A High Place in El-Bariyah
The crew of the Huntington grieves the loss of one of their own, while a malevolent force in a distant corner of the solar system forges its newest weapon.
The highly anticipated continuation of The New Flesh is here.
This story contains graphic violence, sexual content, depictions of surgery, brainwashing, identity death, dismemberment, implied rape, abusive parents, firearms, anti-queer slurs, and healthily moderated but melancholy consumption of alcohol.
As always, this story is for adults 18 years of age or older, it's also the third in an ongoing series. Get caught up before you read it!
Chapter 1: The New Flesh Chapter 2: The Third Law
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January 24, 2253 1800 Earth UTC
The Hildas, 530 million kilometers from Jupiter
7 hours. It had been 7 hours since the Huntington had escaped her assailants, and Chester Silvera, First Mate, hadnât seen the Captain in 6.
Heâd just gotten out of the shower. The entire crew was in shock. Most of them had served with Jenna Powell for years. She was their friend, and despite the frequent clashes between her and Holder, Silvera knew that the crew respected and liked both of them.
Silvera surveyed his quarters, a moderately-sized suite of around 20 square meters, containing a modest bed, a small galley, a lavatory, and the shower he had just vacated. The Huntingtonâs crew accommodations were far from palatial, but they were home.
Chester walked to his dresser, donned a black band T-shirt (The Carowells, Jovian Tour 2250), khaki shorts, and sneakers. He grabbed his portable radio off the table, clipped the handset to his belt and the remote mic to his collar. It chirped reassuringly as he turned it on.
Keying the mic he said, âThis is Silvera, anyone seen the Captain?â
A moment later, Jill Campbellâs voice crackled to life on the speaker. âDoor logs say sheâs still in her quarters. Her radioâs off, want me to ring her?â
âNo, Iâll just walk right over, thank you.â
âNo problem.â
He opened the door to the hallway outside. The corridor was well-lit, and lined with short-pile navy blue carpet and fake-wood-grained wall paneling that had probably been quite fashionable 20 years ago, but now gave the ship a hopelessly outdated look. Chester actually quite liked it. The old girl was past her prime, but she had a sense of style, and you had to admire her for that.
Holderâs quarters were 10 meters down the hall, on the same side as Silveraâs, adjacent to the bridge entrance. Between their rooms was a corridor that led to the now-vacated Engineerâs quarters, the mess hall, the rec room, and the crew dormitories. As he passed the hallway, Silvera caught a glimpse of Powellâs door. It was closed, and unadorned. He thought about peering inside, but decided that wasnât his place, and instead he continued to Holderâs room.
Silvera knocked a syncopated pattern on the Captainâs door, and was greeted with a dull, âEnter.â
He turned the knob and swung the door open to reveal the darkened bedroom beyond. A window faced out towards space, looking aft over the ore holds. The #3 bay was still open, its massive door blocking the view of the enginesâ yellow-white exhaust plumes.
The captain was lying in her bed, eyes open, staring at the ceiling. She hadnât shaved her face yet today, and her stubble was creeping in. Silvera never liked to say anything, but he always thought it gave Holder a dashing, roguish look. Right now though, she just looked exhausted.
âCanât sleep?â Silvera asked, casually, as if this were a normal cruise under normal circumstances, and he had not a care in the solar system.
Holder just lay there, still staring at the ceiling. Silvera waited for her response. When none came, he asked, âMind if I come in?â
âSure,â was all she said.
He turned the lights on to their lowest setting and closed the door behind him. This was the first time heâd managed to get a good look at the captainâs quarters. She hadnât yet put up any decorations, but she had managed to situate a small bookshelf, her favorite armchair, and a small table that currently held a laptop terminal.
âLove what youâve done with the place,â Silvera joked, âFeels just like home.â
âChester,â said Holder, without looking at him, âcan you fucking not right now?â
Silvera smiled, though Holder didnât see that. He knew his captain, and he knew he had to get her on her feet to keep her out of trouble. Holder was a problem-solver. She needed dirt on the tires and grease on her hands or she got restless. With the ship moving and no burn scheduled for another 10 days, Silvera had to become that problem.
âTerry, the crew needs to hear something from you,â he said, âTheyâve just been through hell. Theyâve lost a friend. Now they need a leader.â
âSome fucking leader.â was Holderâs bitter reply.
