Font Size
15px

"A most rapturous good morrow on your return to your domicile, sir," Jeeves' accent wafted through the air just as soon as the elevator doors opened to The Sink. The holographic bars above his table were rising and falling as he spoke, causing a vaguely-kaleidoscopic light show on the ceiling. "I trust that sirs' expeditions and explorations of the crater today were most successful?"

"Absolutely, Jeeves," I said with a smile, Roxie trotting along at my side and Stripe still sitting on my shoulder. "Even picked up a few strays. Hope you don't mind."

"Fear not, sir. Even were I to 'mind,' as sir is wont to say, the addition of other biological life forms within the confines of The Sink, it is not within my programming to alert sir to such an inconvenience." It took a few seconds to work out exactly what Jeeves was trying to say. While I was standing there in front of the circular table, Stripe hopped off my shoulder and started wandering around The Sink, sniffing the air as he went.

"You know, you could have just said 'No, I don't mind.' That probably would've been easier." I said with a chuckle.

"Indeed, sir. But where would we find the fun in that?"

I blinked several tis.

"Was... was that a joke?" I asked; before Jeeves had a chance to answer, I just shook my head and pulled out the two boxes I'd picked up in Higgs. "Nevermind. I found these personality chips out in the crater. How do I install them?" As I held them both in my hand, I took another look at them. I hadn't noticed it in the dim light of the Higgs village buildings, but each box had a small white hexagon printed on the top of the lid.

"Installation of the other personality constructs is very simple, if sir will pardon the pun," Jeeves said simply, the holographic bars above his table shifting their colors several tis before finally settling back on blue. I blinked, thinking about that.

"What pun?" I asked.

"Wasn't there one?" Jeeves seed surprised. "Oh, I'm sorry, sir. If sir truly wishes to go through with sirs aim of inflicting upon sirs self the dubious services of the other constructs within this domicile, then sir may find the proper installation slots on this terminal, just below the main Sink Central Intelligence Chip slot." I looked down, and all I saw below the spot where I'd installed the chip was... blank space. It was just a solid sheet of curved tal.

"Wait, what? But there isn't-" As I spoke, the tal hissed, and it split apart from a seam that just seed to materialize. Seriously, it had been completely invisible seconds earlier. Inside, there was a bank of 9 empty slots, just the right size for the chips. With a satisfying click, I slid the two chips into two of the blank spaces near the left side.

The table began to hum, and the holographic bars disappeared; several words appeared in midair, flickering but still legible.

INSTALLING PERSONALITIES:

-BOOK CHUTE

-JUKEBOX

"Book chute?" I asked aloud, reading the holographic words. "What the fuck is a book chute?" As it happens, I got my answer very quickly.

"Ahhhh!" A voice from sowhere in front of sighed.

"Did soone... who said that?" I followed the noise; it led to a chanical device on the wall that started to light up as I drew near. It looked like a box with a long thin blue light on top, a few blinking blue buttons (circles and squares) in the middle, and an opening in the bottom with several sharp tal 'teeth' around the edge.

"Good day, Citizen!" the machine on the wall said, cheerfully as I approached. "Library Processing Unit 232.7 is on-line and ready eradicate sedition!"

"... eradicate sedition?" I asked. I didn't want to admit it, but I'd never actually heard that word before.

"Of course, Citizen!" the book chute continued. "That's my duty and sole joy in life! All those books from before the War, full of seditious, treasonous, and overly-complicated thoughts!" Alright, that clears that - wait, what? "Just dump any pre-war books into my intake slot, and lickety-split I'll have them pulped, scrubbed clean, and pressed out again! Clean and white and sedition free!"

"Clean and white... wait, hang on. You take books from before the bombs dropped, and make them blank? What's the point of that?"

"Blank books are better for the mind, Citizen!" This thing's overly cheerful deanor was getting slightly disconcerting. "Real science by real n in real lab coats has proved that introducing outside thoughts confuses the brain! Blank books encourage the reader not to question, but to blindly and zealously accept what's put in front of him!"

I felt my eye twitch.

"Alright, leaving aside the utter insanity of what you just said for a minute," I said as flatly as I could. "Those books are... there's knowledge in those books from before the war! Why would you destroy them like that?" The book chute was silent for a few seconds.

"Citizen," the machine's voice dropped down into a surprisingly serious tone. "That sounds dangerously seditious. If my re-indoctrination module was installed, I'd take care of that for you. Sadly, that system was cut for budgetary concerns, so you'll have to perform your own indoctrination. Now, to begin with, you'll need a cage that can fit over your head and a sack of rats-"

"Ohhhh, give it a rest already, man!" I heard a deep, gravelly, booming voice sound off from the other room. Looking for any excuse to get away from the, frankly, disturbing book chute, I followed the voice until I ca across the jukebox in the other room. As the machine spoke, the lights ringing the edge flashed. "You are just way too high strung for this place..."

"What, and you're not?" I asked, looking at the jukebox. "I can't imagine anybody being entirely stress-free in this giant bowl of sugar-free insanity."

"Oh, I'm absolutely a cool cat, daddy-o. Dig? Got nothin' to prove. Not like that Toaster. Now that boy, he got so issues."

