SCHISMS
BEGINNINGS
BEGINNINGS
The man smiled at his own misconceptions. He had thought, after going through the Program, he would wake up with a force-sense that would act like the missing equation giving him immediate understanding. But, of course, that is not the way technology works. It is more trial and error building upon discoveries of old rather than the creation of something new being merely an act of sheer will as spoken of in old mythologies.
Perhaps that is what prompted him to come with his companion, a fellow clone also from the Program, to the dig. He was beginning to understand how the Origin Six group was shaping itself to function as guardian lighthouse to ensure the great vessel Confederation would not wreck itself against the obstacles it faces. But R&D and technology was his personal passion and he was extremely interested in the opportunities new technologies brought about such as the GR Program as well as the Cloning Program.
While he was a clone of an extremely gifted Confederation technologist, he was not an identical clone. He was brought to a younger age and then imprinted with the current original’s mind template. It was a cheat, in a way, but one with some far-reaching possibilities. The social scientist of the group, First Speaker, did not like what he represented fearing the entire Confederation social displacement too great for the society to handle just yet. Already, the populace was coping with an extreme implementation of automation. Well, extreme to First Speaker’s sensibilities though he himself felt the move to a much more technological society only their due. In any event, the First Speaker was the only one who knew as their originals had known each other. Their originals did not know the others as the six were selected throughout the Confederation by some process or other.
His fellow clone companion, however, enjoyed the past and so kept his finger on the pulse of those organizations both public and private with archeological charters always interested in whatever new thing had been discovered or dug up. He had to admit to the value of his companion’s near obsession and the impact it can have in technological advancement given there were thousands upon thousands of years of history to sift through. Who knew how much had been learned and forgotten between the interim of eons?
Already, the Confederation was advancing in areas of mining extraction and refinement in their pursuit of Ultrachrome. A technology that seemed left in antiquity and lost until an enterprising Matthew Lucerne championed its widespread use throughout Kashan and the Confederation. What other knowledge was out there buried, waiting to be uncovered and…
“Here,” his companion motioned interrupting his thoughts as they ducked low into what looked like a cave. Was it always a cave or had it been a building that nature simply conquered with the passage of time? For all he knew, he could have been standing in the heart of some long-forgotten nation’s Temple of Knowledge.
There was a table set up with chairs and equipment but the two moved to an area that looked like discarded finds.
“The team found these but could not figure out what they were. Only that they were manufactured but to what purpose was unknown. Unrecognizable items were put here for the anthropology department to take a look at. Perhaps understanding the species that used to live here may give a clue as to the function of this… whatever it is.”
The man nodded but did not seem that interested. Despite the value archeology had brought to the Confederation’s technology base, he still hated to be in areas more appropriate to primitive man than an innovator in a galactic-spanning nation. He sniffed the dusty air and started to cough.
“So what did you want to show me?” he asked, hoping his impatience did not spill out in his voice.
“This,” his companion remarked and picked up what looked like a rectangular stone whose edges had been smoothed out, making it easy and comfortable to hold tightly in one’s fist. As the man looked at his companion hold the stone tightly, he wondered if he was being ‘put on’.
He was about to say something when a small light flickered and then solidified between them. Well, not exactly between them but also in the space the man was standing in as he watched the other gripping the stone.
It was as if a force-field had been activated and knocked the observer to the ground.
“What the hell?” he shouted, dusting himself off embarrassed.
The other man apologized quickly and let go of the stone causing the small field to collapse and ran to the other.
“Are you ok?”
“What? What was that?” the man demanded, flustered.
“A piece of technology that seems to be powered by… the force.”
The man was stunned and his companion began to excitedly talk, “There are rumors of very old civilizations who crafted technology powered by the force but so little is known that it seemed just that, rumors! I stumbled across this quite by accident but it seems that it did not work for the excavation team as they are not force-users.”
The man was helped up and he went over to the stone and picked it up.
“You have to concentrate,” his companion added helpfully and the man began to tighten his grip.
There was a flicker of light but nothing more. “It seemed like a personal shield,” the companion remarked.
“But powered by the force,” the man added in awe. “I felt something strange as I was concentrating.”
“It made me feel a little drained but wouldn’t that be normal if it were using my force-ability to power this thing?”
“Maybe,” the man muttered wondering about the implications. He looked in the direction of the other items. “Are there others?”
His companion shook his head, “No. I tried. But it seems this was the only piece.”
“I am taking this!” the man snapped and his companion opened his mouth in protest.
“You can’t. It has been cataloged. It needs to be reviewed by the Anthropology Department. If you take it, there will be an investigation and we do not need the attention.”
