📘The Star Pirate's Folly | 17: Maintenance
Everyone knows there are dark corners of the Luxar System where strong laws meet enforcement capability. Human-based AI are one of many such banned practices which have bloomed in the darkness.
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📘The Star Pirate’s Folly — 15 | 16 | … | 18 | 19
Chapter 17: Maintenance
Bill Silver awoke in weightless suffocating darkness. His brain made the terrifying assumption that he was in vacuum, but a sharp intake of breath relieved his fear. Was he sleepwalking again? He groped blindly and felt bedsheets.
“Myra,” he grumbled. “Where are the lights?”
No response. Eyes wide and straining, Bill realized he was floating face down above his bed. Why weren’t the backups on? Just as his eyes adjusted to the darkness, the lights snapped back to life. Silver squeezed his eyes shut against the sudden brightness as the artificial gravity pulled him to his bed.
“Lights off,” Bill hissed.
Immediately the searing white lights on the ceiling were replaced with a soft amber glow from smaller bulbs recessed along the base of the walls. It was just enough to see in the darkness without forcing his eyes to adjust. He rolled out of bed and stood.
“Myra,” he repeated, this time thick with irritation.
Still nothing.
“This better not be your idea of a joke,” he growled.
After dressing and reattaching his prosthetic, Silver headed to the bridge. Everything seemed operational except Myra. He’d always thought it was sloppy to have the AI in control of so many of the ship’s systems, but she insisted she could optimize things better than the stock computer. So far she was never wrong—an infuriating quality which had Silver itching to say to the Captain I told you so.
He went up the ramp to the bridge, through the door, and Ferro whirled on him wide-eyed from the pilot’s chair.
“What just happened?” she demanded.
“I was hoping you could tell me,” Silver said.
“Just cruising like normal, middle of talking to Myra and everything goes dark,” she said. “No warning, no nothing. For a good twenty seconds we were dead in the void there, just drifting. Then everything came right back.”
“Where’s the Captain?”
“Left me on watch about three hours ago, haven’t seen him since.”
“I’ll find him—”
The bridge door opened.
“Sorry about that,” the Captain said as he entered. “Couldn’t risk telling anyone or Myra would have found out.”
“Found out what?” Silver asked.
“That I was shutting her down.”
“Why did you do that?”
The Captain shook his head. “She sabotaged the damn ship.”
Bee woke with a start when Captain Anson’s voice came in over the speakers with a curt command.
“Crew meeting on the bridge, now.”
Half-asleep still, she dressed without even thinking about it, but it occurred to her before she walked out the door that as a passenger she might not be included.
“Myra?” she asked. “Does that mean me too, or…? Myra?”
Bee frowned and headed to the bridge. She heard footsteps around the corner and out of habit slowed to a creep, padding forward to the wall’s edge. The door to the bridge opened and she heard a snatch of Silver’s voice before it closed again.
“—was only half our power cells, but imagine what she could have done. Autonomous AIs like her are illegal for this exact reason, Captain—”
After waiting at the corner for a few more seconds Bee moved to the bridge. The bulkhead door was shut. She could almost make out the muffled voices, but she couldn’t understand anything. As she went to put her ear up to the door it started to open. She backed down the ramp, but made no effort to hide herself.
“Hang on,” Willis said to her as he poked his head out, then turned to yell over his shoulder, “Is this a passenger-friendly meeting?”
“Yeah, why not,” the Captain called.
“Come on in,” Willis said as he waved her inside.
With a sheepish smile, Bee joined the rest of the crew on the bridge. Willis shut the door behind her. Captain Anson leaned against the back of the command chair, Ferro piloted from her own chair, and the rest of the crew gathered in a semicircle around him. Behind them Bee could see the shuttered windows on the front of the ship.
“Don’t touch anything,” Willis said.
He nudged Silver and Truly from behind and they parted to let him and Bee in. Everyone but Spud, the Governor, and Gim was present.
“Oh, she’s part of the crew now?” Silver said when he saw Bee.
“This concerns her too,” the Captain said. “There’s been some trouble with our power supply. I gave Myra permission to tweak the power systems for efficiency. But instead of optimizing everything, she vented half of our power cells. We’ll be fine, it’s just an annoyance. She covered her tracks with the new permissions I gave her and prevented me from finding out immediately by displaying false information on the bridge. I need to do a lot more digging before I can say for sure, but I think she was trying to stop us from going out into the belt.”
“Wait, it wasn’t just a mistake? She did it on purpose?” Bee asked. “Why would she do that?”
The Captain ran a hand through his hair. “Myra’s not like most AIs. She makes her own choices, just like you or me. She’s… based on a person.”
Silver, Truly, and Willis exchanged some uncomfortable glances and Bee got the impression this was a subject to be avoided. She stopped asking questions even though she wanted to know more.