"Toaster?" I asked softly, thinking back to the toaster I'd found earlier bolted to the table. I shook it off quickly. "Alright, so who are you?"

"The na's Blind Diode Jefferson, acoustical wizard. What's the haps?"

"Acoustical wizard? So, what? You play music?" The Jukebox - Jefferson, apparently - just seed to hum.

"Mmm... Used to. Long ti ago. Then Ol' Doc Mo ripped out my music drives. Stuck in more acoustical processors. Guess you could say I got the blues..." He chuckled softly. "Even if I can't play them no more."

"So... what do you do?" As lodic as his deep, gravely voice was to listen to, I was just a little bit tired of getting the run-around.

"Ol Doc Mo used to prototype his sonic weapon designs. Get a good sample base to work from, and I can whip up a wave that makes Jericho look like a kazoo."

"Sonic weapon?" I reached into my duster, and pulled out the sonic projecto gun. "You an this?"

"Yeahhh... that's the... hang on." A light turned on, right in the middle of Jefferson's front panel, and quickly scanned the weapon in my hands. "It ain't upgraded yet. It's still the base model... that's odd. I thought Ol' Doc Mo upgraded that thing years ago..."

"So... you can't do anything then?" I asked, examining the pistol again.

"Well, not yet. I think the schematics are sowhere... ah, damn, where was that again?"

"X-8?" I offered helpfully.

"Yeah, that's it! The schematics should be sowhere in there. I bet if you ask real nice, one of the Think Tank downstairs can help get that thing back up to scratch. Once you do, bring that old thing on in here, and then bring so sound samples. I'll make that baby sing!" He paused, adding with a chuckle: "Or scream, if that's what you want."

"Scream, huh?" I asked with a smirk.

"Mmhmm..." Jefferson grunted out slowly. "With all the funky grooves I know how to spin, you can damn well bet that I know how to make the ladies scream." And then he just started laughing.

"DID YOU RETRIEVE THE TECHNOLOGIES YET?" Klein's thundering, perpetually booming voice yelled in my face. "WE NEED THEM, AS I HAVE INDICATED."

"Not all of them yet, but-" Klein cut off.

"THEN WHY ARE YOU HERE, WITH YOUR PENIS-FEET CONTAMINATING THE THINK TANK? IF YOU DO NOT HAVE THE TECHNOLOGIES, THEN YOU ARE AS USELESS AS YOUR EXTRANEOUS LIMBIC EXTREMITIES!"

"Slow your roll, gaphone," I said as forcefully as I could. "I'm here because I need to... need to..." I tried reaching into my duster for the sonic projecto gun, but for so reason... as soon as my hand got close to the pistol grip, my whole hand locked up. The joints in my fingers just... they stopped responding, and my joints wouldn't unlock until I drew my hand away.

That's odd.

"NEED TO WHAT, LOBOTOMITE? EXPLAIN YOURSELF, AND THEN REMOVE YOURSELF! YOUR CONTINUED PRESENCE IS TAKING OCCAM'S RAZOR TO THE TENUOUSLY THIN THREADS OF MY ALREADY WEARY PATIENCE!"

"I'm trying to grab the projecto gun in my duster," I said, looking up, a bit confused. "I think I got the upgrade schematics from X-8, but I... I can't grab the gun. Why can't I grab the gun?"

"THAT IS A SIDE EFFECT OF THE CEREBRAL SCRUBBING. IT WON'T STOP YOU FROM EXCRETING - OR ASKING QUESTIONS, APPARENTLY. HAVE TO CORRECT THAT NEXT TI..." Klein hovered around , talking (yelling) more to himself than to for a mont, before finally coming back and yelling directly in my face again. "HORMONAL AGGRESSIVE TENDENCIES ARE ACTIVELY SUPPRESSED BY THE PACIFICATION FIELD. AGGRESSION IS A NO-NO, AND NOT PERMITTED IN THE THINK TANK. SHOULD HAVE DONE THE ANTI-AGGRESSION SCRUB WITH THE LAST BATCH."

"Last batch?" I asked. "What do you an, last batch?"

"THE LAST BATCH OF VISITORS TO BIG MT, BEFORE YOU ARRIVED." Klein yelled. "THEY CAUSED A GREAT DEAL OF DAMAGE IN A SHORT TI. THEY STOLE A GREAT MANY SECRETS AND MUCH TECHNOLOGY. IMPERTINENT." Klein paused. "ONE OF THEM ALSO BROKE ONE OF MY TRAINS. I SPENT YEARS PERFECTING THE DETAILS OF THAT ATOMIC POWERED 1:1 SCALE MODEL RAILWAY!"

"These other visitors... who were they?" I had a sneaking suspicion I already knew... but I had to ask. I had to get so kind of conformation.

"DOCTOR 8 AND DOCTOR O COULD TELL YOU MORE," Klein bellowed. "DOCTOR O MORE THAN 8. THE BATTLE AGAINST THE VISITORS DAMAGED 8'S VOICE MODULE. SUFFICE TO SAY, THOSE VISITORS ARE UNWELCO. NOW, IF THAT WILL BE ALL, REMOVE YOUR OOZING, GLANDULAR PRESENCE FROM THE THINK TANK! THERE IS SCIENCE TO BE DONE, AND YOU ARE INTERRUPTING MATTERS MOST SCIENTIFIC AND BEYOND YOUR PRIMITIVE LOBOTOMITE LACK-OF-COMPREHENSION!"