âYou canât be everywhere at once,â he said, âItâs not your fault Powell didnât put the tether on.â
âTell that to the court martial.â the captain said, rolling to face away from him.
âI will,â he said, âand so will the rest of the crew.â
Holder sat up and looked at him, âAre you sure about that? They knew her for years. They met me last month. You donât have to be a physicist to figure that one out, Chester.â
âThe crew will stand by their captain.â
Holder stood now, apparently sheâd lay down to sleep in her blue khaki work uniform, âWhy? Why will they stand by me? I got Powell killed, Chester. She is dead, because, I fucked up.â
âAnd how did you do that, hmm?â he asked, âBy not breathing down her neck and by treating her like a responsible member of the crew?â
âChester,â Holderâs voice got louder and she began pacing, âYou just told me, right before all of this,â she waved her hands in front of her for emphasis, âthat I had to drop my grudge against her. That weâd been butting heads for a month and that I was too hard on her.â
âTerry,â Silvera kept his voice even, âyou are not the first Captain to lose a crew member to that crew memberâs carelessness.â
âHer carelessness?â Holder said, incredulous, âChester, I am the Captain, everything on the Huntington is my responsibility, the cargo, the safety of the crew, the integrity of the ship, everything!â
âYou are one person.â Silvera could feel his fist clenching
âWho is tasked with maintaining discipline and order,â Holder shot back, âI failed in both. Jenna Powell is dead because I couldnât control her,â Silvera thought he saw tears in her eyes, âI should have supervised the EVA, I should have checked the suit inventory,â she was shouting now, âI should have turned back and looked for her!â
âAnd gotten yourself and the rest of the crew killed?â, it was Silveraâs turn to shout now, âWith all due respect, shut the fuck up, Theresa!â
Holder was momentarily speechless, incandescent with rage. Finally, she found her voice. âIf you ever speak that way to me again, Silvera, I will personally make sure youâre-â
âYes, yes,â he cut her off, tired of the show, âyouâll personally make sure Iâm cleaning out waste reprocessors on Io until Iâm old and gray, Iâve heard it before.â
âWhat is your problem?â
âYou! This!â was his response, âYour crew just suffered a trauma and youâre sitting in here feeling sorry for yourself like some first-year cadet when you should be out there, tending to your crew as a captain should.â Holder collapsed into a sitting position on the bed and buried her face in her hands, muttering something Silvera couldnât quite hear.
âWhat was that?â Silvera asked.
âI said,â Holder brought her hands away from her face, and Silvera could see the tears lining her cheeks, âThat they deserve a better captain than me.â
Chester Silvera had been friends with Holder for half a decade. Theyâd met on a cargo hauler, the Venture, where Silvera had an engine technician. Sheâd stayed up helping him study for his command examine, and heâd been her first mate ever since heâd gotten his commission.
âTerry,â he said, choosing his words carefully, âI have served under,â he counted in his head, â4 captains, including you. Now, maybe itâs just my incredibly wise influence,â he paused briefly, and Holder cracked a tiny smile, âbut I would say that you are, by far, the best.â
âYeah, well, thatâs just, like, your opinion, man.â Holder said, bashfully.
âI wasnât finished,â Silvera continued, âIâve never had a truly bad captain, but the ones whoâve impressed me the most have never been the ones that put on a stone face and hide behind their command. The best captains are always those who suffer alongside the crew, who laugh and cry with them. You need to be out there. They donât need you to be their rock, they need you to be beside them in the flotsam while theyâre adrift, so that when someone spots land, you can lead them back to it.â
They sat in silence for a long moment. Finally, Holder grabbed her radio, keyed it, and said, âThis is the captain. Weâve had a bad day, probably the worst any of us has ever had. Letâs all meet in the mess hall at 1930. Drinks on me.â
* * *
Time Unknown
Location Unknown
Jenna wasnât sure if she was in hell yet. She couldnât possibly be alive in this state. Every signal her body sent was telling her that she should be dead. Her face felt like it was still on fire, her shoulder was in pieces, and she was pretty sure her rib cage was caved in, too. Every breath was agony. She had long since stopped trying to move any part of her body. Even with concerted effort at stillness, though, new pains danced and bloomed throughout her.