A surge of irritation flared up in the technologist at having to let go of the object. He had never thought of the Force as being the source of energy. It was as if his mind suddenly lit up with possibilities and cross applications.
SCHISMS
THE MIDDLE
THE MIDDLE
Metalorn
Jensaarai Jax sat at the little station café observing the throngs of individuals going about their business in an attempt to find a story with specific people that caught his eye. Or rather, his force-sense. Some were happy, some stressed out. Others seemed guarded or angry while the majority were intent. As if the station was merely a cross-thru from one point to another. It seemed to be a growing habit with the Jensaari as a way of stretching out his newfound senses. In a strange way, it also helped that Jax spent a great deal of time staring at people out of a telescopic sight while working with the CSIS.
“See anything interesting?” a voice intruded and he smiled. He had been expecting the company since he had received the summons of the Jensaarai’s own resident Knight and herald of the Jensaarai Order, Adrian Ravenna. When Ravenna summoned, a Jensaarai couldn’t do better than arriving early at the meeting place. It did help that he was in-system at the time.
“Master,” he replied wondering if the term would fluster the Confederation’s original Jensaarai but it seemed that the man had come to terms with his “Founding Father” status. At least outwardly for Jax noted the little internal cringe before the man slapped him on the shoulder.
“I told you to call me Adrian,” he admonished, the slap also a gesture for Jax to get up and follow. Having already paid for his caf, the Jensaarai apprentice readily complied. He was new to the Order after having completed several assignments with the CSIS after his GR treatments, but he rarely had contact with such large players on the Confederation stage as Adrian Ravenna. Being so informal with the man seemed … odd.
“I have an assignment for you,” the Jensaarai leader started as they both stepped into an in-system shuttle.
“CSIS?” Jax asked but Adrian shook his head.
“No, this is different,” Adrian informed, his eyes staring out into space even has his hands keyed the destination into the shuttle terminal while standing.
“Someone appended clones to the GR Program, the first Clone Gen being six people, the second Clone Gen being a little over fifty and so on.”
“How many Clone Gens are there?” Jax asked curiously. He had not heard of this.
“Four,” Adrian answered and turned to look at the other man, “There will not be others.”
“Are the clones unable to obtain the Force?” Jax asked curiously. He had an interest in history and was toying with the idea of creating a compilation of Jensaarai history and philosophy to help him find an internal balance. He also had an interest in all things related to artificial midichlorian creation or augmentation. He had thought the old danger of clones going mad with the force had gone the way of Jorus C’baoth. The old Imperial Emperor had found a way to transfer his powers to clones as had the Sith Master Ahnk.
Adrian Ravenna smirked wishing it were something as simple as making a clone of the old Sith Ahnk (there was an old rumor that there was what? 20 of them running around at one point?) and proceeded to tell Jax about the tribunal of the clone of Christina Thorn and the claims she made as to the activities of the Original Six. Ironically, the tale seemed to put at ease some of the thoughts that had plagued Jax about actions and stances the government had taken in the past few years. It was as if these original six clones had wrestled with the same moral implications that he had but instead of being patient for understanding to come, these people had acted. Their actions, however, had caused the deaths of Confederation citizens.
“So either they could be one of the greatest triumphs of the Confederation or they could be the start of its downfall?” Jax asked rather dramatically.
“Admiral Lucerne had thought that perhaps these clones had compromised a portion of our military and were angling towards perhaps a preemptive strike of some sort. He thought to use the tribunal of the clone of the Pro-Consul to force whatever hand they had by handing down a harsh sentence. As it turned out, the clone’s hand was more subtle than the good Admiral thought and circumvented his harsh sentence with two words, ‘I’m pregnant’.”
“That must have opened up a can of grubs,” Jax whistled.
“You have no idea. The idea of executing a clone for the murder of bridge crew of a warship can be sold. Executing a pregnant woman is out of the question! But then, that opens up even more questions regarding the program. The defense for the clone then began to claim that the hormonal, emotional changes that a woman goes through during a pregnancy may be even more pronounced if the pregnant woman is a force-user. Who knows? It was enough of a claim to stall everything and the clone of Thorn has now stopped talking again. She is back in her cell and no one is saying anything.”
“So… you want me to impregnate a force-user and find out if she kills me?” Jax asked innocently.
“I’d kill you myself if I thought it would help,” Adrian replied dead-pan, before giving the younger man a smirk. “No, I need you to go back to the beginning and investigate the clones. Interview them if you can get them to talk. Otherwise, investigate their activity. There is no proof of anything other than what they claim. Are they telling the truth or are they feeding our own paranoia?”