"Fine, whatever, look -" I opened up my duster to show Klein the makeshift holster for the sonic. "How do I get this damn thing out of the holster without the pacification field kicking in?"

"HAVE YOU TRIED TURNING IT OFF AND ON AGAIN?" Klein yelled unhelpfully. I buried my free hand in my face.

"Forget it, I'll figure it out on my own..." I sighed and walked away, intent on speaking with any other mber of the Think Tank who wasn't going to shatter my eardrums.

"YES. A MOST GOOD-BYE."

"Hey... uh..." I walked up to the Think Tank with the dull burnt-orange bio gel in his tank. "Doctor 8, right?" The brain-tank-scientist-robot turned around in midair, looking at ... and then he let out that sa static that I'd heard before.

**[ = $ _ - - * ]**? **[ * $ ( ^ = ) # ]**!

"Uh... right." I cleared my throat, still a bit perturbed that I could sohow 'see' the characters he was spewing in my head. "Can you speak? Do you... I an, can you understand ?"

**[ = $ _ - - * ]**? **[ = $ _ - - * ]**? **[ * $ ( ^ = ) # ]**!

"Your voice module got damaged," I said, going out on a limb. "I heard from Klein. But you can still understand , right?"

**[ $ ( ( * & ^ # % ]**. **[ * . . . . . . . ]**... **[ $ ( ( * & ^ # % ]**.

"Is... is that yes?" I asked. "A no? Or... a yes-no?" I smiled, chuckling weakly. There was sothing... I don't know how to explain it, but sohow... the more I was talking with him, the more...

**[ $ - - - - - - $ ]**.

"So... is it alright if I ask you so questions?" Dumbass, you're already asking him questions. You're asking a question just asking him a question.

**[ = $ _ - - * ]**? **[ $ ( ( * & ^ # % ]**. **[ $ - - - - - - $ ]**.

"Not... sure. What you ant." I said, being honest. But still... there was sothing...

**[ = $ _ - - * ]**? **[ $ ( ( * & ^ # % ]**. **[ $ - - - - - - $ ]**.

"Alright..." I said, recognizing the sa series of characters again. "So, here's one: What can you tell about the attack that ruined your voicebox?"

**[ # - ! ! ! ! - # ]**! **[ # - ? ? ? ? - # ]**! **[ # - ! ! ! ! - # ]**!

"Alright, alright!" I said, holding my hands in a disarming gesture; at the ntion of the attack, 8 started shaking in midair like crazy, and the static... characters... got more frantic. Sohow. I guess that was the wrong thing to say. "I'm sorry, just calm down. I didn't an to alarm you."

**[ $ ( ( * & ^ # % ]**. **[ * . . . . . . . ]**... **[ $ ( ( * & ^ # % ]**.

"Hang on," I said, looking closer at the tank suspended in the bio gel. "I swear your brain... tank... thing... I think it sparked." And then... sohow... it all ca together.

**[ # - ? ? ? ? - # ]**! **[ # - ! ! ! ! - # ]**!

"Wait a minute... that's..." I paused, going over the images broadcast in my head again. "You're emitting characters in patterns of 8, aren't you? They're... bracketed patterns of 8 characters, with tonal adjustnt at the ends."

How did I know that?

**[ # - ? ? ? ? - # ]**! **[ * . . . . . . . ]**... **[ $ ( ( * & ^ # % ]**.

"Well, I just heard the rhythm in the sequence is all," I said with a smile and a shrug, almost answering my own question. Honestly, I wasn't sure - but it sounded right, at any rate. "I probably should put it to use counting cards when" if "I get back to Vegas."

**[ $ ( ( * & ^ # % ]**.

"Well, yeah," I nodded. "I an, the code has got so problems. I'm not arguing that."

**[ # - * $ $ * - # ]**. **[ * . . . . . . . ]**... **[ $ ( ( * & ^ # % ]**.

"So... oh, I think I get it now. Your broadcast pattern is RobCo termlink code, but not by choice..."

**[ = $ _ - - * ]**? **[ $ ( ( * & ^ # % ]**. **[ $ - - - - - - $ ]**.

"But if that's RobCo termlink protocol... doesn't that an it can be hacked?" I asked, thinking about all the many, many, many tis I had to sift through RobCo termlink garbage to hack into a terminal.

**[ # - ? ? ? ? - # ]**! **[ * . . . . . . . ]**... **[ $ ( ( * & ^ # % ]**.

"Hey, c'mon, don't worry," I said, trying to ease the obviously nervous brain-bot. "I'm not going to take advantage of the exposed code. I'm not that kind of guy."

**[ $ ( ( * & ^ # % ]**. **[ * . . . . . . . ]**... **[ $ ( ( * & ^ # % ]**.

**[ $ ( ( * & ^ # % ]**. **[ * . . . . . . . ]**...

**[ $ ( ( * & ^ # % ]**.

"It's not a problem, man," I said with a nod. "I know what it's like to be experinted on."