Time was behaving strangely, too. She was dizzy, like sheâd had too much to drink. Her stomach felt like it was being twisted on an auger. Through the haze of it all, in the back of her engineerâs brain, she knew that if she wasnât dead yet, she soon would be. Sheâd taken at least 50 grays of hard fusion radiation. By all accounts, she should have been dead by now.
And yet, she lived. The thingâfor that was all that Jenna could call itâthat had taken her from the emptiness of space had carried her over its shoulder to some kind of medical facility. It lay her on a cruel-looking steel table and cut her suit off, injecting her with a syringe of some oily substance that filled her mouth with a rusty taste she couldnât shake. Even now, what had to be hours later, it remained.
She drifted in and out of consciousness for some time. Each time she woke, her head felt slightly clearer. After what felt like half a day, she woke and found that she could move her neck without feeling the crunching of bones beneath it. How long have I been out?
No sooner had the thought crossed her mind than a wave of intense nausea swept over her. Though the pain had dulled slightly, it still felt as if she might shatter when she reflexively rolled onto her side, and wretched. Nothing came out. She braced herself with her right arm and was surprised to find that she could bear weight on it. She marveled at this only a moment before another convulsion gripped her stomach. This time, she threw up. The room was dimly lit with a warm light, but even the yellow glow could not hide the contents of her stomach as it spilled onto the floor.
Blood. Lots of blood. Some clotted, some not. Some was bright red and some was nearly black. Jenna heaved again. More vomit, more blood. Her engineerâs brain chimed in again. Sodium-24.
The deuterium-tritium fusion that drove the Huntingtonâs main engines took two hydrogen atoms, one with an extra neutron, the other with two, and smashed them together to form helium and heat. The helium atoms, technically they were alpha particles, were of little harm to the human body normally, though the sheer quantity of them in fusion exhaust posed a danger. The real problem, however, was the neutrons produced as a byproduct. It was them, she knew, that would seal her fate.
It was the sort of thing that had captured her imagination as a young boy in Dublin. A particle so small and nonreactive that it could pass right through solid objects. Except sometimes, it didnât. Sometimes, the neutron would hit an atomâs nucleus square-on, and stick there. The nucleus would become unstable, rippling like a drop of water falling from a cloud, and then it would break apart. Do this to the right substances, and you could generate power, build a bomb, trace the flow of blood through the human brain. Do it to the wrong substances, the ones that made up your body, and you became a bomb in slow-motion, destroying yourself, unable to prevent your own demise.
Much of the sodium in her body had absorbed neutrons, changing from stable sodium-23 to radioactive sodium-24. While fusion exhaust had neutrons and alpha particles, both of which penetrated relatively little, sodium-24 emitted gamma rays, and those gamma rays could pass through almost anything short of lead, including the human body. As they did, they stripped the ends off her chromosomes, shredding her DNA and leaving her cells unable to replicate themselves properly. The result was that she was dissolving. As the fastest-dividing cells in her body reached the end of their lifespans, they died. Rather than being replaced, her organs were simply shutting down.
But it didnât make sense. She had taken so much radiation she should have died within an hour. Why hadnât she? She was pondering that question when the thing that had brought her to this room stepped through the door.
Jennaâs head was clearer now and she was better able to absorb the figureâs appearance. It had a human shape. Bipedal, standing about 180cm tall. The basic outline of it implied that it was, or at least, had been, female. Cybernetic prosthetics were not unheard of but this lay outside the extreme end of that. The thingâs joints were covered in layered segments of metal with a dark oxide coating, tubing ran over its limbs. The only skin that Jenna could see was its face. The face was almost human. Dark lines ran as veins underneath the skin, the lips gunmetal gray, as if the blood inside had rotted. There was hair, a short tangled mess of raven black. One of the eyes was distinctly mechanical, a bright, electric blue. The other was green, and looked natural.
âYou are awake,â was all the thing said.
Jenna made a dry croaking sound as she tried to speak. After several seconds of halting attempts, she finally found her voice, âHow...how am I alive?â It hurt to speak. She thought she might have burns on her larynx from inhaling fire.
âWe have been able to repair your DNA to a degree,â the figure replied, âHowever the process is not sufficient to ensure survival. Do not be afraid. We will make you one with us.â
âLet me die.â Jenna begged.
