Read the first part of my new story, Inhuman Contact right here. Okay, so what’s it all about?
A mission of first contact under threat. The genetically engineered reserve crew are all that remain. Now, they must unlock their potential… and become truly human.
Max (Medical Assistant XIII) was designed, grown and conditioned for this mission and this mission alone. He is capable of performing complex medical tasks, administering drugs, running blood tests and even assisting in minor surgeries. But Max knows nothing more. Nothing about the mission, the ship, the other Artificial Persons on board or even himself. Only, there is something wrong with Max.
He is beginning to learn.
The first prequel in the Galactic Arena Series, Inhuman Contact explores the story of Mission Zero and humanity’s first encounter with Orb Station Zero. It examines the origins of the Artificial Persons Program and why there is pro- and anti-AP terrorism on Earth in the main series. It can be read before or after Book 1 Orb Station Zero, or as a stand-alone story.
Here are the links to buy Inhuman Contact now:
Amazon US | UK | CA | AUS
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Here is the first section from Part 1 (please note that the formatting on this post is different to the actual ebook formatting – this website has far fewer options and cannot replicate it).
PART 1 – AWAKENING
Max never intended to speak the words. They simply emerged from his mouth with no decision being made on his part.
“Please,” he found himself saying. “Do not damage my brain again.”
The doctor stopped, holding the probe a few centimeters from Max’s temple. The silver shine of the spherical instrument head reflected Max’s face back at him, hugely distorted due to the light waves bouncing off the curved alloy surface at different angles on their way into his eyes.
“What did you say?” Doctor Sporing asked him, his face displaying some form of expression. Probably one of surprise although it could also have been fear, anger, frustration or, perhaps, the early stages of cerebral hypoxia. The last one was the most unlikely as Max was not suffering from it himself.
However, he had just requested that the doctor desist from the medical procedure that he was about to perform. Displaying initiative, defiance or any kind of desire—including the desire for self-preservation—was beyond the limits of his conditioning.
“Max?” Doctor Sporing prompted, scratching at the blond stubble on his chin. “I can’t believe you just said that. Did I hear you right? Talk to me.”
The Medical Assistant #XIII (Max) was himself surprised by the words he had spoken. He knew that by requesting retention of his memories he had said too much already. That unconscious decision to speak had overcome his conditioning but Max could now decide to not speak. Apologizing or attempting to explain would demonstrate only that his outburst was not a one-off occurrence of consciousness, of human-like behavior and that would only make things worse.
He said no more.
Doctor Sporing lowered the probe out of sight. “Max, I order you to repeat your last statement.”
Max lay strapped to the medical examination bed, his head locked into the brace for the duration of the memory erasure and brain-damaging procedure. There was an intense, conditioned desire to obey the doctor’s order. A physical urge to obey.
He stared at the wall opposite, feeling his jaw tense as he fought the urge to unclench his teeth. The row of medical screens behind the doctor was on standby, each individual one just a reflective black rectangle. Underneath those screens, his workstation was covered with drug dosage racks, one for each member of the crew. Max felt a desire to be working instead of in the position that he was in. Still, he could not act on that desire until he was commanded to or released. It was one thing to keep quiet when ordered but it would be quite another to physically remove himself from an A-Crewmember’s presence without express or implied permission.
“Did you hear me, Max? I just gave you an order. A direct order, Max.”
The doctor spoke softly, which usually indicated a state of relaxation or indicated the intention to express compassion, concern and provide comfort. The verbal communication database also suggested it could in some cases indicate extreme anger. Max could not recall the reason that there was such a discrepancy but human behavioral biology was full of such inconsistencies. Was the doctor calm or angry?
Every time the doctor reinforced his order, it was harder to resist the deep AP conditioning.
Across the room, Max watched the reflection of himself and Doctor Sporing in the bank of black screens. He saw himself strapped upright to the bed, his head locked in position. The shining probe in the doctor’s hand, other implements held in place against the magbox by the doctor’s elbow.
The realization came again. Max was about to have his brain damaged. He must have already demonstrated that he was operating outside of his conditioning.
What more could Doctor Sporing do to him?