“Anyway,” the Captain resumed, “It means we’ll have to restock our power cells when we get to Optima. We shouldn’t be there more than half a day, but it’s one more thing on the list now. The real problem is Myra. She pulled a lot of weight around here—more than I should have given her. She was managing too much without enough oversight.”
Silver nodded his agreement.
“I’ve got no problem just using the stock nav,” Ferro said. “The day I need a fancy AI to help me fly is the day I turn in my wings.”
“Yeah, well just don’t let Myra hear you talk like that,” Captain Anson warned. “I’m not leaving her offline for good, just until I correct the problem. Everyone’s going to have to do more work for now, but we’ll still need her after Optima. Any questions?”
Silver looked like he wanted to object, but he crossed his arms and kept quiet.
At their silence he said, “Good. Ferro, Silver, I need you two here. Everyone else is taking up space. Go on, beat it.”
Bee shuffled off the bridge with Willis and Truly. She had a thousand questions but wasn’t sure who to ask. She didn’t really know either of them. Willis left like he had somewhere to be while Truly headed to the kitchen.
“Hey Truly,” she called, waving him down. “The Captain offered to teach me some more in the nullroom, but I’m guessing he’s busy now. I was wondering if you have time?”
Truly turned and considered it, bobbing his head with a frown. “Alright. Yeah, alright. Let me eat first.”
“Can you come get me when you’re done? I’ll be in my room getting my suit ready.”
Truly gave her a thumbs-up as he continued to the kitchen and Bee headed to her room. She figured she could ask him about things casually, ease into the conversation over the course of their training session. They all seemed friendly, but she didn’t want to overstep her bounds and create friction with anyone she didn’t have to—especially the first officer.
Bee needed every ally she could get. Silver already hated her, and unfortunately he seemed to have a lot of pull on the ship. The Captain was nice, but she didn’t expect to see much more of him. Same with the pilot Ferro. She wished she could get back on the bridge and just watch.
She wanted to know how everything on the ship worked—and plus then she’d be able to find out more about Myra. The Captain said he was going to fix her or something, what did that mean? Would she be the same when she came back on? Bee hoped so. She opened the door to her room and smiled at what she saw inside.
The white loaner nullsuit was spread out on the floor. Bee had stayed up with Myra a few hours the night before figuring out how to disassemble and clean it. She wanted to try the nullroom herself, but she wasn’t allowed in there alone with Spud. It unsettled her a bit how the others talked about Spud—like he was an animal, something not quite tame.
Before she went to sleep, she’d put the suit all back together and laid it out. It was a grungy off-white when she first got it, but after scrubbing off the layers of dust and grime it was almost radiant. The color reminded her of the buffet dishes back at the hotel and she became homesick for her cozy little room.
She hoped Hargrove was okay.
“Uh, Truly? Is this on right?” Bee asked, gesturing at herself in the suit. She waited to put the helmet on until she was sure about the rest of the suit.
But also, she wasn’t sure if she would puke or not, and she didn’t want to do it in the helmet. Being inside the suit gave her this strange feeling like falling, and she kept wanting to reach her arms out to catch herself even though she was standing still.
“Yeah, looks fine,” Truly said after a brief inspection. He wore a black undersuit, the only thing she’d seen him in yet besides armor. “Good job.”
“Myra helped me last night.”
“Sounds like she likes you,” he said as he dressed himself in his gray armor. There was a mechanical whir and locking noise as each piece attached at the orange striped joints.
“I guess so,” she said as she took a couple of wobbling steps. “What… is she?”
“She’s an AI,” Truly said as he slipped his gauntlets on. “One of the best in the system.”
“No, I know that, but—oh, never mind,” she grumbled, struggling to stay upright.
She was having trouble keeping her balance since the boots kept her anchored to the ground, but the rest of her felt light and floaty. She weighed nothing, which made her movements quick, but she was used to compensating for the pull of gravity still. Nothing felt right.
The weirdest part about the nullsuit was that without the helmet on she could feel how heavy her head was compared to the rest of her. The thought gave her stomach a threatening lurch and she had to crouch to steady herself, dropping her helmet in the process.
“Just try to hold still for a minute.” Fully armored now, Truly’s voice projected from his suit’s speakers. He picked up her helmet. “Takes some getting used to. Since we’re indoors you can take your helmet off if you think you’re gonna spew—long as you clean it up.”
“Gee, thanks,” Bee said, grabbing her helmet.
“But if you ever end up in zee you’re better off just swimming in it.”
“I’ll keep that in mind,” she said with a laugh.
Bee slid the helmet on and secured it. Truly gave a thumbs-up after checking her and beckoned her to follow. He took a few long steps before making a swan dive up into the center of the nullroom, using just enough force to drift along slowly toward the ceiling while doing neat somersaults.
“Showoff,” Bee muttered as she focused on walking without falling over.
📘The Star Pirate’s Folly — 15 | 16 | … | 18 | 19
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