âYou have been selected to become an assimilator unit for the hive.â was the figureâs flat reply.
âIt hurts.â Jenna felt tears running down her face, âPlease, let me die.â
âYour body will be modified and augmented to assimilate others into drones for the hive.â
âLikeâŚyou? No...no...â
âDo not be afraid. Your body will be altered surgically and mechanically. Due to the extensive mechanical and radiation damage your body has endured, most of it will need to be replaced with a synthetic chassis.â
âNo...god, pleaseâ
âYou will remain conscious during this process.â
Jenna tried to scream but all that came out was a dull rasp
âYou are afraid now, but you will enjoy it, soon.â
The figure placed an anesthesia mask over Jennaâs face.
âAs your external tissue is so damaged,â it said, in that flat, synthetic voice, âwe were unable to administer the nanites in the usual manner. Instead we have given you a 10cc intravenous infusion.â
âPlease,â Jenna whimpered, âplease kill meâ
Her pleas fell on deaf ears, however, âUsually,â the figure continued, âThe surgical procedures would have begun immediately, but the nanites needed time to stabilize your biological processes. We will now begin.â
It grabbed Jennaâs wrists with shocking strength and fixed them to cuffs on the table. She struggled and pulled and twisted, trying to break free, but she wouldnât have been able to, even with all her strength in her. And she was so tired. Her heart had been racing since the thing had come in, and the adrenaline had worn her down. It wasnât so much that she resigned herself to whatever happened, she just couldnât keep up the fight anymore.
Jenna heard a hissing sound come from the mask as the figure reached beneath the table and twisted something. A sharp, sweet chemical aroma curled into her nostrils. As she inhaled, she could feel herself relax. For a moment she almost forgot about her troubles, but her engineerâs brain started sounding alarm bells. Theyâre drugging you. It had to be that.
âPlease,â said the figure, its voice friendlier, more familiar now, âdo not resist the gas.â
âI...I donât,â she croaked out, âI donât want this.â
âYou do not know what it is you want.â
Donât I? Jenna thought to herself, Maybe, maybe itâs right.
It was like falling into the arms of a lover after a long day at work. Warmth, softness. Jennaâs mind wandered to an encounter sheâd had with a young naval officer she met at a Titan bar not that long ago. How her consortâs uniform had glided so effortlessly off as soon as Jennaâs quarters door closed. How her soft fingers had wrapped around Jennaâs cock at the same time sheâd suckled at Jennaâs tits.
Jenna realized her pain had subsided greatly. She also noticed that she had an erection.
âSubject arousal maximized,â said the figure beside her. Jenna looked over her again. She was female, decidedly. Broad-shouldered, but delicate. An artisanâs body. How had Jenna failed to see the beauty there before? âInitiating neural reroute.â
The pain quickly came roaring back, different than it had been before. Before, it felt like her body was on fire. Now it felt like tiny teeth were chewing up her insides. She tried to scream but even as she opened her mouth, it subsided, a beautiful warmth replacing it. It was like falling into the softest bed after the most filling meal in the coziest house in the world.
The world took on a brighter, sharper appearance. Jenna could hear people talking, but couldnât make out any words. Next to her, the figure spoke, âSee, isnât that better?â As she spoke, the woman ran a mechanical hand up Jennaâs leg. Jenna couldnât help but curl her body up in pleasure. She closed her eyes and let herself fall into the pleasure.
Oh, she thought, I guess you know how to treat a girl.
We have much experience in providing pleasure. Jennaâs eyes shot open. She had heard the woman, not with her ears, but in her head.
The neural transceiver is already functioning? The woman said, You are a promising candidate.
Jennaâs engineer brain was working double-time in thick, deep mud. Neural transceiver?
Jenna could hear the voices again, more clearly now, and realized that they, too, were inside of her. Though every rational fiber of her being screamed to pull away, her curiosity overtook her, and she reached out.
It was like stepping through a door into a crowded amphitheater. Sights, sounds, smells, textures, tastes, movement all seemed to stream into her head from everywhere at once, as if she were both infinite and singular. She flew around the ship, it was smaller than the Huntington. She saw dozens of people and yet felt only one presence. Her mind flicked through them all, letters and numbers appearing with each figure before finally slowing to a stop in the room where she was. The assimilation chamber. Sigma-26 stood above her, warmth on her face. The nascent drone on the table, what had itâs name been?