“Where do I start?” Jax began to wonder at the task ahead.
“Start with the Trojan affair,” Adrian advised.
“What are you going to do?” the Jensaarai apprentice asked.
“Me? I am going to interview a pregnant force-user.”
“I thought she was not talking?”
“Not that force-user. I am taking a trip out to the Commonwealth to talk with the sister of Luke Skywalker.”
Jax whistled again. “She’s pregnant? Perhaps the old Jedi Order’s ‘attachments forbid’ might make sense after all, eh?”
*
Nebula-Class Star Destroyer, Trojan
“This isn’t going to take long is it?” the Captain nervously asked. “We have to get underway soon to rendezvous with the fleet at Kashyyyk.”
“Don’t worry, Captain. I am just getting a feel for the bridge,” Jensaarai Jax commented as he inspected a variety of stations. While the damage had been repaired, he had decided to get an on-hand look at the bridge himself. Using the holos taken of the damaged areas and where personnel had fallen by the initial investigative team, he tried to recreate in his mind the chaos of that situation. The Palladin (Mark II) was the premier battledroid of Metalorn Manufacturing, the Metalorn Defense Forces’ manufacturing arm based on the industrial world.
“So there was no bridge recording taken of the attack?” Jax asked already knowing the answer.
The Captain confirmed, “It seems the Paladins knew exactly what to hit and where. Even then, do you know what kind of damage to a ship’s bridge repeated SAR rounds can do? They killed my Second in Command,” his voice trailed off. “She was a good soldier and would have made an excellent Contegorian Captain someday.”
“So, the Pro-Consul and her CSIS companion come to the bridge to consult with the Second in Command?”
“Actually, the Pro-Consul and Exec were going to go over the final details of the ceremony schedule with the leadership of Ter Abbes. Ship regulations prohibit the bridge commander to leave the bridge during duty hours so the Pro-Consul had come to her as a courtesy.”
“And during the conference, the clone flanked by two Paladins exited from the lift here,” he pointed , “and ...”
“I believe the conference had just ended when the clone entered the bridge with the Paladins. Their entrance probably shocked the others because while the clone was aboard, no one really knew it was a clone. The Pro-Consul liked to keep it discrete when they traveled.”
“Are there recorders in the lift?” Jax asked.
“Yes, we submitted copies to the initial investigation team but I can call them up on this terminal over here.”
Jax looked on as the Captain found the footage and sure enough, there was the clone who entered first and then the Paladins. The footage remained the same as the clone seemed silently waiting for the lift to reach the bridge.
“How far back can we follow the clone?” Jax asked.
“The investigation team followed the footage to the Pro-Consul’s quarters. The clone left there and went to where the Paladins are stored aboard and left that area with two Paladins in tow,” the Captain replied and showed the Jensaarai that footage. “As you can see, she entered the storage quite easily. Typically, the Paladin storage is under the security net lockdown.”
“Did she enter a disabling code?”
The Captain smiled grimly, “The code she entered was just the typical code to open the door. Alarms should have sounded and alerted Ship-Sec. After the incident, we had the Engineering Department tear apart the panel and we found that the security connections had been physically separated. Not damaged, not burned out and not cut or severed but as if a section of the circuitry simply was not completed when the board was manufactured.”
“A manufacturing defect like this is quite a coincidence,” Jax mused.
“If it was a defect, I would agree,” the Captain replied. “The manufacturer assures us it was not defective when the part was sent to us. How much is that the company trying to avoid government litigation or possible recall exposure, I am not sure. But the company does have a good track record so I am inclined to agree with them..”
“But?” prompted Jax.
“But, as you say, it would be quite a coincidence as the clone of the Pro-Consul does seem to be aware of that defect or at the very least, not worried about getting caught.”
“There is that,” agreed the Jensaarai. “What about the Paladins themselves? You mentioned she pulled them from ship’s stores. Any idea why they went rogue and shot up friendlies?”
“I would have surmised that they had been reprogrammed in some manner but, looking at the recorder, the clone is not in there long enough to be carrying out the extensive reprogramming required, if she could get at the processing interface. “ The Captain sighed in frustration.
“I noted that the initial investigative team found no evidence of tampering with Paladins. Did they check the others left in storage?”
“I unloaded every Paladin I had into the custody of the investigative team and requisitioned more from Metalorn directly. Different lot and all. The manufacturer went back over the droids and found nothing remiss in any of the Paladins left by the clone.”
Jax narrowed his eyes as he watched more footage of the clone leaving the ship’s storage accompanied by the Paladins.
“I appreciate your time, Captain. I will keep you no more from your mission.”
