Chapter One:
The Rising Sun Express
The Rising Sun Express
The city of Strasbourg continued its silent vigil amidst howling winds. The storms of spring had come once again to the Upper Rhine Valley, further accented by the rumbling of thunder far in the distance. Street vendors, businessman and mothers clutching their children's hands moved with a quicker pace to attend to their business, a flash of light lit up the horizon and moments later the concussive rumble followed. Things still needed to be done, food needed to be bought to prepare for supper, business meeting must be attended and knick knacks needed to be peddled but a new sense of urgency permeated the air.
The city had always been a place of duality and changing times Celtic ruins were built over by Romans and when the Empire fell it changed hands between the Alemanni, Huns, and Franks, a free city, to one of the many great bastions of civilization in the Holy Roman Empire, to the French, and to the Germans and back to the French. It was a bastard of many hands shown in its German architecture but French speaking populace whose ancestry can be traced all through Europe. A duality only further increased as humanity progressed further into the 21st century. 15th century buildings stood next to towering skyscrapers and pulsing clubs of bright neon throbbed in the night built atop long forgotten roman burial sites.
“Ashes to Ashes.” Crash muttered as he look up at the gray skies suspended above him. Strasbourg was one of many stops on their journey with Kybuashi Enterprises’ mysterious box. Their journey started in a small warehouse in Oxford, they took the Rising Sun Express (RSE) under the channel into mainland Europe and would eventually end up crossing another ocean to get to Japan. It was a trip that would've taken weeks if not months by land in the old days, but thanks to the improved maglev lines that crossed the globe it would take no more than the better half of a day. Oxford to Tokyo in a little over 15 hours without stops. Wasting time was wasting money after all.
Though the whole situation still bothered Crash. Everything still just felt... off in a way. You didn't need as many Divers as they had for a simple delivery mission. Most of them were armed to the teeth and cybered up in such a way that they were ready to invade a Corp HQ, not defend some box on a train. And why were they even taken a train? A cargo plane could of easily hauled the box unless somebody feared it being shot down. And it wasn't just the odd parts of the scenario either. Crash had dealt with Corps before. A man like him was hired often by these types for various missions and jobs of varying moral disposition. They valued his muscle and willingness to use it, but this deal felt like nothing like any of those shakedown runs. Even in those scenarios the Corps had always felt the need to show their dominance. He would be invited to their high reaching skyscrapers filled with guards, security and the latest in groundbreaking technology. You would be surrounding by impossibly pretty people all with smiles on their face even as their eyes told you that they were judging a commoner such as yourself. They wanted to show anyone that they could that they had the true power in the world and that they could flex it in any which way they pleased.
This time was different.
He was sitting in a studio apartment halfway across the world, barely furnished and the floor boards creaking beneath his cybernetic legs. No jobs had come through in the past month or so and he was starting to get restless. He had enough money to retire away to some nice quiet town and spend the rest of his days gardening if he wanted to, but of course he never would. He needed something anything to do or he could swear he felt his body rotting away underneath him. It was than that a message came through on his computer, state of the art five years ago. It was a simple three line message from a corporate account, a greeting, a date and a meeting point. He sent back a reply of agreement before he even read it all the way through.
He ended up meeting the Kybuashi Enterprises Representative on the other side of town at some coffeehouse. Crash didn't particularly like coffee but the place was high class enough so that a Corp wouldn't feel out of place and public enough so that neither of them would try and kill one another. He recognized the woman from the news one of Kybuashi's PR representatives: tall, blonde hair, blue eyes and the disarming sort of smile that just made you want to talk to her. Not Crash's type, but he at least appreciated the gesture. She came alone but he could of sworn he felt the Spook on the rooftop across from them with the sniper rifle trained on him for any sudden moves, practically begging for him to do something stupid. He did'nt of course instead they talked over coffee about business in the hum of conversation. Kybuashi would be transporting one of their new prototypes from one of their labs in England. Something big apparently, something that could change the game forever. They would be hiring a team t make sure that it got to where it needed to safely and on time. They did'nt expect any trouble but it was better safe than sorry. The money was good, half of it was wired straight away to his account but that wasn't why he took the deal.
Then silence for another two months until finally he received contact again. A message giving him a date and a location in Oxford. He arrived to find the other members of the team that had apparently been hired. They picked up the box from an empty warehouse the ID scanner at the door already programmed to let them in. On top of the box was a note written in elegant curvy handwriting. It told them they needed to catch a train.
He turned towards the train car where he knew the box would still be sitting. Curiosity taking the better of him he crossed the small distance and reentered the car. It was strange it stood no larger than a man, made of a strong blend of carbon fiber and advanced polymers that give it an almost alien black sheen. Running a metallic hand across the surface, it was perfectly smooth almost as if it was sanded down to a point. He casually flipped on the x-ray component of his EYE-SEE implants but just like before he still saw nothing. It was protected by something, probably an interior coating of lead. Whoever had built it made it specifically so that nobody could look inside of it.
“You were hired to protect the box, not to attempt to peek inside of it Crash.” A playful voice spoke out seemingly from out of the ether. Crash sighed as he removed his hand from the box, his large shoulders moving downwards. Ghost. The Spark certainty fit her handle, you almost forgot about her existence until she started whispering in your head. Crash never liked Sparks in the first place, they were always twitchy little buggers who definitely had some problems if they felt more at home in the Net where they were composed of ones and zeros rather than the real world. But Ghost took it to another level.
“Well miss, I doubt you're just speaking to chastise me. What’s the situation?” Crash responded, outside another flash and another concussive boom each one getting closer and closer. Soon the storm would be upon them.
“Loading and unloading will be finished shortly. You should be on the move with the package within ten minutes. But it’s strange, I’m picking something up through the net lots of chatter. It’s probably just interference because of the storm but I’ll keep monitoring it just in case.” There was a click as the voice disappeared once more leaving Crash in silence. He give one last look towards the box, making sure the straps keeping it rooted in place where secured before he step outside of the car again.
The others were all milling about outside, some talking among themselves and others like Crash keeping their own silent vigil. Another boom and a crash this time almost atop of them as the front of the storm began to drift over Strasbourg. Drip, drip, drip. The slow methodical dripping of water came soon after as droplets fell from the ever darkening sky. Crash switched over to local communications as he spoke relaying Ghost’s message out to the team.
“Ten minutes.”