**[ * . . . . . . . ]**... **[ # - ! ! ! ! - # ]**!

"Well, alright... now that we know each other a little bit better," I grabbed the edge of my duster and showed 8 the sonic device in the makeshift holster. "Maybe you can help out with this? I think I got the upgrade schematics from X-8, but I'm not sure they're installed... I'd like to be sure this thing can take out forcefields next ti I head out into the crater."

Suddenly, a small beam of burnt-orange light began projecting from the front of the brain bot; I felt a strange tingling sensation, and the sonic gun was lifted out of the holster and held aloft in a tiny tractor beam. Several pulses of thin blue light bounced back and forth between the sonic and 8, suspended in midair by the larger shaft of orange light.

**[ $ ( ( * & ^ # % ]**. **[ * . . . . . . . ]**... **[ $ ( ( * & ^ # % ]**.

**[ * . . . . . . . ]**... **[ $ ( ( * & ^ # % ]**.

**[ $ ( ( * & ^ # % ]**. **[ $ ( ( * & ^ # % ]**.

"Well, 'projecto' is kind of evident," I said, comnting on his explanation of the device as he worked to upgrade it. And, apparently, what Rox had found in Gabe's lair wasn't the upgrade - the upgrade schematics were transmitted directly to the Think Tank as soon as I finished the High School test. Gabe's bark was one of the audio sample bases that I could take to Blind Diode Jefferson upstairs.

**[ $ ( ( * & ^ # % ]**. **[ $ ( ( * & ^ # % ]**.

**[ $ ( ( * & ^ # % ]**. **[ * . . . . . . . ]**... **[ $ ( ( * & ^ # % ]**.

**[ * . . . . . . . ]**... **[ $ ( ( * & ^ # % ]**.

Man... so much information contained in so few characters... I was having a hard ti grasping just how I could understand all this. But I could. And it was weird.

Well, now that the sonic was upgraded and I could (in theory) disable force fields, I didn't really have any need to stay down here with the other floating, talking tin cans.

But... I dunno. 8 seed all right. Maybe it's just Klein who's the asshole. So, I decided to give it a chance, and wandered over to the floating brain bot with green bio gel: Borous.

"Hello, Lobotomite!" Borous said as I got close. He floated around , extending his eye and mouth monitors in odd directions in front of . "Good work retrieving the schematics from X-8. And for putting down Gabe!"

"Wait, what?" I seed a bit taken aback. "You're glad I killed your dog?" Granted, I'm not sure that giant Frankenstein monster of tal and fur could've really been called a dog anymore... but Borous just nodded his tank.

"He was a scamp, but really... his highly-augnted combat programming could have proved ddleso. In any event... thank you for putting him down. One LESS test subject to catalogue and sort - clearly a FAILURE of doggie cybo-engineering..." Borous seed a bit less histrionic than he'd been before. And that's when I rembered:

"Hey, you know... I found this in Higgs village," I said as I reached behind , pulling out the dented plastic dish. "This is Gabe's bowl, isn't it?" Borous froze in midair, his two eye-screens locked on the lump of plastic in my hand.

"WHAT?!" Suddenly, a green beam was emitted from Borous, much the sa as when 8 took the sonic from my hands. The plastic bowl was lifted up in the air and Borous stared at it for a few seconds before speaking again. "Why... yes. Yes, it is. I used to leave it outside his dog house, chock-full of chems. Before the cybernetic modifications, of course. And..." He paused. "No matter how chemd the food, he would always eat it. And his tail, his tail would wag... even... even while I... I..." Borous stopped again, simply staring at the dish for a few seconds. He cleared his throat and turned back to , lowering the bowl but still keeping it suspended in the tractor beam. " I am having the most perplexing feeling squiggling through my biogel. I can't quite... pin it down..."

"You know," I approached Borous with a smile, intent on putting a hand on his shoulder - and then I rembered that he doesn't have any. So I settled with patting the top edge of the closest eye-screen in a (hopefully) comforting gesture. "Sounds to like Gabe really loved you." Borous didn't move. He just lifted up the bowl again with the tractor beam, and kept staring at it.

"Why... yes." He sighed. "Gabe. No matter how awful my day had been, he... he was always waiting there." He paused again. "How odd. My gel is de-coagulating." He floated back away from , the eye and mouth screens retreating inward, and the hovering bowl following. "And when I would talk to him about Betsy - and how Marcus would beat on and call Smarty Sissy Pants, he'd just sit there, head on my knee. And..." He stopped retreating, and turned back to . "If you don't mind, I'll... I'll just take this bowl. I just... need to remove it. Put it away. Sowhere out of radar range. For so reason, its similarity to the Crater-shape of Big MT is starting to fill up all available cognitive spaces. That, combined with my own overwhelming feeling of having done sothing terrible... the two are hitting with... unexpected force."

"Hey, it was yours in the first place," I said with a shrug and a nod. "Sounds to like you hurt soone who loved you very much." Borous looked at the bowl in his tractor beam, and then back at , hovering up above slightly - not because I thought he wanted to be above , but because he'd already backed up into the wall.

