Lady Starlight Part 2:
Adel watched the Ragnarok race towards her prison with glee.
She had calculated that she had had maybe one chance in a million
to be rescued, and that was probably being generous; she knew enough about
human nature to know that suspicion and fear were as powerful a motivational
tool as charity and concern, and it was as likely that her signal would be
ignored as investigated. She had a limited ability to monitor the transmissions
from the ground to the Ragnarok, and she had been shocked to hear that the
Ragnarok was being ordered to investigate. When the Ragnarok had fired its
boosters and exited orbit in a reckless yet well-plotted course, sending
messages of hope, a dark joy had filled her soul. She was not just being
rescued, but being rescued by caring, humanitarian souls. Those souls were the
easiest to prey on, she knew from long experience. So she sent back messages
begging for aid, using her crisis to hopefully blind the would be rescuers to
the threat she posed. Soon she would have the means to return to the world she
had ruled, and all that had wronged her would pay.
Adel's laughter filled the ruined remnant of the Lunar Base.
He had been with her on enough of her training for this mission
that he knew she had not been explicitly trained to perform the interception
mission that she had plotted into the navigation computers, yet here they were,
rocketing into the void, much to the amazement of the control staff at Esthar
Airstation. Tharling had periodically contacted Selphie, first expressing the
worries of Laguna that she had acted so recklessly, then moderate amazement
that her course was working. Through it all Selphie had sent message after
message to whomever was calling them, adjusting their approach as they drew
nearer, and being remarkably calm.
"Fine. Our ETA is twenty minutes. Hope that we get there in
time."
"The Propagators? They weren't that smart. I saw a report on
the autopsy on one of the creatures that Squall and Rinoa killed. Their brains
weren't built for that kind of logical thought. All they cared about was
keeping themselves alive." She looked up at him. "
"And if it isn't? "
"Then we leave. They can't get back down to the planet
without the Ragnarok, right?"
"
"Don't be silly, Selphie. I can't fly the Ragnarok as well as
you can, and you know it." I want to protect you, Selphie, he thought.
Can't you see that?
"But what if something happens to you?"
"Sure you can,
"This is Esthar Airstation," Tharling sent.
"Selphie, be advised that the object you are meeting is tumbling
erratically in it’s orbit. Your thruster control has to be very precise. Do you
wish any assistance?"
"Ah, negative, Esthar. The time delay lag in the signal
transmission would affect my control. I'll wing it."
"Read you, Ragnarok."
"That's done pretty good by us so far." Selphie wondered
if she just meant piloting the Ragnarok or something else. "We'll be there
soon. You need to get to the topside airlock before I start final maneuvers, so
I'm not bouncing you all over the place."
Selphie gulped, then nodded. "You-you too, Irvine." When
he left the cockpit, Selphie covered her hands in her face. "Why didn't
you say something else, you little goof!" she berated herself.
Outside, Irvine sighed deeply and muttered to himself. "Brave
guy. Couldn't even admit it to her, could you?" He shook his head and
headed for the same airlock that Squall and Rinoa had used to enter the
Ragnarok, all those months ago.
In the airstation, Laguna watched with trepidation as the blip on
the holographic display above Tharling's head that represented the Ragnarok
neared the source of the signal. He had never been comfortable with ordering
men into situations where they could be killed, as a Galbadian soldier and as
President, and this situation smelled the same to him. Selphie blasting off on
her own did not change the fundamental fact that he had ordered her to do it
anyway; she had just accelerated the timetable. It bothered him, almost as much
as it bothered him that for the past thirty or so minutes, Bruetel and his CORE
Group clique had been on the other side of the control center in some sort of
discussion. Kiros wasn't too impressed either judging by his expression.
"What's up, Kiros?" Laguna whispered to him.
"I'm not sure. Those CORE Group guys make Dr. Odine seem
rational. Still, I think either they're up to something, or they know something
that we don't."
Laguna considered this. "Well, whatever they could be up to,
there's not much they can do from here. Selphie and Irvine are too far away for
them to do anything to."
