RECV EDC: 07JAN2019 COMM MODE: DSN REFLECT CODED ABST: D/M/C CRC: 2820485004 10514 ============================================================ Nothing clears your mind like getting kicked in the head. About sixty of this planet's long days ago, I had a run-in with the local guard. Like most local guards, they don't appreciate the homeless, and the homeless don't appreciate them. At the time I hadn't eaten for two sleep cycles, and I was moody and inconsiderate; I expressed my feelings with my fists and the guards repaid in kind, first with their fists and then with their heavy boots. Honestly, The kick to the head, with its resulting loss of consciousness, was a welcomed relief after the repeated blows to the stomach and external obliques. After our brief and overly-physical dialogue, the local guard was kind enough to titra-bind me and drop me of at the brig, where they were a bit more compassionate and I was a lot less combative. Without removing the binding, I was placed in medical rehab for two of their days. The best part was the tube feeding. At least I was no longer hungry. When I was well enough, I was freed from my chemical- mechanical shackles and placed in holding, where I could consider my situation. After quite a few days in confinement waiting for my trial, I came to the point that I had fallen into voluntary poverty and obscurity for: I was finally ready to communicate everything that had been harrowing my mind in the most acute ways. All that was left was to escape- it was a comforting and familiar position for me, made even more bright by the prospect of getting a heavy weight off my chest. With patience, tact, and perfect complacency, I allowed the local legal system to accuse, try, and sentence me to a lifetime of slavery in their largest planetary industry for my attack on their local guard. The whole process took one morning. I cheerfully worked in their sulfesium mines, outperforming the rest of the rabble and placating my superiors for a week or two; enough to gain the tiny level of trust needed to stage an escape. From that escape to this terminal is not important. I'm stalling, I think. It's time to get to the point of this transmission: What happened in the Corporation labs. If you have my previous transmissions, you already know that I was working a legitimate mining contract when I was arrested on false charges of skimming, then spirited to a lab to become the Corporation's newest test subject. What you don't know is how the Corporation had previously placed me in confined and solitary work conditions in order to complete complex, long-term bioscans, which showed that I was a viable test candidate. What I thought were odd work conditions were actually a pre-screening phase. Much of my time in the labs was spent under heavy sedation. Clearly, I have nothing to report about those times. Eventually, however, I came to a full and comprehensive state of consciousness; it was so acute and sudden that it felt like falling out of bed in the middle of a dream. Instead of landing on the floor, I found myself strapped to a table, surrounded by masked scientists, one holding a large needle that had apparently just come out of my forearm. My head was viced in some sort of contraption so that I couldn't move any part of it, couldn't speak or get any better view than I had. My senses were heightened; I could feel the small stream of blood coming from my right basilic vein where the needle had been. There was no gentle nurse to stanch the flow with a bit of sterile fluff. My mouth started to taste like a cocktail of lido-sevofluride and some unknown narcotic, as the injection took full effect. "He must be fully awake for the cerebellum portion- for the cerocartographic images be usable." "Will this alter the parity?" One of the masked faces turned toward me. My vision was painfully amplified, and like an eagle looking at fish under the surface of a lake, I almost thought I saw compassionate eyes. "Yes. It will alter the parity, but the scan is complete and the subject will be terminated after the final procedure. The image-con won't recall this episode, short-term memory is independent of the cerocarts." At the word "terminated" a scream started to rumble in my lungs, but was arrested by some kind of brace around my trachea that included a needle into my larynx. "If he's awake, won't he move, when he feels the pain?" "He will, but his head and neck are entirely immobilized. The unknown chemicals that they had used to rouse me were overloading my senses. I could identify even the slightest variations in the voices around me; so far, two male scientists were interrogating one female scientist, the one that had looked me in the eyes. Though my head could not budge in the slightest, I was starting to become cognizant of all the metallic surfaces around me that offered usable reflections. Without trying, I formed an image of the entire room from the reflections, as if I could see what was going on from an out-of-body perspective. A brusque male voice now took up the interrogation. "You didn't need to bring him up like that- what was in that formula?" Another