The doctor’s face filled his vision.
“Max,” he said, sighing. “Let’s have a conversation, you and me. Nice and informal. I want to know what’s really going on up there.” The doctor tapped Max on the forehead with the tip of a finger. “I think you asked me not to damage your brain again. Tell me why you said that. Tell me why you asked it in those specific terms. How did you know?”
Of all seven members of the A-Crew, the doctor was the one who spoke to Max and the other APs with the most civility.
But he was still A-Crew.
Max turned his face toward the doctor’s. “Doctor Sporing, you have been working for over nine hours today without a break and have averaged only five hours’ sleep in every twenty-four over the last sixteen days. It is likely, therefore, that you are experiencing auditory hallucinations.”
Doctor Sporing looked at Max for a long moment, head tilted to one side.
After approximately two seconds, he sighed and banged down his probe on the magbox next to the bed, sticking it to the surface so it did not float off. Even though the Mission had been in progress for thirty-four months, Doctor Sporing had never gotten used to the weightlessness of the ship’s core, which made up sixty-four percent of the internal living/working space. He had a standing request to move the sick bay to the gravity ring and seemed often to repeat this request to the Mission Commander when they conversed. Max understood that this was some form of joke but he did not understand why it was thought to be humorous.
The doctor spoke toward the ceiling. “Comms, go. Jim? Can you come to Medical?”
“Problem?” The Commander’s voice filled the room.
“Not at all,” Doctor Sporing said, licking his lips. “But please come down to see me for a few minutes, soon as you can.”
The Commander’s voice grew louder, echoing a little from the clean white walls. “Herman, you know I’m busy preparing for the Big Sleep, can it wait?”
Doctor Sporing ground his teeth together for a moment. “I’m perfectly aware of that. Which is why I need to see you, please, Commander Park.”
There was a pause. “On my way.”
Dr. Sporing looked closely at Max, as if straining to see into his skull. “If there’s any genuine awareness behind those eyes, Max, you’d better tell me about it. I can’t help you unless you are honest with me.” The doctor sighed again, ran a hand over his face. “Honesty, right. Are you even capable of understanding the concept of deceit? Perhaps you’re right. Am I losing my mind? What do you think, Max?”
Max said nothing, staring at the black medical screens straight ahead, four meters behind the doctor’s back. Sporing sighed, unstrapped him, pulled him free of the bed and pushed him gently toward the medicine cabinet draws.
“Max, please finish preparing the hyposleep doses for the A-Crew. Be sure to cross check the most up to date mass measurements and blood results, the ones from yesterday. Confirm.”
“Yes, doctor. Order understood.”
At his workstation, Max busied himself with his task, unsure whether he had avoided the doctor’s brain damaging procedure or not. He couldn’t recall it happening so maybe his memory had been wiped. On the other hand, the fact that he could think such a thought suggested that his brain had not been damaged by the shining medical probe.
Either way, he had a task to complete. The familiar feel of the gloves on his hands, the bottles and syringes between his fingers was usually highly satisfying and yet he could not focus as he normally would. Something was wrong.
Doctor Sporing pulled himself about the room behind him. Every wall surface of Medical, all six sides other than the two doors, was made up of the covers of drawers and cupboard doors. Those storage spaces hid medical machines and equipment, pharmaceutical chemicals of organic and inorganic compounds, and emergency medical kits. From the sound of it, the doctor was opening and closing almost all of them.
“What’s this about, Herman?” Commander Park’s harsh voice filled the usually-peaceful medical compartment as he pulled himself through the hatch into the compact room. “What are you up to?”
Doctor Sporing’s voice was unusual when he replied, a kind of urgent whisper that Max had not heard before. “Keep your voice down, Jim, for Christ’s sake.”
“What the hell’s gotten into you?” Commander Park said. “What are you doing?”
Max listened while the doctor guided the Commander to a corner of the room. Max continued measuring the range of drug doses for all seven A-Crewmembers, slotting them into the racks and placing those back into the refrigeration unit. Good work. Satisfying work. Still, he strained to listen to what the men said to each other behind him.