"True. But what if there's something up there they know about
and we don't?"
Laguna frowned. "What could possibly be up there that we
don't know about?" he wondered.
Kiros sighed. He sometimes despaired of getting Laguna to take
some aspects of government seriously. "Laguna, the CORE Group operates
under a black budget with no government oversight. All you cared about with the
lunar base was that it kept Adel imprisoned. Who knows what they did up
there?"
"I'd say we need to find out," Laguna said in his
classically understated way.
Before either man could act, Tharling spoke up. "She's making
her intercept, Mr. President."
Laguna and Kiros looked at the displays and both, in their own
ways, wished Selphie well.
If you told Selphie the degree of difficulty involved in matching
velocities with an object that was tumbling in an eccentric and decaying orbit
was considerable, she might have been a bit concerned as she began her task.
However, since Selphie was not one to worry about such things, she set about
falling alongside the ruined hunk of the station with a casual ease that would
have stunned her instructors back in Esthar. She adjusted the yaw and pitch of
the Ragnarok with minute thruster burns that twisted and turned the ship in odd
directions against its forward thrust and gradually brought the ship alongside
of the hulk. She switched to the inboard commo circuit and said "You about
ready, Irvine?"
"Course I am, darling. What'll I do?"
Selphie checked her screens. "I've lined us up with an
airlock on the target, and the Ragnarok has the ability to magnetically dock.
I'll try to get us into the magnetic field range."
"Sounds like fun," Irvine called. In the airlock, Irvine
ran through the training he'd had in how to use the suit's thrusters to control
himself through space, in the event he wound up floating in vacuum. He hoped
that did not happen.
Selphie brought the Ragnarok within twenty-five feet of the ruin,
and quickly saw that things weren't going to work. "Irvine, there must not
be enough power onboard to power the magnetic seal on their end. I'm going to
have to get you as close as I can and you do the rest. You…sure about
this?"
Not really, Irvine thought, but there are worse fates. "Is
the airlock hatch just like the one on the Ragnarok?"
"Ah…yeah. That means the hydraulic override will be in the
same place."
"Good enough. You ready?"
Selphie was quiet for a moment, then she said "Opening outer
hatch, Irvine. You be careful, hear me?"
"Goes without saying."
The air cycled out of the lock, and the hatch slid open, showing a
view of a pitted, pockmarked surface, a circular hatch that greatly resembled
in technology at least to the one on the Ragnarok. It hung about twenty or so
feet away, the kind of distance that meant nothing to a high level, properly
junctioned SeeD like him…back home. Irvine made certain that Exeter rested,
slung over his back, in place, then he released the magnetic lock of his boots
and jumped forward. He floated out into space and realized that he was moving a
lot faster than he expected, and as he neared the hull of the ruin he hit his
thrusters once. Which meant that he only had the breath jarred out of him as he
hit the side of the ruin.
"Irvine! You okay?!" Selphie cried.
"Just…peachy…" he gasped. He reached over and tried the
controls for the airlock, and was surprised when the outer hatch cycled.
"Outer hatch opening."
"Read you. I'm boosting the signal to you so there's no
interference from the structure." Selphie sent another text message to the
source-"We're here, can you help us find you?"-yet got no answer.
"Irvine, no one's answering."
Irvine has now in the airlock proper, the outer hatch closing
behind him. He did not hear air cycling into the lock, and said "Selphie,
there's no air coming in here. I'm going to try the manual override."
Not far away, Adel used some of her carefully marshaled resources
to engage the air lock system, calculating that while it could raise suspicions
it expedited matters. She checked the trap that she had set for this
"Irvine" and waited.
"Uh, cancel that Selphie," Irvine called. "Air lock
cycling."
"Keep your suit on, Irvine. That area's unsafe as hell."
"Didn't plan on taking that big a chance."
