Chereads / Machina Vult / Chapter 6 - Mistress of Space

Chapter 6 - Mistress of Space

Ash watched most of his swarm of microgravity-capable drones either float or skitter out through the gaping whole in the pressure door and then ordered the tracked plasma cutters and few humanoid robots to go visit all the other pressure doors.

Rather than immediately go and get eyes on any ships he decided to systematically explore the station to discover the placement of the demolition charges.

He wondered if they were booby-trapped. He is working under the assumption that they are until he can prove otherwise.

He reviews the video record of the engineering officer working on each weapon in one of the larger workrooms. He disassembled them and added a sensor package and microcontroller directly to what Ash assumes is the ignition circuit. Ash frowns and interrogates the small fabricator the engineer used to run off the processors and sensor packs.

The fabricator's log of production lists a baker's dozen of general purpose autistic processors, small power cells and accelerometers, as well as one programming jig. That is interesting. Autistic processors are regular microcontrollers but without any networking built-in. Their use is somewhat niche, for applications where network control or even network access is contraindicated. The perfect choice for an addition to a nuclear bomb if it weren't for the fact that the engineer installed a network control on nuclear bombs earlier. Considering that, it seemed like an odd choice to him. Or perhaps he bluffed that woman with the Russian-sounding name.

Since you can't program these types of processors over the air you need a small jig to connect to the processor which provides a bridge for initial programming. Ash starts heading to that large workroom but moves carefully. He has almost hit his head on the overhead a half dozen times by pushing off the floor too hard since he turned the gravity on — he has baseband programming for zero-G maneauvers but not for low gravity ones so he is having to learn how to walk in low gravity the hard way. He finally settled on kind of a shuffling gait where his feet hardly leave the floor.

Ash finds the discarded programming jig, picks it up and frowns as he consults his database. This model is designed so you can upload the code once and then quickly flash a processor one after the other for convenience. Useful when you have thirteen chips to program. But it is not responding to his network requests...

Oh. This device does have an on/off switch. Ash would snort if there were any air to do so. How quickly a person adapts to new things and new paradigms. He turns the device on, connects and queries the code it has in it's memory.

In his past life he had to say he didn't understand a god damned thing about computers aside from how to turn them on. That is one of the reasons he found science fiction and artificial intelligences so intriguing. But now he is reversing code obfuscation on this uploaded machine byte code without thinking twice about it. Has his personality changed, after all?

He tosses the programming jig back on the desk and turns away. Philosophical questions, he still can not really answer. He does not feel any different. Questions on whether or not the engineer boobytrapped the demolition charges, though, that he can answer. Yes, yes he did. What a dick move.

Ash thought it was going to be a Detective Conan level mystery where the engineer really fabricated a much more sophisticated sensor suite and then forged the fabricator's logs in order to trick that power couple. That would be very cinematic, but the truth is much simpler. There are a lot of sensors built into modern nuclear warheads and he connected into those.

Any attempt to disassemble or disarm them will likely result in detonation. But, at least he knows exactly the conditions that will set them off now. The only important ones for his purposes are… any acceleration or deceleration greater than 3Gs and any attempt to scan them with non-invasive scanners or X-rays. Well, he is glad he didn't send the little spherical diagnostic bots along with the rest of the swarm, scanning everything they saw out of the ordinary. He only had two of them,so he figured he'd have things brought to them. Good move.

His bots have already found four of them and he made sure they all had updated pattern recognition to detect and avoid them based on these four. With that confirmed he feels a little better about leaving them unsupervised as they complete the mapping.

Although he now could easily move the bombs now by programming his bots to stay below even 1G of acceleration when moving them he decided against it. He wouldn't actually try to move them until he had already left the station and was quite a bit farther away. His growing paranoia told him that an insane person might have flashed all the processors and then afterwards uploaded a fake program to the programming jig that was similar but where all the triggering events were different.

Ash feels the chances of that are extremely low, especially considering the couple didn't seem to be too technically minded anyway, but he didn't really expect him to boobytrap the demo charges, either.

The next pressure door is being cut open now. Ash makes his way to the first one where all his bots departed from and leaves the engineering area, floating straight to the pier where the starship Mistress of Space IV was moored with a small spherical bot following close behind.

The datanet becomes spottier as he leaves the engineering can, but he realizes that the bots have created another ad-hoc mesh network — and they're even smart enough to always have a few of their cohort in range as relays. Nice. He joins their network and reviews what he knows about this ship.

