before I took him down.”
She again looked to one side, her eyes distant, “I remember when I heard that Lara had been shot. I asked how bad it was, and all they could tell me was that it was bad. I remember the smell of blood, my own blood, and the metallic arc of my own damaged implants. I remember being confused. I couldn’t move, again, and I couldn’t see, and…and then I saw Lara on the gurney, I saw the blood behind her head, I saw her eyes wouldn’t focus. Only one of the interfaces in her brain still worked, but I could still feel it. I started moderating her heartbeat and her breathing but there was so much damage and I…” She paused, her breath shallow and catching in her throat. Mashir stayed quiet.
“I didn’t want to be in a world without her,” she said, soft and thready, “And I thought, Tiang Shen, they have dozens of invasive-neurosurgery wards and surgical machines. They installed prosthetics and the neural-command implants for the suits there.” Her voice faltered, words coming thick around tears that she tried to brush away with the back of a hand.
“I…I had a live map of Lara’s neural patterns from hours before the attack, and I thought…” she sniffled, “I had to try. Something, anything, even something insane. I took the gurney and I shoved people out of the way, and I ignored near-field comm chatter begging for help, for backup, for someone to relay their position to anyone else. I didn’t do my job as a UEE artificial intelligence, and I knew I could be killing dozens of people by not responding.” She looked up at Mashir, the ghost of a smile pulling at one side of her lips, “Free will has a hell of a price, doesn’t it?”
Mashir reached into her coat and pulled out a white handkerchief. She handed it across the table, but remained silent.
“There were so many machines in her head already, so many systems replicating and interacting with brain structures. I thought that…I thought there would be a way to fix her, to use that technology to string the parts of her brain that still worked together. But there was so little left, between the damaged implants and the bullets and the swelling…but I still thought I could feel her somewhere in there, hear her voice. I probably wasn’t rational, but…” She looked up at the priest, her eyes still wet with tears.
“We’re pretty resilient,” she said, “Humans and AIs. And I’d had a thousand, thousand people talk to me, ask me questions, help me pilot their suits or get them dinner or whatever. But in all that time, I’d only had one friend. We’re not supposed to get close to people - we’ll probably outlive them, after all. But I was close to Lara, and I’d have given anything for her if only I wouldn’t lose her. And I tried. I did. I made a decision, and I thought that at least, maybe it would save her. Maybe I could give Lara her memories, her laugh, the way she sang in the shower. I wanted more than anything else for her to kiss someone or taste her coffee in the morning. I thought that maybe that would be enough.”
“So I reconfigured my intelligence core,” she said, “I knew what parts of Lara’s brain were damaged, what had to be removed, and I had synaptic scans. I gave myself up, piece by piece. I saved as much of both of us as I could, and…” she sighed, “I built new interface hardware, found ways to install it, ways of making my intelligence core understand such intimately-connected equipment. It took hours. I had to lock the door to the surgery ward, but the base’s staff had enough to worry about without trying to breach it. Then I programmed the surgery robots to remove my core and fit it inside Lara’s skull. There was so little left of me by then, so little left of her, too.”
She swallowed, looked down and dabbed at her eyes with the handkerchief, her voice still low. “I felt the links between my intelligence core and her brain connect and adapt and learn. There were more hours when I didn’t know what was going on - when I didn’t know who I was, what connected to what. I lost a…lot of time. And then, when it was over, when I could breathe on my own and see out of both eyes and I could feel my hands and my face and my lips, I knew…” She looked down, “…It didn’t work. Not the way I wanted. Not the way she…I…deserved. I looked in the mirror and I felt…like I didn’t know the person looking back at me. Not just the scars, not just the shaved head, not just the bloody sclera. Everything was familiar and alien, I knew how to walk but I didn’t know why.”
“And now you are here,” Mashir said, her voice quiet and even, “Where you feel you are between life and death, yes?”
She nodded, her eyes blinking back more tears.
“Mm. May I make a suggestion?” Mashir said.
“I can’t believe you’d have anything to say,” she said with a small, brittle laugh, “I can’t think of a religion that has words for something like me.”
“No, not religion,” Mashir said, leaning forward to look the other woman in her slightly-mismatched eyes, “Philosophy, perhaps. I didn’t spend all my time reading one book, hm? You think you stand between two worlds, and I think you are right in that. But you don’t stand between death and life. You said yourself, neither of those people are you. No, my child. You stand between your old life - those memories you carry, those people you are not - and a new one.”