The hall outside was in zero gravity, pieces of debris floating in
the air, panels in the walls open and wiring hanging from them. Irvine turned
on the light mounted on the shoulder of his suit and panned it around as he
made his way into the hall. "Selphie, this place feels dead…"
Adel smiled as she set her plan into motion.
She had control over four small servo remote drones, once used by
the scientists of the CORE Group to transport materials from one zero gravity
lab to the next. She had used those remotes to set her trap, modifying the
wiring in the walls into a web that she unleashed on Irvine.
Ten wires shot out of the walls, propelled by compressed air, and
they struck Irvine, each tipped with a contact electrode that sent a shock into
Irvine's suit as they attached to him. Irvine managed to shout "
Selphie!" before the shocks drove him into unconsciousness…
"Irvine!" Selphie screamed, her heart jumping onto her
throat. She had been monitoring Irvine's medicals-pulse, heartbeat, and so
forth-through her command interface, and she saw that he was still alive, his
readings that of someone unconscious. Still, she called his name again as if
her very voice could wake him up. Perhaps it could.
"Selphie! What happened!" Tharling shouted.
"Something…something happened to Irvine!" She stared
helplessly at her controls. What happened to you, Irvine? Who's out there?"
Adel's servo remote drones were each the size of a medium sized
dog, with six legs and four separate manipulator arms mounted on the top. They
scuttled out of the walls and busied themselves with freeing Irvine's
unconscious form. Adel did not view the SeeD-her sensors registered the unique
energy of someone with multiple GF junctions, a trait of SeeD-as a threat, but
rather as a weapon to use against the pilot of the Ragnarok. The drones picked
up Irvine between them and began carrying him down a corridor that ran the
circumference of the section of the base, bringing him to Adel. Once deposited
in front of Adel, she set the last element of her plan into motion.
Selphie was on the verge of panic, of getting up and going after
Irvine, when an alarm went off on her board. She was stunned beyond belief to
see that it was a virus warning, an attack on the control cores of the
Ragnarok. She pulled up the system file and saw that the virus had not yet
gotten past the firewall she had installed into the ship, but it was looking
for a way in.
"Someone has hit the Ragnarok with a computer virus!"
she called down to Esthar. "I'm shutting down all my links to the ground
so it won't infect your systems!" She had to keep a commo link open to
Irvine, but thankfully that was a different, encrypted frequency. She was now
alone, though, against whatever foe had drawn her and Irvine here.
Below, Laguna stared daggers at Bruetel, who was unable to hide
the shock on his face. "Damnit, man, what did you let me send them
into!" he shouted.
"I-I can't believe that it managed to survive the
destruction," Bruetel said. "Or that the ROM construct approximation
was that accurate…"
"You aren't making sense, Bruetel," Kiros growled.
"I know I'm not. What's up there…what Selphie Tilmitt is
facing…is Adel. Or, at least, it thinks it's Adel…"
Selphie closed her eyes, forcing herself to be calm. She could not
defeat the virus that was attacking the Ragnarok, let alone rescue Irvine, in a
panic, after all. Underneath her attempts to remain calm, though, was a single
thought, repeating over and over: I decided to come here so quickly. I did this
to Irvine. "No," she said to herself, "that won't do Irvine any
good." Her first order of business was finding a means to communicate with
the ground without worry of the virus reaching the Esthar systems, because she
could not do this alone. Okay, miss wizard; let's see how good you really are…
Irvine awoke slowly, vaguely aware that he was lying on his back,
staring at an unfamiliar ceiling. What happened to me, he thought, trying to
sit up-and feeling something holding him down. He turned his head and, through
blurry vision saw some kind of legged mechanism pinning his arm to the ground
with its manipulator arms. He surveyed his surroundings and saw two more of the
remotes, one holding down his other arm, the other his feet. "What the
hell is going on?" he asked aloud.
"My freedom," a voice spoke from nowhere.
Irvine scowled. There was something terribly familiar about the
malicious voice that surrounded him, although he could not place it. His
limited view of the surroundings told him that banks of computer terminals
lined the room, though he saw no one operating any of them. "Who said
that?" he asked.