"As odd as it is, I believe that is the conclusion. And... I wonder why it didn't hit before, until I saw that mory in your hands?" Borous floated back down, finally setting the bowl on a nearby table, and deactivating the tractor beam. "This sensation is unpleasant. I don't care for it." He started hovering around , his screens slowly and subtly shaking. "I don't care for this place, either. And... I feel... as if we've forgotten sothing..."

"Forgotten?" I asked, a bit more curious now.

"Still... it..." Borous didn't seem to be talking to anymore. "It is NO MATTER." Ah yes, there's the histrionic Borous I'd seen earlier. "Crush the feeling down. Crush it down, push it into the loop, the... hmmmm." The brain bot spun in midair and turned back to . "YES. Forgotten. Almost. Yes? I do not need to rember ANY MORE. Not today." Borous nodded at , and then hovered past and up into the rafters; up and out of sight.

"Not today..." I barely heard before he disappeared completely.

"Breaking News!" Doctor O yelled as soon as I wandered close, without even turning around until he was halfway through speaking. "Talking Lobotomite arrives in Think Tank! Its purpose? Unknown. Undefinable. Its presence here? UNPOSSIBLE!"

"Uh..." I laughed a bit, walking up to the brain bot with dull grey bio gel. "I think you an 'impossible,' not 'unpossible.' Unpossible isn't a word."

"O REALLY." Doctor O shoved his two eye monitors up close to . "Now the Lobotomite is master of the dictionary arts!" He started spinning around in place, still ranting and raving. "What, do you have a doctorate in verbology? No? I do! And..." When he finally stopped spinning in place, he focused his eye screens directly on my arm. "STOP. THE. PRESSES. Just in from my eye monitors..." He looked up at , shoving his monitors in my face, causing to back up. "Is that RobCo tech on your arm?" He looked back down at the Pip Boy. "IT IS!" He looked back up at . "What's your agenda, bringing that in here?!"

All that moving about and yelling at that he was doing was starting to make dizzy; I shook it off as quickly as I could.

"What's the big deal? It's just a Pip Boy." I looked down at the computer on my arm; for all I'd been through since I got it, it still didn't look any more or less beat up. How many explosions and gunfights had this (and I) survived?

"What, are you showing off? How great Robert House and his biiiig company are?" He started floating around , speaking in a fake high-pitched accent. "Oh! We can make Securitrons better than any robot those geniuses at Big MT can make, and they'll last for a thousand years!" He shook his tank and growled, going back to his normal voice. "Oooh! You're lucky I don't have hands to tear that Dip-Boy trash off your arm - or feet to stomp on its stupid tal guts! Ooooh! Damn RobCo!"

"Well," I said, thinking back to my assault on the Lucky 38's Penthouse. "Look at it like this. You don't have to worry about House anymore." O looked at , finally settling down a bit, and the eyes on his monitors narrowed at .

"Worry? About House? Why would I do that? Hope he died alone in a dingy room, streaming his last remaining bodily fluids into jars! Him and his dirty girl-bots! Don't even get started on those filthy biological catcher's mitts!"

"Calm down," I said; you know, for a crazy, stupid, ancient brain in a jar, he wasn't far off from what actually happened. "I just wanted to ask you so questions."

"Fine," O sighed, and settled into a hover a few feet away from . "Ask."

"Well, you know... Been talking with the other mbers of the Think Tank. At least, I tried to talk to 8 about the attack I keep hearing about, But he... wasn't really all that helpful." He looked like he wanted to curl up in a little ball when I ntioned it, I didn't say.

"Uh... I'm not sure I'll be much help either. I don't like to talk about it. It wasn't all the visitors though - only one of them got out of control. He's the one that took control of Little Yangtze, our old human farm."

What.

"Human... farm?" I asked, utterly confused. "What do you an?"

"This human... I can't believe it..." O said; I think he didn't understand the question... "He broke out of the Think Tank. In seconds! Then he went for Yangtze, got the bomb collars, and started practicing on the subjects that were still there until he got the right frequency."

Elijah. It had to have been that old bastard. While I was thinking, O kept talking.

"We were sending robots to stop him, and he was slicing and cutting through their shells with so souped-up laser gun like they were cheese... paper. When he hacked into the mainfra, 8 tried to stop him and got fried. ? He rerouted my processors to take control of the train network here. If you see the tunnels with the trains plowed into them, you can thank our visitor for that. He wrecked the whole place. While we were busy trying to keep containnt on the surface, he used one of the other trains to punch out a tunnel and escape... it's sealed now, but..."

"Wait, you said there were others, right? Who were they?"

"Two other human specins. One arrived not long after the troublemaker... and the last one..." O paused. "Not sure when he showed up. Thought the first one was going to be lobotomized in Y-17, but she got out... sohow."

Christine. Didn't she say that she'd been experinted on here in the Big Empty? Note to self: visit Y-17 at so point.

"As for the last subject... Klein might know more. He talked to him, then Klein let the last visitor leave the Think Tank. So you should probably talk to Klein if you're interested."

"Yeah, I think I'll pass. My eardrums can only handle so much in a day..." I grumbled... but the gears in my head were turning. I was trying to rember what Christine had told when the two of us talked in Vera's suite:

"There was soone else who ca along. Saved . Knew about Elijah."

"What, like another mber of the Brotherhood?"