*
Metalorn Manufacturing
The two Paladins lay next to each other on separate tables and Jax had to admit, seeing them up close and personal, they were the perfect killing machines.
All that power walking around at the mercy of its programming… Even as grim as the thought was, he had to admit that the incident had been the first of it’s kind.
“..the problem is,” continued the Metalorn Manufacturing Designer pointing to the droids as he walked around the table, “we cannot figure out how the droids went haywire.”
“What?” Jax snapped out of his reverie.
“That is exactly what the Team Leader of the first Inspection said,” the designer remarked. “We’ve been through these things with a fine tooth comb and then some. We cannot find any evidence of reprogramming.”
“What about that device that the CSIS man indicated the perpetrator removed from the droids causing them to shut down?” the Jensaarai asked.
“That is the weird part. Look here,” the man pushed a button causing a chain to drop and he attached it around an arm. Taking a controller, he flipped a toggle and the chain pulled up causing the inert Paladin’s arm to rise. “You see there? Right behind the shoulder, almost under the arm pit location… you see there?”
Jax walked around the table and saw a round discoloring.
“..almost like carbon scoring there. In fact, it may be. But what is really weird is that the ceramic under plating has been shattered under the impact of whatever was attached there. Now…”
The designer turned around to a nearby desk and picked up what looked like a lump of metal. “..this has been fused but if you take the mass of this thing, run it through a holomatrix using the circumference of the carbon scoring as a guide, you come up with an object that looks like this..”
A holographic image appeared over the desk. It was not a large object but it would have been visible if attached.
“I do not remember seeing that in the holo-recording of the droids on their way to the bridge.”
“Exactly!” the designer remarked. “They were not attached until after the droids emerged on the bridge…”
“But the Pro-Consul and the CSIS agent did not see the perpetrator attach the device. Only remove it..” Jax mentioned thoughtfully.
“It stands to reason that this object was responsible for the reprogramming of the droids, despite what people are saying because…”
“The droids would not have been following the perpetrator to the bridge on a ship not at battlestations,” Jax finished.
“You are correct, Sir!” the designer replied, nodding.
Jax took the reasoning further, “So, at some point the droids were reprogrammed or re-tasked to follow the perpetrator to the bridge. The droids shoot up the bridge and personnel also knocking out the bridge recorders and storage units (by design or coincidence) and then they stop just before killing the Pro-Consul and the CSIS agent. By the time they stop, this device, whatever it is, has been attached. Which means that if they did not see the perpetrator attach the device when they come onto the bridge which would, by the way, draw everyone’s immediate attention, it must have been attached during the shooting when the Pro-Consul and agent would have been distracted.”
The Jensaarai ran his hands over the carbon circle noting the multitude of cracks around the contact point.
“In that fire fight, the object was attached with an incredible amount of strength. The tensile strength of the armor alone is enough to shrug off a slug. It is hard to imagine a person being able to do it…” the designer replied, rubbing his chin with his hands staring down at the droids.
“What about a force user?” Jax asked and the eyebrows of the designer rose. The man gave Jax a look of mixed admiration and respect.
Then he raised a finger, “But, you would have to ask yourself, ‘Why?’. Still, if that is what happened, I may have an idea as to what this object is then.”
“What?” Jax asked with growing interest.
“If this thing did not reprogram the Paladins, if it was not applied until after the shooting started and was then removed after the machines stopped, then it might have been a type of restraining bolt.”
“A what?” Jax asked.
“A restraining bolt,” the designer repeated.
“A restraining bolt would take down a Paladin?” the Jensaarai asked.
The designer rolled his eyes, “You crack the armor of any thing, you can take that thing down.”
Then he added unhelpfully, “Which would then mean the perpetrator was trying to stop the assault and probably saved the lives of the Pro-Consul and the CSIS agent.”
Jax sighed, “Well that makes no sense.”
*
Unknown Locations
Present Day
They had a location finally.
Colonel Daria Ceires felt the vibrations of her launching as she was sure that Major Vallance and the rest of their teams did as their ship exited hyperspace with all the bluster and noise a vessel prepped for war could make firing as normal space coalesced multiple objects at the world below.
The vessel did not activate any thrusters or engine output to slow its exit into realspace and so the warship kept coming at velocity far above what it’s typical engine sublights could carry it as it continued to fire projectiles.
Naturally, the world immediately detected the exit and defenses started to come online. But it was only one ship so it did not take long for the approach velocity to be matched by the tracking stations and for multiple batteries to converge on it.