voice in the background, mechanical and grating as if it was piped in through some archaic low-tech speaker system, brought the argument to a close. "It doesn't matter, it's done, and we have no time. Move forward with the cerocarts immediately. Dr. Sossial, you brought him up, you can clean up the mess when we're through." The mask with the hidden eyes nodded, and as the others moved into position for the work ahead of them, I saw her pause for a brief moment. My elevated senses pushed even further, driven by a burst of adrenaline, and time slowed. Without lifting her arm, I noted in my reflected image of the room that she was making a signal with her right fingers, and then with her left. Microseconds all told, and she had repeated it again, right-then-left. Darius, if you're reading this, it was the sign of the Xero Mods. This scientist, so deeply embedded in the Corporation's human experimentation and wetware branch, was a purelife-entity extremist. If she was here, and if she was in a position of knowledge-dominance even among what must be the leading scientists in this field, then I might have an opportunity for escape. The room was small, and had one exit. There were seven scientists present, counting the Xero-mod. The restraints were auto-harness instead of individual. I might just have a chance, with help... All of this I took in and evaluated in the few seconds I had between the crackly-speaker-voice's command and the flip of the cerocartographer's switch. My chemically-heightened senses, which were such a blessing in understanding and capturing these very brief moments of consciousness, now became a wretched curse as a blazing column of pain was thrust in through the top of my neck and straight down my spine. I longed to feel the relief of a scream, but I could make no sound. No one who has felt that amount of pain can accurately tell how long they had to endure it, for such pain always lasts an eternity. Even so, the pain ended as abruptly as it began, and I found myself still under the effects of the injection; I saw the room again. The scientists were slowly making their ways to counters, where they were taking off gloves and masks, flipping switches and pulling out tubes, and dropping various instruments into metal tubs filled with a viscous blueish liquid. "It's done. Finish and mop up, Sossial." came one final command from the speaker-voice before a sign-off signal blipped. The Xero-mod female was still standing over the table. Seconds after the command, she reached over and pulled the release on the auto-harness. The body-belts, neck and larynx mount, and head mount detached with a hiss and lifted promptly and obediently away from my body. There would be no pleasure, for me, in relating what I did to the scientists in that small room- with the exception of the Xero-mod, who I left alive. Upon finding myself freed, I lept up from the table and realized that the injection had not only given me heightened senses, but peaked physical performance as well. The Xero-mod stood by as I had my chemically-driven revenge on these unknown assailants. At the end, she removed her mask and simple said, "run." Darius, I have to believe you're going to receive this transmission. It was you who introduced me- a reluctant skeptic- to the Xero mods and their ideals. I always figured they were right, but I never imagined that I would caught up in their intrigues. You showed me their signs, and explained their doctrines, and tried to convince me. You showed me the theoretical tech they were fighting against, the researched that proved there battle was real. I didn't care. I didn't see how it mattered: if a being decided to mod, that was there choice; if they "stayed pure," as you put it, that was also their choice. You warned me, Darius, that eventually it would not come down to individual choice, but to force. You were right. Based on the technology that I encountered, the theoretical tech you showed me is no longer a theory. The Corporation is working on forced-mod programs, and the mother-of-all abuses, the forced transfer of consciousness. The scans they described and the machines they were using, even the blue- bath for the equipment- were just as you showed me they would be. There's just one thing that keeps me in fear at this point, and that is the fact that the final scan was completed before I could break out. The Corporation has my consciousness, Darius, if the process worked. You already know that the tech for a willful transfer is available, but this extraction tech is different. I'm convinced that they made a copy. They were going to copy-and-terminate, rather than transfer. It's the only explanation that makes sense, but it's weak. I need help. I need someone who can help me make sense of it all. And more than anything else, I need to make sure the Corporation doesn't have my mind. I'm afraid to go anywhere, to do anything that I myself might logically predict. Find me, Darius, or help me find you. I need to know more from the Xero-mods. I'll keep looking for you, and I'll try to think of a way to meet you that I wouldn't think of, if that's even possible.