Deep within Jennaâs mind, a part of her began fighting, kicking, screaming that this was wrong, that there were people out there who missed her. Jill and Karl. Iris and Phoebe. Chester Silvera and Jack Thorton. And Theresa, her captain. Holder hadnât left Jenna out of spite, or anger. She had been doing her job. She had been trying to keep the others safe and alive.
And yet, the drone now in her head thought, she didnât even try to save you, did she? She could have tried to scoop you into an ore bay, or given you a few more seconds to make it to the airlock. Instead, she left you out there, adrift. The hive found you. The hive took you in. The hive healed you. Shouldnât your loyalty lie with them?
Jenna didnât care. She knew that it wasnât Holderâs fault. She resisted, trying to pull herself back from the warm light of the Hive. She could feel them working their way into her head. She felt the Hive push into her memories. No, not those!
She was 10, a boy in a flat in Dublin. Her mother has taken her sister, Penny, to the doctor. Her father is asleep, and sheâs snuck into Pennyâs room. Sheâs trying on Pennyâs dresses when her pa walks in. Sheâs never seen him so angry.
She was 14, in the boysâ locker room at school. Everyone is showering but she canât bring herself to take off her shirt. 3 of the other boys corner her. She hides the bruises from her parents.
She was 20, a student at University College Cork, sitting in a doctorâs office. The doctor is writing her a prescription for estrogen. He seems uncomfortable, but says nothing.
She was 21, seeing her family for the first time since starting hormones. Her mother opens the door. Sheâs confused, but polite. Her father sees her and screams to get out of his house, that he wonât have a faggot for a son. She leaves. Itâs the last time she sees her family.
She was 27, on shore leave at Olympus Station, orbiting Mars. Sheâs leaving a bar, alone, again. After a few minutes of walking, someone hits her hard in the back of the head, knocking her to the ground. The man shoves a chrome handgun in her mouth and says if she makes any sound heâll blow her tranny brains all over the decking. She thinks about her mother.
She was 28, assigned to MV Huntington, her first posting as chief engineer. The crew are kind to her, but none seek her out. She never grows close to any of them.
She was 30, her new captain wears a nickel-plated .45 on her hip. Jennaâs heart races and suddenly sheâs back on Olympus. She runs to her quarters and vomits. The new First Mate knocks on her door. She opens it with tears running down her cheeks. He asks her whatâs wrong. She cries for 10 minutes before she can say a word. When she finally speaks, she begs him not to tell the captain. He promises he wonât.
Sheâs 30. Her face is burning, sheâs floating through an abyss, abandoned and alone.
Thinking back on all of these things, the last bit of Jenna Powell, the part that was fighting and screaming for her humanity, grew weary. She had never desired power, or money, or the secrets of the universe. The only thing sheâd ever wanted was home. Sheâd never had it.
The last part of her let go of the cliff it clung to. It fell, backwards, through an infinite abyss. And where it had been, only the drone remained.
âI am a drone of the hive.â she said, âShape me to a razorâs edge.â
* * *
1930 Earth UTC
MV Huntington mess hall
Captain Theresa Holder stood just outside the entrance to the mess hall. The crew was seated in 2 rows at the long table, nine on a side. Chester was sitting on the left side nearest the empty chair at the head.
The Captain had not told the crew to wear anything special. She didnât like the formality, and the crew, in turn, had donned their ragtag Sunday best. Jill Campbell wore a navy blue polo. Karl Miller had tied his hair, normally past his shoulders, into a tight bun. Iris Owens was actually wearing a dress. A bright, neon-pink dress with a skull printed on the front, but a dress nonetheless.
Holder, for her part, was wearing her blue dress uniform. Deep navy wool with brass toggles, her captainâs pips on her shoulders. The Civil Navy did not award medals to be worn with dress uniforms, and so on her left breast was a patch that simply said âHOLDERâ in light grey letters above the embroidered silhouette of a Shinkelobwe-class ship.
As she entered the hall, Silvera stood, âCaptain on deck!â he barked. The crew stood with him. Holder stopped half a meter beyond the threshold. Funerals at sea were one of the times that regulation permitted her to wear the pistol strapped to her hip. Despite this, she made a show, while the crew watched, of removing the belt and hanging it on a hook next to the door. She pulled the pistol from its worn leather holster, and racked the slide back. She had not loaded it prior, and so manually locked it open before replacing it in the belt and turning to the crew. âAt ease,â she said, and the crew sat.