The ship kept firing the projectiles even at its quick approach velocity, each projectile adding a counter to momentum of the approaching warship causing the speed to slow down even as the world’s gravity well sneaked its invisible tendrils around the mass of the vessel.
The projectiles had stopped firing from the approaching ship as if by preprogrammed intent, the breaking thrusters finally firing even as the defense battery fire quickly followed up the wake reaching the warship striking it with the fury of someone indignant of the trespass.
The echoes of an anger describing those within the installation as well as the installation itself were etched into the memories of those the words were directed at…
True or not, factual or not, it did not really matter…
For something was conveyed that day….
Something that would have very dire consequences for all parties involved..
You want to see the one who clawed his own fingernails off scraping at the walls of the interview room while we tried to devise a method of restraint that he couldn't slither out of? The one we couldn't get close enough to sedate because he could move the doc's injector with his mind! Or how about the one who draws these fantastic, intricate, beautiful little micro-portraits on the lens of the holorecorder with the tiniest dab of feces on the end of a fingernail? Ooh, or what about the one whose mouth we have to auto-blur on the recorder and whose audio we have to scramble because, embedded in the streams of incoherent nonsense that he shouts at imagined copies of himself all day and night, are fragments of high-level classified military secrets that he learned because one time, for five seconds, he was fifty meters away from a Cooperative general inspecting the facility to make sure we were adequately accommodating our guests?”
“You want to know where they are, Jensaarai? They're under a mountain, surrounded by blast doors, and stun fields, and a battalion of Cooperative Army soldiers, with a bomb buried under their feet, and a ring of watchtowers three miles out staring at them from every direction for every minute of every hour of every day, just in case that's not enough and we need to call in an aerial bombardment to flatten the complex.
“Do you want to see them? Because I can make that happen. I'll walk you right past the guards, through the barriers and defenses, I'll even sit you down to chat with one of the not-quite-crazy ones, but if I set that up for you, then you give us what we need. You give us what we need to fix these people, or you give us what we need to understand why they can't be fixed.”
That for all their looking, they just could not see…
The multiple defensive battery fire rocked the ship causing it to tumble out of its approach. When that much combined power set against the approach velocity of the ship met, it sent a ripple effect down the superstructure of the vessel throwing it off course. There were no shields raised and no weapons fired from the ship except for the torpedoes and they were not even aimed directly at the planet.
The planetary defenders expected the torpedoes to explode harmlessly against the shields that were being powered up. Unfortunately, the velocity of the torpedoes was enough to cause them to skip past the threshold point where the shield solidified and while the projectiles were moving at an incredible rate of speed nearly horizontal with the ground, the planetary gravity did begin to exert itself.
The approaching vessel reached the protective barriers and combined with the defense batteries caused the warship to explode blanketing the sky with what looked like a meteor shower as the atmospheric friction began to burn the fragments of the intruding ship.
Those smaller defensive towers that the projectiles came in range of tried to fire on them with no effect. The silver projectiles started to slow as they lost height tracing the horizon passing city after city intent on a course set before them from a mixture of audacity, physics, and a generous application of mathematics all gift-wrapped in an ultrachrome shell.
The projectiles dropped further and some struck towers, penetrating those structures through before going to ground leaving large channels of dirt and rock in their wake. Other projectiles that missed the towers struck the facility head on also penetrating into the interior.
*
Colonel Ceires shook her head as her body ached even in the crash webbing within the cocoon. Her fist pounded a section of the pod’s interior instantly launching the top up and away from her as she brought her weapon to bear.
The facility’s power had been knocked out but backup’s were going to come back online in certain areas. Sparks spit out locations of power interruptions as she moved down a hall checking the signal locator strapped to her weapon.
Other troopers would be doing the same and they needed to be fast an efficient before these people unleashed hell.
“Out of the way!” she barked through her helmet to confused bystanders.
Some fled while others went down with their hands over their heads.
One tried to get in her way and she knocked them out with her weapon intent on the locator’s direction signal.
A discharge from her weapon blew a hole into a door that separated her from a strong signal and her armored boot kicked it open.
With one swift glance taking the room in, she saw bloody finger prints and designs lining the walls and floors which stood in stark contrast to the white-colored sterility the room had been originally.
A figure was standing off to the side, the tips of his fingers more like stubs of bloody paintbrushes. He was shaking slightly and as she swung her weapon around to train it on the individual, he grinned through his sweaty long hair.
“You are too late…” he rasped out.
Her finger was depressing the trigger when her target simply exploded sending Colonel Ceires through the wall of the room as everything was vaporized in the explosion.
Multiple explosions began to take place throughout the facility as their charges erupted like bombs.
Sixteen in all.