"No. A courier. He called himself a courier, at least. Wore an Old World flag on his back. He was the one who pulled out of there. Told where Elijah had gone."

Elijah... Christine... who was this other guy? I tried to shake it off. I didn't have enough information to figure it out now, so there was no sense worrying about it. At least, not now.

"Never mind. What about you? What do you do here, anyway?"

"What I do?" O asked back. "I am responsible for all things robotical. You see a robot? I made it. See a broken robot? I made it that way. Deconstructed it down to parts! I have a gift with machines, you see. I can render anything inoperable - preserve them in a non-functioning state." I thought about that for a minute.

"That... doesn't sound all that impressive." I said. "Breaking machines, that is."

"Well, who asked you?" O blurted out defensively. "You just wait until a working machine threatens you! O yes, you'll wish I was around then!"

"Hmm..." I scratched the back of my head, my fingers brushing against the tal studs at the base of my skull. "You know, I've got to ask... That na of yours, O... is that your only na? Just a letter?"

"No..." he grumbled. "It wasn't always 'O.' I had to take that one by default because SOTIS it's easier to accept the mistake as long as the purpose works." He grumbled again. "I don't want to get into it. It's a sore topic with . Makes my gel ripple."

"Are you sure you don't want to talk about it?" I asked. "I'm a good listener. Got the ears for it." I laughed a little, and flicked my earlobes back and forth several tis.

"Great. Psychology. Clearly the worst of the Sciences. Right after Colosto-Diarrhetics." He sighed heavily, and continued. "O-kay, so my na isn't 'O.' Never was. It was circular, a single character, digit, but not 'O.' But even with enhanced sensors, not a single one of the 'geniuses' here in the Think Tank could get it right! Always kept seeing the letter, not the number."

It didn't take all that long to work that out.

"If they kept confusing the letter with a number, then that ans, your na is... Doctor Zero?"

"YES!" Zero yelled, nodding his tank feverishly several tis. "Thank you! Zero! I am Zero! How hard is that? A narrow, thin Zero, but no! They always call O, and never rember when I try and correct them!"

I thought about that for a minute.

"You know, if you wanted to differentiate the "0" and the "O," why didn't you just put a slash through the zero?"

"What." Zero ca to a dead stop in midair, letting out the flattest 'what' I'd ever heard uttered by anyone.

"Draw a slash through it," I continued. "I read about that in a science book a couple years back. Programrs would draw a slash through a zero whenever the distinction for the character needed emphasis. I an, as long as none of the Think Tank are Scandinavian, they shouldn't confuse it with ." Wait, hang on. How... how did I...

Dead silence reigned between us for several seconds. The gel in Zero's tank bubbled and the light flickered.

"Did... did I shoot myself with a brainial beam or sothing?" Zero's tone of voice made it seem like he thought this was the most brilliant idea he'd ever heard. "That's brilliant!" He coughed, and tried to compose himself. "I an... er, I... I would have co to the sa conclusion. Eventually... er... O, who am I kidding? I never would have figured that out! I can't figure anything out! I'm..." Zero let out a wail. "Aighhh! I'm useless!"

"So, is that what you want to be?" I asked, trying to get him to stop feeling sorry for himself. "Zero, I an. Not useless. You want to be Zero?"

"Exactly! At least the old na was indisputable. O... O is more like... surprise. 'O, look what I just stepped in!' you know?" I shrugged, nodding in agreent.

"I do. And personally, I like zero as well. There's power in zero. It reduces anything multiplied against it - to zero." I smirked, thinking back to his earlier comnt. Kind of like what he does to robots.

"Well, of course it does," Zero nodded his tank in agreent. "That's the most lethal of mathematics." He paused, thinking on that for a seconds. "That's pretty cool, actually. Destroyer of numbers! I already wreck every robot I study, why can't I wreck basic arithtic, too?" He turned back to , and started ranting - but happily this ti, not angrily. "I like your solution, Lobotomite! With that kind of slash in the middle, I can set myself apart! Er... I an, if I wanted to. The biggest Zero in all the Think Tank! They won't be able to escape it, that diagonal slash right down the middle!"

"You can take the idea, I'm not using it," I said with a smirk. Zero nodded again.

"Thanks. Talking to you... it really helped unclog so frustration." He sighed. "Huh. Talking. What a primitive form of thought-kicking..."

One last brain to talk to: Dala. She turned to as soon as I got close, and stared at with eye-screens that looked slightly... larger than any of other mbers of the Think Tank.

"You are an unusual specin to so boldly... walk... into the mighty expanse of the Think Tank," Dala said in a silky sweet (and surprisingly calm sounding) voice. "Fearless and proud as a teddy bear. Between the extraction of their higher reasoning abilities and urination-inducing fear, most Lobotomites dare not approach us. Let alone speak to us."

"What can I say, I'm special like that," I smirked. Dala started hovering around , and I could practically feel her gaze looking over.

"You have no such fear, facing , epidermis flushed with blood, plasma running molten beneath, your face contorting with... muscular expression..." Dala ca to a halt in front of my face, staring at with intent and hungry eyes behind those monitors. "Will you... indulge ? Say a... a few words?" She seed short of breath - which made about as much sense as anything else here. "Please, face toward the monitors, so that I might... record it... for further... examination."

