http://standaloneshell.livejournal.com/ (
standaloneshell.livejournal.com) wrote in
trans_92009-09-03 11:56 pm
Entry tags:
Testing Boundaries [ Open ]
The Sensorium...of all the various strange and bewildering places she'd found aboard this madhouse, it had proved to be the most interesting. It was like an old science fiction movie, one of the improbable ones that gathered a cult following and generated money for greedy toymakers. It was like being plugged into the Net again, almost, with the freedom and power to change the world around her at command, and after only a few hours in the hollow, Netless silence, it was blessing to have something to take the edge off. Unprofessional, that, but still reassuring to have something so utterly human inflicted on her.
The Major had spent a few hours sifting through the available simulations and programs. Heavy-arms training runs, adventurous little role-playing games, even a few tactical simulations. Mostly it was just fluff, or half-finished or any of dozens of things that were little else but dry educational or pure entertainment in value.
So, what else could she do but program her own?
'Begin with what you know,' ran the old adage, and so she had. The city spread out before her was dark, tinted glass made inky black with night time and reflected neon and streetlights like a spectrum of eyes from every corner. This wasn't exactly accurate, as a simulation; Tokyo had never had as Jiggabachi helicopters or powered exoskeleton-toting soldiers wandering it's streets and skyways. Perhaps it had as many criminals, but they weren't so blatant. Then again, the point of this exercise wasn't realism, was it? Nostagia made these lacks seem obvious, maybe, but as Motoko stood on the edge of a flat-topped roof at what she'd deemed the "beginning" of the course, she decided it would do for a testing ground. Varied landscape and opponents would be a good measure of her teammates skill— among other things. Damned if she was going to go haring off anywhere with nothing but a blind knowledge of her teammates and hopeful wishes.
The Major had spent a few hours sifting through the available simulations and programs. Heavy-arms training runs, adventurous little role-playing games, even a few tactical simulations. Mostly it was just fluff, or half-finished or any of dozens of things that were little else but dry educational or pure entertainment in value.
So, what else could she do but program her own?
'Begin with what you know,' ran the old adage, and so she had. The city spread out before her was dark, tinted glass made inky black with night time and reflected neon and streetlights like a spectrum of eyes from every corner. This wasn't exactly accurate, as a simulation; Tokyo had never had as Jiggabachi helicopters or powered exoskeleton-toting soldiers wandering it's streets and skyways. Perhaps it had as many criminals, but they weren't so blatant. Then again, the point of this exercise wasn't realism, was it? Nostagia made these lacks seem obvious, maybe, but as Motoko stood on the edge of a flat-topped roof at what she'd deemed the "beginning" of the course, she decided it would do for a testing ground. Varied landscape and opponents would be a good measure of her teammates skill— among other things. Damned if she was going to go haring off anywhere with nothing but a blind knowledge of her teammates and hopeful wishes.

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She didn't add that training for herself would only decrease her abilities over time; but then that was trade-off, wasn't it? You gave up a lot for the boon of full-body prosthesis, and one of those was the natural healing a biological body provided. For most people, it never crossed their minds that low-income cyborgs tended to have half the lifespan they ought to. It's all fun and games until someone overheats themselves to death.
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"Is there a goal?"
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A slight jerk of her chin at a figure running the streets below. He was a grimy, furtive individual, carrying something under his arm and doing his best to hide in the shadows; an effect that was ruined by their vantage point.
"He's up to no good...probably armed, could be he's some kind of smuggler," She mused, "Or maybe he's an informant. If he's a cyborg, he won't react to injuries the same way someone completely natural would. You have to consider that he could just as easily be some kind of victim, or just a scared guy in the wrong place. Make the wrong decision, and you've got blood on your hands. Technically, you've got blood on your hands no matter what you do, but a good portion of this job is making sure you minimize the damage, and only kill when the situation requires it."
She paused, considering Picard and his jacket and his gun, the blue smoke still drifting from his lit cigarette, "Which is depressingly often, if you're wondering."
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"Computer, phaser rifle, standard Enterprise issue," he intoned, gripping the futuristic weapon in hand as leaped down on to the first platform. He didn't really have time to climb down the stairs, so he made due with climbing the railing, leaping down one level to the next until he hit the ground. He was thankful that his experiences with the Borg and the Baku world had put him back in such peak condition for his age.
He was about to call for the shadowed figure to halt when another noise was brought to his attention. Walking battle tanks, while new to Picard, weren't wholly unexpected(since he had observed them from the roof). A quick roll behind a dumpster protected him from the first volley of rounds, and a few lucky strays that pierced the side of the large metal bin.
"Depressingly often?" he asked himself. "Let's find out." A quick readjustment to his rifle was all he needed. Picard aimed up over the top of the dumpster instead of the side, figuring the driver of the tank would be expecting that. Rather than fire a pulse, he aimed a piercing beam at the weird gun-arms the tank had, taking off on foot down the narrow alleyway after the figure. It could be something, or it could be a red herring. At the very least, Picard knew enough to know it was suspicious, and for Dixon Hill, Private Investigator, that was good enough for him.
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Meanwhile, Picard was closing on the 'suspect.' A chain-link fence had blocked his path, and he was in the process of climbing it when the Captain came upon his position. A dirty sort of person, all filthy rags and more smudged hat than sense, he was awkwardly trying to scale the barrier without letting go of the package he carried, and it was slowing his progress considerably.
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With the weapon aimed at the figure, he decided to see now if the figure would stop. If not, he was curious if a phaser on stun could stun a cyborg from this kind of world.
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"Stay back!" the boy screeched, pressing his back against the corner between wall and fence, "Get away from me! It's mine! You can't have it, I found it, it's mine!"
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"We got off on the wrong foot. I'm Captain Jean-Luc Picard. Do you have a name?" Hologram or no, it was an excellent simulation of a frightened child. Sometimes, however, the realism of holodecks and the Sensoriums got even to him.
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"I-I'm warning you!" And really, he was, although the fact that it seemed more likely he'd shoot out of panic than malice was more horrifying at the time, "I'll shoot! I'll do it!"
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