She walked, not to the head of the table, but to the foot. She remained standing, and spoke.
âWe are here, tonight, our number one too few,â she began, âWe have lost our colleague and friend, Genevieve Powell.â She paused, she hadnât written anything down and was struggling to remember the bits sheâd thrown together in her mind as sheâd shaved and showered.
âLook,â she said, dropping the air of pretense sheâd held before, âNobody comes out here expecting to die. We didnât join a combat fleet. We didnât sign up to be shot at or blow up troop depots or raid supply outposts. Weâre miners.â
She looked around at the crew a moment before continuing, âAnd miners die. Itâs been happening ever since humans started digging holes in the ground. Tunnel collapses, methane explosions, tidal shifts. But what happened today, thatâs not something, I think, that any of us expected.
âJenna and I didnât exactly get along. It feels a bit ghoulish to be up here, praising her, to tell you the truth. Like Iâm taking credit for something I didnât earn. But I need you all to hear this. What happened today, itâs my responsibility. You all performed admirably in a situation that none of us was prepared for. This morning, you were asteroid miners. This evening, youâre heroes, all of you. None more so than the woman who should, by all rights, be sitting at the head of this table.â
Holder gestured in the direction of the empty place setting, âJenna Powell died trying to get you all to safety. When you tell your friends and families about today, donât sing praises of your captain. Heap your praise on Jenna Powell, whose loyalty and courage cannot be disputed. Chester, the bottle.â
Silvera stood, grabbing a bottle of whiskey that he had placed on the floor next to his chair. He walked towards Holder, and handed her the thick, ornate glass vessel.
Holder broke the seal and uncorked the bottle. She walked around the table, gently pouring a finger of the amber liquid into each crew memberâs glass. When all had been served, she poured herself a glass, and holding it in her left hand, raised it. âTo Jenna.â
âTo Jenna,â the crew replied, smiles and tears all around, and drank.
After downing her glass, Holder placed it on the table and picked up the bottle. She held it high and said, again, âTo Jenna.â
âTo Jenna!â the crew said once more.
And with that, Captain Theresa Holder silently drained the rest of the bottle out onto the floor of the mess.
Timecode Error: Format Not Recognized
Hive Interdictor K-14
The drone lay on the table, no longer restrained. Her tired flesh would soon be discarded, replaced by metal, composite, and plastics.
Sigma-26 stood above her, âThe radiation has severely damaged your body,â she said to the new drone, âyour augmentations will be rather more extensive than most.â
The new drone silently confirmed receipt of this information. 26 began hooking life support tubes into the new droneâs neck. The plan was already clear in her mind. She was eager for it, eager to leave behind the flesh that had confined her and become one with the hive. To feel the electricity run through her wires and hear the thrum of motors and pumps.
26 approached, pulling down an armature from the ceiling that held a large band saw. Wordlessly, she turned it on, and began lowering it towards the new droneâs hips. The blade bit into the damaged flesh of her right leg first, right where the femur met the ball of the hip.
The new drone heard the hive through the wire, It is not clear yet how much of your body will need replacing, it said, the process will proceed in stages to ensure stability.
The blade ground through the new droneâs leg, spitting bits of meat out to the side. As it struck bone the motor bogged down slightly, and the drone felt a high-pitched vibration through her entire being. Waves of pleasure overtook her, the ecstasy of death and rebirth. The nanites in her system worked to seal off the femoral artery and other blood vessels, protecting the brain from losing its precious supply of oxygen. The external life support systems were not yet needed, but that time would come soon.
26 removed the severed limb from the table and began amputating the other leg. Another fine mist of gore sprayed out. It felt so good, the new drone felt itself grow hard as the last bit of skin was severed.
In order to assess tissue damage, the hive spoke again, we will need to access your abdominal cavity. The life support systems will take over now.
Wordlessly, 26 plunged a scalpel into the new droneâs abdomen, just above the pubic bone. She worked it around to the right hip, then back and down almost to the table. She turned then and cut upwards, under and around the lower segment of the rib cage. The new droneâs cock was nearly bursting now, and she gave in, releasing herself, firing juices all over her stomach.