"Your captor. The force that brought you here. I will have
the Ragnarok and be freed."
Irvine struggled against the implacable grip of the remotes.
"You leave Selphie alone, whoever you are!"
"Voice print analysis indicates that you are greatly concerned
about this "Selphie' person, implying an emotional connection, high
probability affection of a romantic nature." Who is this? Irvine wondered.
Sometimes it sounds almost familiar, sometimes like a machine. "Is such
affection returned?"
"Hell if I know," Irvine answered honestly. I know I
love her, he thought.
"Well, you had best hope so, little SeeD. For if I have to
use you, I will, to have the Ragnarok, and my freedom."
"It started ten years ago," Bruetel explained, pacing in
a small circle. "A division of the CORE Group became interested in the
psychology of sorcery, its mechanics, its pathologies if you would. We wanted
to understand why so many sorceresses become malevolent and evil. And we had
the perfect test subject in Adel, imprisoned in suspension in orbit. It was
easy to monitor her brain wave patterns and if need be stimulate them to see
what kind of response that we got."
"Do you know how dangerous that was?" Kiros asked.
"You could have awakened her!"
Bruetel nodded. "We realized the danger, which was why, once
we had established a proper database, we decided to continue our research
virtually. We built a ROM firmware construct based on our database that
essentially emulated Adel's thought processes and basically put it through a
series of emulations."
Laguna, true to form, asked a simple question that had deeper
meaning. "How do you know that's what's going on up there?"
Bruetel paled, realizing that he had perhaps said too much.
"It's the only thing that makes sense, sir. The Adel project was conducted
for the last few years in the Special Space Workforce Development Division's
laboratory. The ROM construct could have survived-"
"You're lying to me, Bruetel, but I don't have time to pull
the truth out of you. What do we do?"
"We order Miss Tilmitt to leave, to use the Ragnarok's
weapons systems to destroy the lab. The loss of her comrade is regrettable,
but…"
Tharling spoke up. "We can't communicate with her, and she
said the Ragnarok was under attack by a virus program. How do we tell her and what
if she's lost control of the Ragnarok?"
Laguna smiled, amazingly enough. "You have a point,
kid."
Selphie was singing a cheerful song, which she realized was a
rather feeble attempt at hiding her fears, as the virus ate at the ship's
datacores and she programmed the means that would allow her to talk to the
Airstation. She could see from his suit telltales that Irvine was alive,
possibly conscious, but she did not dare talk to him, for a variety of reasons.
She worked her boards desperately, hoping that the frequency skipping program
would work well enough to keep the attacker from finding and pirating the
signal. Hold on, Irvine, she thought. I can't lose you now.
Adel admired the skill with which her opponent was defending her
viral attack, but not to the point that she was going to admire it forever. Her
energy reserves, needed to keep the mainframe system that housed her core ROM
personality, weren't unlimited, and too hard a battle would deplete them. The
time had come to use her advantage…
Selphie was ready to test her program when the commo board called
for attention, on the suit frequency. She stared at the board, hoping that
Irvine was trying to talk to her, doubting it a great deal. The suit frequency
was not strong enough to serve as a carrier wave for the virus, so that risk
was minimal. She took a deep breath and touched an icon on the screen.
"Yes?" she said jauntily.
"Are you the one called 'Selphie?' " a cold, flat and
familiar feminine voice asked.
"Who are you?" Selphie cried. "What did you do to
Irvine?"
"Nothing, yet…for now. And as to who I am, you can call me
Sorceress Adel."
"Adel," Selphie whispered. That was impossible, she
knew; SeeD had defeated Adel months ago, during the battles aboard Lunatic
Pandora. "You can't be Adel."
"The reality of my existence is this: I am attacking your
ship with a viral program that will give me control of the Ragnarok. I have the
SeeD you sent into my hands, and I will kill him if you do not drop your virus
protection and give me your ship!"
"I-I can't do that."