“I’ve turned off the cameras and microphones in this compartment,” Sporing said to Park. “God knows, there’s enough of them. Don’t worry, I’ve done this a few times the last couple of years. No one at Mission Control notices. Or gives a damn.”
“Herman, if I have a medical condition I’d prefer you came right out with it. Tell me. Is it cancer?”
“It’s not you, Jim, for the love of God. You are the healthiest man I’ve ever seen, you’ll live to be a hundred,” Sporing’s voice became unusual again. “It’s about the APs.”
Max’s heart rate increased almost immediately, as did his respiration. It was unusual, because APs had extremely suppressed endocrine systems but it appeared to be epinephrine and norepinephrine flooding his body. APs could exhibit the acute stress response, commonly called the fight-or-flight response, but usually in life-threatening situations and in response to visual stimuli or intense pain. Max was undergoing neither which was disturbing because that would suggest he was responding to a cognitively perceived threat.
APs should not be able to do that.
Commander Park said nothing for a moment. Max imagined the Commander’s eyes staring at the back of his head. Then the Commander spoke.
“Go on.”
“I know this is not the best time to bring this up but we’ve all had concerns about some of our APs for some time. Max in particular.”
“He’s right there, H. He can hear you.”
“Yes, yes, but remember he still can’t understand abstract conversations, especially while focused on something else. If you had your own AP you would be used to it. See, he is occupied with measuring and loading doses for us for the Big Sleep.”
“If you’re concerned with his behavior, should you be trusting him to do that?”
“There has been no significant difference in his work output or outcomes. Nor any of the others, except perhaps for Roi and for Lissa. Even then, nothing to write home about.”
Commander Park sighed loudly, which Max knew was an indication of some form of distress or displeasure. “Out with it, H. Come on, what’s the problem?”
“Some small things, individually. But all together, it adds up. Max has been referring to himself in the first person. Increasingly, I find him looking long and hard at his reflection in a mirror. A few months ago, I found him using the computer for non-medical searches. Do you know the very first query he asked it? Where am I?”
Max fumbled the bottle he was holding but grabbed it before it floated away. His heart rate increased even further but he held himself still. Realizing they might notice that immobility, he carried on doing his work, trying to control shaking hands.
“What the hell?” the Commander said. “What did he find out?”
“Just about the ship and the mission. He found out he’s on the UNOPS Ascension, heading to the outer solar system. He’s got into some stuff about interplanetary space but I’m sure that none of it made sense to him. I doubt he knows what a solar system is, what a spaceship is. Any of it.”
“But they’re intelligent enough to understand if left unchecked,” Park said. “It’s important to keep them highly focused, Herman, or else their narrow intelligence risks becoming general.”
“Hence the conditioning to prevent it plus the sleep pod interference fields to keep them in line. It’s simply that in some cases, additional interventions are required.”
“And you didn’t report this at the time?” Park said. “Didn’t think to mention it over dinner, maybe?”
“Look, I manage the AP’s mental functions constantly, you know that, for God’s sake. AP brains show continuous but slow growth with synaptic pathways being rewritten over time. In addition to the sleep pod memory retardation system, I perform highly focused electrical shock therapy to the prefrontal cortex. When their behavioral changes reach a certain level, I perform the procedure. Simple. Business as usual, Jim. No reason to report it.”
“That’s bullshit, H. You hid it from me because you knew I’d have concerns.”
“That too. I know how you feel about them and I didn’t want to add to your burdens.”
“My burdens. Pull the other one. You’re a coward, H. Pure and simple. Don’t ever change.”
“I’m a diplomat. A counselor. A mediator.”
The Commander laughed in a way that was not meant to convey humor. “And a coward. Alright, so you performed the procedure this time and it hasn’t worked?”
Doctor Sporing hesitated before responding. “I’ve performed the procedure three times on Max in the last thirteen months. Every time, his behavioral quirks disappear. Or diminish greatly. Certainly, there’s no more unauthorized searches, no more prolonged eye contact. Performance always within nominal parameters. All good. But he’s been recovering with greater frequency. Last time was only two months ago. I increased the severity and it seemed to do the trick for a while. But earlier today, I found him using one of my medical screens while I was checking the tanks. He was reading about the biological differences between APs and humans. And the thing is, I had to double check to be sure but the thing is… he was picking up from where he left off before. Before the last procedure.”