I raised an eyebrow, and smiled at her again. What to say? I wonder if she wanted to say anything in particular... And for so reason, I thought back to when Christine had just gotten her voice back in the Sierra Madre...

"The quick Scribe jumped over the lazy Paladin?" I offered up eventually.

"Yes... yes, go on." Dala said with a slight quiver in her voice. "Seeing your... lips and mouth forming the words... both revolting... and sohow..." She paused. "How does it feel to have the flesh roll around in your mouth like that? To control each muscle... and the... tongue... like having a fish or an extrely dexterous slug, lolling and flopping in one's... mouthal cavity."

"Man, I love doctors. They're so disgustingly clinical," I said with a laugh... and then an interesting idea popped into my head. Not sure if it was a good idea, but it was almost certainly bound to be a laugh, at any rate. I thought back to Dala's house in Higgs: the love nest. And here she was, so obviously obsessed with...

"You know... I could be wrong," I laced my fingers behind my head, and my smile practically spread from ear to ear. "But it seems to that you have more... biological needs than your counterparts." Imdiately, Dala floated away from , looking back and forth from her left to her right.

"What?" She said hurriedly. "Nonsense."

Oh really?

Without saying anything, I closed my eyes, and breathed in obviously and heavily through my nose; I reached high up above my head and stretched.

"Wh- what are you doing?" Dala's monitors twitched, but she didn't look away.

I opened my mouth as wide as I could, let out a long, heavy sigh, and ran my hand along the top of my shaved head. I angled my head so she could get the best view of my fingers running along the top of my head.

"St-stop it! Wh- why are you m-making partake in this... this... this filthy formography?" She still wasn't looking away; the lights in her tank flickered, and I could see a few bubbles.

I brought up my other hand, and ran my hands alongside both sides of my face as slowly as I could. I inhaled deeply (and loudly), sucking in the air through my teeth, and then letting out a satisfied "Mmmmmm..."

"Enough!" Dala blurted out; a big bubble rumbled through her tank, and the light was shining brightly. "I am already... intrigued. You have sufficiently... percolated ."

"Got your motor running, huh?" I said with an almost predatory smile. Dala kept staring at .

"I... don't know what it is about the biology of Lobotomites. It... it infects my thoughts. All that skin and muscle... and..." Dala angled her eye screens down. "...tissue." She quickly brought them back up to look at my face.

"You don't have to feel ashad," I said, lacing my fingers behind my head again. "There's nothing wrong with looking at the human body. I certainly don't mind you looking." I grinned again.

"Perhaps... perhaps there is value in what you say." Dala paused. "I... I did so enjoy breathing once. Long ago."

"I could co back any ti, and just... breathe." I offered. "If you want."

Dala was silent for a very long ti.

"I... yes." Dala finally said, her voice dropping down low. "There is... I think there is sothing you can do. Sothing more than... breathing. Though that is nice. It's very... very nice." The light in her tank flickered and glowed brightly again. "But there is... yes, there is more you can do for . For Science, I an. "

"More than breathing?" I asked. Dala nodded.

"It's... an experint. Sothing that I've been... working on..." Dala looked around again. "In my... private labs. Away from the other mbers of the Think Tank."

"Private lab?" I asked, raising an eyebrow.

"What is this place?" I asked, following Dala as we descended deeper through a series of twisting, turning tunnels.

"There are several laboratories beneath the Think Tank Do," Dala said, much more confidently now that it was just the two of us. "Each mber of the Think Tank has a private laboratory, where private research can be conducted in isolated, controlled, and especially private conditions, away from the other mbers of the team. Only I can access my private laboratory, just as Klein can only access his, and so on."

"And there's an experint here you want to help with?" I asked. Dala didn't say anything, but I could tell that she was nodding, even though she was in front of , and leading the way.

We finally ca to a halt at the end of a long hallway, which ended in a tal bulkhead, and a circular light (glowing purple, obviously) right in the very center. Dala extended a beam of light from her tal chassis, directed right at the purple light; there was a heavy thud, a clunk of tal machinery grinding against more tal, and the door slid into the floor.

"This is a lab?" I asked, stepping into the room behind Dala; the door slid shut behind . "Doesn't look like a lab." One of the walls was lined with shelves upon shelves of holotapes. Teddy bears were scattered all around the room - sitting against the walls, lying against the floor, sitting on top of the furniture... and there was even one sitting on the bed situated right in front of .

Wait, bed?

"My collection of... ehm, formography - strictly for research purposes, mind you - it... uh, it only goes so far. There is only so much data that can be collected from holotape, or from radar scan. Once I get to a certain point, the data stops being... fresh. So I've been trying to perfect a more detailed data collection procedure, but... I..." Dala seed incredibly nervous. "I'm not sure it works. Completely."

"Do the other mbers of the Think Tank know about this?" I asked. I looked back at the wall; the shelves went from the floor to the ceiling, taking up all the available space on the wall, and each one was completely full. If this 'formography' was actually what I thought it was, then that was a whole hell of a lot of porn.

"Oh, my word! No! No, no, no, absolutely not! Quite apart from how repugnant I find them all, they don't believe formography a legitimate field of research, and what's more, they're lacking the proper..." Dala looked down again. "...equipnt. They would be more useless than normal."