"Voice print analysis indicates that your stress and
emotional levels, 'Selphie', are rather high, and in line with you possessing
some form of emotional attachment to this 'Irvine.' You would not see him
harmed, would you?"
Selphie knew that was the case, but SeeDs did not give up that
easily. "I-give me a moment to think about it, all right? There's a lot at
stake here."
"Indeed there is. I give you five minutes, Selphie. And then
the next sound you will hear is that of your friend as he breathes his
last." Adel signed off.
"Well, that was encouraging," Selphie said aloud. She
activated her frequency-skipper and crossing her fingers for luck, called out
"This is Ragnarok, do you hear me?"
"Mr. President, " Tharling called, "we're receiving
a signal from the Ragnarok on an alternate, encrypted frequency. It's on the
commercial frequencies, not military."
That Tilmitt girl is a miracle, Laguna thought. "Patch her
through!"
"…Airstation, this is Ragnarok, do you read? This signal is
designed to frequency-skip at a rate of .098 on the commercial wavelength every
thirty seconds, do you read me?"
Tharling's hands blurred over his workstation, setting his gear up
to match the skipping from channel to channel that Selphie's signal was
designed to do "We read you, Selphie, go ahead."
"I don't have much time, but here's the story. Something
calling itself Adel has hit me with a virus and says that it'll kill Irvine if
I don't surrender the Ragnarok to it. Now just what exactly am I up against?"
Laguna spoke up. "Apparently, it is Adel-a program that is
designed to act like Adel. Selphie, I'm sorry-I think some people here knew
that it could be behind this before we sent you up there."
"Sir, apologize later. I need to find a way to save Irvine."
Laguna looked from Kiros to Bruetel and then back to Tharling's
workstation. "There isn't a way. Selphie, you-you have to destroy
the…"
"I will NOT kill Irvine, sir!"
Bruetel cleared his throat. "My name is Bruetel, Miss
Tilmitt, and I have some knowledge of your situation. What you face is,
effectively, a computerized version of Adel's intelligence. If it gets into the
Ragnarok, it could utilize the nanocores-the self repair systems that we
installed before this mission-to replicate an approximation of Adel's physical
form."
Laguna stared wide eyed at Bruetel. "And just when were you
going to drop this bombshell on us?"
"I just did, sir. Adel's ROM firmware construct was
programmed with certain creative limitations, to keep it, as a creature of data,
from actively taking over computer systems. While it could evolve past those
limits, and seemingly has, we hardwired one absolute into the system: it cannot
use the nanocore system. But if Adel transfers to the Ragnarok…"
"The behavior controls are physical, not data," Selphie
finished. "The program will know it can use the nanocores."
"Precisely. Adel will be reborn as a creature of
hyper-technology and sorcery, virtually invincible. You must destroy the lab at
any cost."
Selphie was quiet for a moment, then she asked, "Why would
you create such a thing?"
Laguna cut off Bruetel. "Selphie…I'm sorry. So very
sorry."
"I'm sure you are. Ragnarok out."
Selphie closed her eyes, hands hovering above the weapons
controls. She knew the kind of threat that Adel reborn would pose to the world,
to SeeD, to everyone. She knew that SeeD existed to serve as a defense against
the power of sorcery, above and beyond any mercenary contract, and she knew
that defeating Adel was the only thing that should be on her mind. But she
thought about how Squall had moved heaven and earth to get Rinoa back when she
had become a sorceress, and of how that love had become something of a legend.
And she thought about how little a person she would be if she left
"Yes?" the malicious voice hissed.
"It occurs to me that I have something you want."
"That you do. Will you surrender the Ragnarok to me?"
Selphie entered a series of commands into the controls, and, one
by one, the systems of the Ragnarok shut down. "No, I won't," Selphie
replied. "In fact, I have just ordered the central systems to shut down-a
full terminal shut down."
Adel's voice was filled with rage. "What have you done,
girl!"
Selphie smiled. "I've just killed the Ragnarok. Nobody goes
home now." She giggled, unaccountably. "Now we make a better deal,
Adel."