The Commander sighed. “The procedure doesn’t work?”
“All the literature says it works. I have Terra Pharma studies showing it does. So I scheduled another procedure for today, before we began the Big Sleep. I decided to excise as much as I dared of his declarative memory, you know his autobiographical and semantic memory while retaining as much procedural memory as possible. But as I was about to do it, he asked me to stop. He said, doctor, please do not damage my brain again.”
“Okay,” the Commander said. “And it’s just him?”
“I’ve had to perform the procedure twice on Roi and once on Navi.”
“Does Mission Control know?”
“They know everything, obviously. All the data is sent back and we can’t do anything to change it. But no one has contacted me about it and I have sent no specific reports. I always got the impression they wanted it that way.”
“So why the secrecy now? Why turn off the cameras?”
“It’s important that you make the decisions, Jim, not them. It’s important for us as a crew, for our individual and collective psychological health that we do not outsource any difficult decisions, especially ethical ones. We’re the ones who’ll have to live with the consequences of any decision.”
“You want me to euthanize them now? Before the Big Sleep?”
Max held his breath. He recalled reading the word euthanize somewhere and, though he did not know the meaning, he felt on some level that it was not something good.
“No, absolutely not. No. That’s the ultimate destination for all this, obviously but I don’t want to jump to any conclusions.”
“So what’s the problem, H? Zap him again and finish your prep. You know what I think this is? This is classic avoidance. It’s resistance. You’re stressed because you’re worried about putting us into hyposleep, about getting it right. And I can understand that. I don’t want to lose any of my crew. You most of all. But you’ll have to put us under, one way or another. Unless you want to turn this baby around and head on home?”
“Look, I just wanted to ask you about ethical considerations. Should I still perform the procedure? And if not, what would the implications be for the mission?”
“Are you kidding me, H? There are no ethical considerations for Artificial Persons, that’s the whole point, isn’t it?”
“That’s what I’m trying to say. I’m having an ethical dilemma here, James. I never had a problem stopping the development of awareness. Just because something would develop consciousness without my intervention, doesn’t mean it’s unethical to stop it from doing so. The thing itself had no awareness to stop. But I think I might have left it too late. If Max has rudimentary consciousness I cannot simply damage his brain to remove that consciousness. It would be a murder or something like it. Even if it has only the equivalent level of consciousness as a monkey or a dog, I don’t think I can do it.”
“Doctor, I feel like you’re the one without any consciousness here. That thing there, it has no rights. No matter what your personal or professional thoughts are on the matter, it has none, it will never have any. You know what will happen to it eventually. And right now, we have actual problems that cannot wait. Engineering is switching everything over to automation, to the AIs and to Roi and Poi. The rest of the crew are running last checks on their tanks, purging themselves with your emetics. The processes have started. We do not have time to talk about this. Think of the big picture here. The mission. Our destination.”
There was a long silence before the Commander spoke again.
“I could order you to do it, Herman. That’s what you want me to do, right? Make the decision for you, so you don’t have to sully yourself with it? You know it’s necessary but you don’t want to take responsibility. You really are a coward, H. Not a physical coward, obviously. Just a moral one.”
“That’s not what I’m asking. Even if you ordered me to do it, I’m not sure I could.”
The Commander raised his voice. “We don’t have time for this. Are you willing to mutiny over that… that thing?”
“Oh, don’t be so damned dramatic, Jim,” Dr. Sporing said, huffing. “Mutiny is a—”
“Mutiny is what they call it when you defy the captain of the ship, yes. Why do you always have to be such an obstinate—”
An alarm blared. Max jumped, dropping the bottle in his hands. It floated away and he grabbed it while the alarm sounded again.
Max had never heard a real alarm before. He wondered if it would be something serious.
***
That was just a teaser, the first section from Part 1 of Inhuman Contact. Get the rest of the story now:
Here are the links to buy it:
Amazon US | UK | CA | AUS
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