And that's when I realized she was looking at my pants.

"So, you need soone with a body?" I think I could see where this was going...

"I have tried to calibrate the... erm... the data collection procedure using normal Lobotomites. However, as their higher functions have been removed, they are completely unsuitable for my needs. They are little more than animalistic lumps of at, uncoordinated and clumsy." She paused. "Also ssy. The data collected is only marginally more stimu- er... informative than what I can see on holotape."

"Alright, I sure I can help you out. I can be rather graceful, when I need to be. So, where's this data collection whatever it is?" I asked, looking around the room. Dala gulped audibly, and the light in her tank flickered.

"It... it's ."

The light on Dala's chassis lit up again, and for a mont, I thought she was going to use the tractor beam for sothing... but no. The beam widened, appearing very large - almost as large as a person... and then, purple cubes made of solid light materialized in the beam, coming together in a manner which I'd seen before only in the Sierra Madre. The cubes grew together into sothing solid - a woman. A woman with short, ssy hair and wearing a labcoat materialized in front of , made entirely out of solid purple light.

Okay, I was wrong! This is not what I was expecting at all.

"Is... is this you?" I asked, staring at the hologram standing in front of . "I an... is this you from before you... before you..." I couldn't quite say out loud 'before you put your brain in a jar.' Sothing inside of told that would be rude.

"I... I don't know." Dala said; when she spoke, the hologram also spoke in ti with the brain bot, and I could hear the sound coming from both the robot and the hologram.

"You don't know?" I asked, raising an eyebrow. "How do you not know?"

"I... I think it's what I used to... but I'm not sure. I've forgotten..." Dala paused, and her hologram looked flustered, screwing up her mouth. "I designed this composite facsimile based on fragnts of data I recovered over several years. But I couldn't find enough data to provide a complete picture."

I hesitated for a mont, trying to process what she'd said... and finally decided not to bring up the whole 'mory loss' thing. At least, not right now. Sothing strange was going on, that much was certain. 8, Borous, Zero, and now Dala... all of them either directly or indirectly ntioned gaps in their mory. Klein was probably the sa, but I... wasn't really interested in talking with him to find out.

"So... you're telling that this hologram... collects data?" I finally asked, incredulously. The hologram Dala nodded, and took a step forward; the brain bot followed, keeping it projected.

"The digitally generated surface structure of the hologram can transmit data, in much the sa way as a normal radar scan, but provides a much more detailed image. The way it collects data is modeled after a Lobotomite's nervous system. There are... gaps, I admit. I have not been able to replicate certain biological functions digitally. Sll. Taste. It can't replicate the sensation of breathing..." Dala advanced on again.

"What are... what are you..." I began, but trailed off when I realized that the hologram Dala was lifting one of her hands to press it against my cheek. The holographic fingertips that brushed against my face felt smooth and slightly cold - a bit like glass. The Dala hologram closed her eyes and shuddered.

"I have managed to replicate the sensation of... touch." Her lower lip trembled slightly. "But whenever I try to collect data using a normal Lobotomite, they are... they are too rough. Too clumsy. I can't calibrate properly in ti for the more intense... sensations."

My smile turned truly predatory, as I finally, really figured out where this was going.

My first thought: This is weird. This is really weird, even for this place. This is one of those things that seems like a good idea at the ti, but then you look back and you realize that you only thought it was a good idea because you've drunk half a bottle of Absinthe.

My second thought: Oh, what the hell. You only live once, right?

I reached up and touched her cheek, mirroring her gesture. And I gotta say... touching a hologram is the weirdest fucking thing. Seriously, it's just... yes, it felt like glass. But it moved. It wasn't rigid and immobile, like you'd expect from sothing that feels like glass - it had the sa kind of give as normal skin. It was just so squishy. And what's more, as I moved my hand along the holographic surface, I could feel faint tingles and sparks, almost like static electricity arcing into my hand. It was such an alien sensation, and yet...it sent shivers up my spine. I was so fucking confused, because I didn't understand why I was so turned on, but this was really turning on.

"So, you need soone who can be gentle?" I said in a husky whisper, slowly snaking a hand around the hologram's waist, and drawing myself in closer to her. "Soone who can take you through it, show you what feels the best, step... by... step?" I leaned in, and pursed my lips, blowing softly against her neck. The hologram shivered.

"It... it would be... hah... most beneficial - ahn! - f-for... for Science..." Dala bit her lip, and reached behind with her free hand, pawing feverishly at my back. She took the hand pressed against my cheek and wrapped it around my head, drawing in closer. I chuckled a little, nibbling softly at her neck; the holographic Dala let out half a gasp, half a moan, and squird in my arms.

"Whatever you say, darlin..." I muttered with a smile. "Whatever you say..."

You are reading New Vegas: Sheason's Story Chapter 100: Picking Their Brains on novel69. Use the chapter navigation above or below to continue reading the latest translated chapters.
Share with your friends
Library saves books to your account. Reading History saves recent chapters in this browser.
Continuous reading

You may also like

No reviews yet. Be the first reader to leave one.
Please create an account or sign in to post a comment.