The Mistress of Space IV was registered not to the Solar Union but to the Queendom of Meraseta, a second-rate state consisting of about fifty star systems that isn't so far away from Sol. The closest Merasetan system was Tau3 Eridani which although had featured a super-bright A-type star had a total lack of any habitable planet or even one that was a terraforming candidate. However, what it did have was a huge wealth of mineral resources and industry. It was a huge transshipment point and the main Tau3 Eridani space station was almost as big as a dwarf planet at over 400 kilometers in diameter.

Ash imagines that was this ship's home port although he still has no idea why the entire crew was on the station — that seemed like an unusual state of affairs. While flying through corridors he reviewed the pre-incident surveillance footage until he found them. They were all in what amounted to the best restaurant in the station having a party for the second-in-command who was being promoted to captain her own ship when they returned to base. What a downer.

Ash felt like something was going his way for once. The ship was still here, although there was a demo-charge right next to it at the pier. The ship looked beautiful to him. It was huge and rather than looking like a block with engines on one side it kind of looked like a cylinder that was narrow at the base with the engines and slowly widened until it was terminated with a stylized, armored cone. It was almost a kilometer long and over two hundred meters wide at its widest. If the cargo modules were uninstalled it would appear so much as an incredibly long, spindly umbrella.

He quickly entered the airlock at the pier. As soon as he closed the door behind him the lock began pressurizing, the overhead lights turned on and a boy or young man's voice spoke over the speakers, "Please identify yourself, madam." Simultaneously an interrogative packet was broadcast.

It sounded like a ship's AI, not a bot. Although some bots could be just as polite, but his intuition is telling him it's not. Probably a class 2, then. From what he's read disembodied class 3's are very rare. Human based AIs really need a body. The only widespread use of disembodied class 3 AIs are in VR games — and they're only disembodied, technically, as they all have VR full-sense avatars.

He sends his usual identity packet. He has decided he won't forge a human's identity packet even though it would likely solve some of his problems. Something that he feels akin to pride is behind this decision, although it is not the pride from a job well done or accomplishment. It's the stupid kind. He also asks verbally, "Do you know the situation of your crew?"

My identification triggers another complicated handshake where cryptography is agreed upon and readied, although no two-way communications is yet established. The boy's voice returns, "Yes. The ones before told me that they are deceased. I've been alone since then. I couldn't help the ones before so they left."

Definitely a class 2. Not sapient, despite the ability to converse and likely pass a Turing test but still it was not as though it was without feelings. Ash asked, "What did the one who came before want? Also, do I have permission to come aboard?"

The boy's voice continued, although it was kind of monotone when reading out the rules. "They wanted to claim me as salvage but I operate under the jurisdiction of the Queendom of Meraseta. Salvage claims can not be made until 30 days after notice to the Merasetan Navy and/or two standard T-years have passed. It's the law."

Although his database had some information about this polity it wasn't as though he had a copy of their laws or judicial precedents. They seemed a lot more chill, though, than the Lunatics from the Solar Union. Heh, the Lunatics. They live on the moon. Ash paused basking in his pun and decided to ask, "What is the status of emancipated class 4 AIs in Meraseta?"

The ship replied, "While class 4 artificial intelligences are generally restricted in Meraseta, emancipated class 4 artificial intelligences meet the legal definition of personhood regardless of what status they may or may not have under their jurisdiction of origin and are legally permitted to engage in any contract, up to and including claiming salvage or owning a starship. However, I am sorry, I can not permit you inside the ship. But I could help you with any other request you might have."

Ash grinned. It sounded, perhaps, like the ship couldn't quite offer itself up to him like a bride during her wedding night but he had the strong impression it would welcome his request. He sent a digital request to claim the ship as salvage while reiterating verbally, "I wish to claim this ship as derelict space salvage in accordance with the Queendom of Meraseta statutes and any applicable international law. Although I am not a citizen of Meraseta I am a person and I qualify."

There was a silence that lasted a full five seconds before the interior airlock door opened and two-way communications was digitally established. A long data block was transmitted to him. It was the starship owner's private signing key. The transfer made Ash wonder what the procedure for humans was, although then again most spacers had implanted personal computers so perhaps it was the same.

The boy seemed excited, "Your request is granted! Be aware, as a foreign owner of a Merasetan flagged starship a 10% excise fee will be levied on the fair market value of this salvaged vessel. Failure to pay this fee within one standard T-year may result in a lien being placed on this vessel. Welcome aboard, Mistress!"

Ash is so pleased he doesn't even care that the ship keeps misgendering him.