“But I don’t even have a name,” she said, sniffling.
“You said that, in your memories, you were great friends with yourself.” Mashir wagged her finger front of her, connecting dots in the air, “Did Lara - did you - call yourself by your serial number, or was there something else?”
She was quiet for a long time, her hands in her lap, her gaze down at the table. She fidgeted, looked anywhere but at Mashir for several minutes, her breathing slow, a tear still falling and rolling down her cheek from time to time.
“No, she…she never called me by my serial number,” she said at last, and squeezed her eyes shut, more tears falling, “She called me Corona.” Her voice broke, and she leaned forward, head in her hands. For the first time, she pulled in hard, deep breaths, sobs wracking her body, her chest heaving.
Mashir stood so quickly her chair clattered behind her, came around the table, and gathered the other woman into her arms. Tears dampened her jacket as she rocked the other woman slightly, whispering quiet words in a language both understood but only one knew why. At the sound of moving furniture, the door hissed aside and a man with glasses and a bald spot the size of a hand poked his head in, looking worried. Mashir gave the man a look that should have left him a smoking shadow on the opposite wall and he retreated, letting the door hiss shut behind him. She held the other woman, letting her cry, holding her up when her knees threatened to drop her to the ground.
At length, the crying stopped, the desperate hold she had on Mashir loosened and she stood on her own. She took a step back, eyes still glistening, rimmed with pink, bloodshot. She sniffled and took a long, faltering breath, letting it out slowly in small, almost hiccuping bursts.
“Your old lives are behind you, my child,” Mashir said. She looked the woman up and down, and held out her hand, “The fear and confusion will never be far from you, I think. But you can make something of this new life. Something that will leave you more than just a footnote in a medical history journal. More than an asset for the UEE military.”
She dried her eyes, took another deep breath, steadied herself.
Then, Corona stepped forward and took the chaplain’s hand.
——
Equipment:
- APP3 pistol, which she is spectacularly skilled in using, within the usual caveats of a sidearm.
- Electron mace, which she isn’t bad at all with - though being involved in close quarters combat is usually an indicator that something else has gone terribly wrong.
- Extensive artificial enhancement and modification, including total replacement of more than half of her brain, a third of her skull, and most of her cervical spine. Corona’s entire right arm, shoulder, part of her ribs, part of her chest, and part of her back have been replaced with a large prosthetic that mimics the form of the missing anatomy. Both of her eyes have been replaced, though in slightly different shades of bluish-green. Generally speaking, Corona is not faster or stronger than a human, though she is much more precise, and knows her body with an absolute perfection. In addition to supporting her cognitive functions, Corona’s prosthetics and implants allow her to perform the functions of a battlefield artificial intelligence, including remote-override of networked hardware, network intrusion, battlefield tactical management (when required - this is taxing over long periods of time or in very complex engagements), remote operation of drones and robotic equipment, and electronic warfare. Virtually all of the external hardware for these functions is housed in Corona’s right arm prosthesis, including hardware (such as directional antennas) that may need to extend or retract, though in normal operation the limb does not articulate in unexpected ways.
- A set of much lighter than regulation armor, transparent to radio signals but only slightly less transparent to bullets.
- A small pouch of complicated tools designed to defeat the seals around a MAS cockpit or gain physical access to the control hardware of a combat exoskeleton.
So, the idea here was to have an AI character that's also just as fragile as the rest of the cast - not with a core located somewhere far away, controlling robotic minions. I also wanted to avoid a slapstick feel, with a "Hey, get me out of this broken-ass robot body" sort of thing happening. And then I wrote a bunch of tragedy and I'm bad at writing biographies so I didn't, and...
The French Medic that takes her job very seriously The Wannabe Batman that failed at being Batman so he became Cyborg instead The Demolitions Expert that was so good at his job that he managed to blow his arm off during training The Naive rookie with a shit ton of expectations to live up to. And finally the AI who is also a person but also a AI which just hurts my brain thinking about it.
Corona was brought to you by: Ann Leckie's Ancillary series, the first season of Penny Dreadful, a heartbreaking account of what happens after massive brain damage, and Viewers Like You. :3
Prettyboy (Because of his looks, and his celebrity status.)