When the scalpel had circumnavigated the new droneâs belly, 26 reached in just under the sternum, and peeled the skin back. It pulled and twisted and sucked, a mass of skin, fat, and muscle a few centimeters thick. It, too, was tossed aside. Another drone came in the door and retrieved the severed legs and the skin flap, whisking them away to a reprocessing terminal.
26 examined the new droneâs organs. The new drone could not see them, but could hear the hive as it wordlessly assessed the situation. The radiation damage was too severe. Her body, even with most of the skin and organs removed, was too damaged to remain.
Full submaxillial amputation necessary, the hive declared.
26 grabbed a port with several needles on the end of various bores. She gently cupped the new droneâs head in one hand, lifting it up, before gently pushing the cable in to the base of the skull. Nanites in the port flooded in, connecting themselves to nerves, building microducts to carry oxygenated blood to the brain after the next step.
When the connection was complete, 26 reached into the open abdominal cavity and began paring out organs. She started with the bladder and intestines. The new drone watched as meters of glistening tubes were removed from her. She could feel herself becoming lighter. The stomach came next, along with the pancreas. Each cut was like an orgasm in and of itself. A blast of pleasure that washed over the new drone like fire consuming kindling.
Her liver and lungs were removed. The new drone could feel her brain stem panicking, trying to force her to breathe with lungs that could not draw air. It was driving her mad, she could feel pressure building up behind her genitals again, and once more she fired off, her glistening seed spurting into the now-empty cavity.
At last, all that was left was her beating heart. It was pounding so fast, and her body was so much lighter now, that she actually thought she might be popping off the operating table under the power of its palpitations. The new drone met 26âs eyes as the latter reached for the band saw. 26 switched the tool on, its blade accelerating to full speed almost instantly. In anticipation, the new drone opened her mouth wide.
26 brought the saw down between the new droneâs jaws. It first caught her cheeks, tearing into them and spraying blood inside her mouth and out the side. She could taste it, the hot, metallic taste of her own body, the last thing she would ever taste. As the blade continued downward it met her mandible, the blade shrieking inside the new droneâs head. It passed out the back side of the bone and immediately dug into the droneâs throat. Blood spurted down it. The pleasure of it all was overwhelming. Finally, 26 angled the blade to pass up through the top of the spinal column, just below the brain stem.
As the blade exited at the end, the new drone felt her body disappear. A nuclear bomb of pleasure went off in her, her eyes rolling back in her skull. The few muscles that remained, as well as the stumps of mandible that had not yet been removed thrashed wildly, for 12 minutes and 22 seconds. When the last wave of orgasm subsided, the new drone opened her eyes.
26 was standing above her, smiling. She felt her hivemate grasp her on either side, and lift her up. It was a curious sensation. She felt so light, so free. Wordlessly, 26 strode over to a person-sized case standing in the corner of the room.
Behold, said the hive, your new form.
The mechanical body was slightly taller than the new droneâs old one. It was sturdier too, with a more muscular look. On top of the neck sat a mechanical mandible. There was no skin, that would be artificially grown over it after assembly. 26 carefully placed the new drone atop the stack, and, using a scalpel, cut away the last bits of her original jawbone.
The artificial mandible responded without command, screwing into the joint sockets on her skull and connecting artificial muscles to mechanical ones. Soon, the drone could feel small actuators gripping the blood vessels inside her and making permanent connections. 26 stood back and watched the process. Finally, she reached behind the new drone and removed the life support tube from the plug. The new drone became momentarily dizzy during the changeover, but 26 was quick to connect the bodyâs hookup to the port on the skull.
Step forward, came the voice of the hive.
The new drone complied. Wordlessly, she turned around, facing herself away from 26, who began fixing armor plates to the back of her skull, covering up the sensitive port. When 26 was finished, the new drone turned back to face her. She stared down at her new hands, sleek and metal. She flexed her fingers, feeling the power of them. A full diagnostic ran automatically, the results appearing in the corner of her vision, confirming all systems were functioning as designed.
âWhat is your designation?â 26 asked the new drone.
The new drone looked at her, and said, âI am Sigma-38, assimilator unit.â
Welcome, Sigma-38, came the voice of the hive, we will do great things together.