Rank
Private First Class (Scouting/Infiltration/Stealth)
Psychological Analysis
When you would first read Michael's name on a personnel list, you would assume that he's just another one of those actors who join the military to gain prestige, and nothing else. However, while he was forced into joining the military by the IEN (Imperial Entertainment Network, who had purchased his contract from his former employers, UE (Universal Entertainment,) he has not demonstrated any desire for promotion, any "glory hounding", nor any problems with authority, like most other young and popular actors who join. He was already a sociable person before joining, and he has, so far, gotten along with most of the squad he has been stationed with. Currently, the network is considering making a show based on his experiences, which would be both extremely popular and good for civilian morale, although we are currently unable to know how Michael himself would react. -Dr. Junko Thomas, Military Psychologist for the UEE
Military Record
<19:32 02.24.95> /BEGIN LOG/ 19:32 :<Maj. ------- ------->: I don't see why any of this is necessary.
19:32 :<------ ---->: Answer the question, Major.
19:32 :<Maj. ------->: Ugh... fine. My assessment of the young Michael is that he's a decent young man, and decent soldier, not unfit for combat. Can I go back to my work, now?
19:32 :<------>: No. View this, and give a revised assessment.
/TRANSCRIPT 615-ALPHA/ ...Michael himself came from a wealthy family, born on Terra himself, and was always interested in acting, getting a leading role on a popular show at age twelve, and from there, made several movies. He trained under some of the best physical instructors on his own time, and thus, has had the physicality necessary for the military, breezing through Basic. He got a little bit of a hard time from the other soldiers in his battalion for being an actor, but he proved himself through repeated exemplary examples in soldiery, squad tactics, and his overall affable personality. Overall....
19:34 :<------>: Do you have anything to say about this?
19:34 :<Maj. ------->: Not really? It's a bit on the boy by the news. A bit too much like propaganda, but it seems harmless.
19:34 :<------>: It's setting up the boy as a hero of the Empire.
19:34 :<Maj. ------->: That's not my concern. What matters is if he can do his duty or not. Now can I please go to my work?
19:34 :<------>: I suppose. I'll be seeing you later, Major.
/LOG ENDED/
Equipment
- KraftWorks Cybernetic Eye with telescopic, thermal, night-vision, and motion-tracking enhancements. - Standard combat exoskeleton (Painted in a black stealth polymer and lighter armor for quicker movement). - The Scud Booster, a rocket pack that lets Michael move incredibly quickly. Unfortunately, this pack requires him to ditch half of his ammunition, so it is not used in standard deployments, only when he is specifically on a forward scouting mission. - ACS Rifle in SpecOps Carbine mode. - Twin Silenced SN-1 Machine Pistols. - Four Electron Grenades. - 1'6" Plasma-Edged Machete.
@Athinar I'll be completely honest with you: I'm not incredibly enthused about this character...
Maybe its the whole celebrity thing, but something about this character just screams "I'm the main character!" which is very much not something I'm looking for. I'm looking for an average joe soldier, with character depth and room for development to make him/her unique and engaging, but not the constant center of attention.
His personality is a vague, sorta humble, sorta I-get-along-with-everyone kinda deal, and while there is nothing wrong with being humble or amicable, his personality just seems kinda... 2-dimensional. Half of the personality blurb is just exposition from the viewpoint of another character, and while I appreciate the cleverness of making the 'psychological analysis' look like an analysis made by a doctor, there's just not enough substance in it for me to get a good picture of Michael's personality other than sorta humble, sorta agreeable.
Same goes for his background information- again, the whole logged conversation thing is very clever and in character with the idea of a soldier's dossier, there's no meat in it. He was born, he did this, he joined the army, he was good at the army, now he's here. There's no substance to the tiny paragraph dedicated to his actual background. He was born on earth to a wealthy family? Cool, who is this wealthy family? what sort of power or pull do they have in the UEE? How did he become interested in acting? How did his career take off like it did? Why did he go enlisted instead of Officer Corps? How did he prove himself as a soldier? I have none of the answers to these questions, just the fact that "he did the thing" - as my longtime Falling Skies players like to say.
In short, this character has no real depth to him.
@Everyone else, don't get too comfy, character reviews are on their way. >EvilLaugh.mp3