A cyborg in the Wasteland [Fallout] [Self-insert]

I mean honestly no matter what species she ends up as when we get to ME, once she's old enough to go out on her own, she'll most likely go to the Terminus Systems to escape Citadel Laws and oversight. And that's if she isn't just born out there anyways.

Although obviously the superior choice is to be a Leviathan. :V

Be your own boss, tell those thralls to worship you, be the 'Apex' species. Just watch out for the murderous metal cuttlefish.

Yup, I agree that she will indeed move into the Terminus system. Hence why I think she should make a PMC/Merc group, and Asari or Krogan are the best choice for that option.

You want Lily to be a telepathic space fairing cuttlefish, surrounded by other telepathic space fairing cuttlefish? I'm not even sure the damn things have or even know how to have babies as they continue to hide from the Reapers.
 
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You want Lily to be a telepathic space fairing cuttlefish, surrounded by other space fairing cuttlefish? I'm not even sure the damn things have or even know how to have babies as they continue to hide from the Reapers.
Biotic, aquatic, telepathic, capable of travelling through space by themselves and achieve FTL using what is essentially an extremely overpowered biotic jump. Plus, the ones you meet are the progeny (descendants/offspring) of those who survived the First Harvest which was 'eons ago' so they've been reproducing. And even then, it's kind of hinted that there might be more than the three you meet hiding in those depths.

But it was more of a joke suggestion, even if my monkey brain is interested now.
 
Just finished bingeing this story in 2 days! Can't wait for more chapters!!
 
Yeah, the Krogans got punished, as they should, but the way they were punished was probably a mistake. Nothing pisses of a species off more than harming their children, or in this case, potential for children. But I think the issue the Salarians had with the Krogan and the reason they choose this method, is that the Krogans base genetics are stupidly robust and adaptive (I think this is mentioned in ME1 or 2). And when they found something that worked, they went for it right away. I also don't know if Lily could modify the Genophage. I'm not saying that she can't, just that I don't know who's bio-science is more advanced. That's why I suspect Spira plans to reincarate Lily as a child, so that she has more time to 'learn' and adapt to her new situation, and why I'm convinced it will be a humanoid species rather than some exotic kind of race, like Hanar.
Fair, I can buy that. Lily was more advanced by a mile coming from EP, but it's all based on the human genome so anything she does in mass effect would actually be very difficult and require a lot of research.

Yup, I agree that she will indeed move into the Terminus system. Hence why I think she should make a PMC/Merc group, and Asari or Krogan are the best choice for that option.

You want Lily to be a telepathic space fairing cuttlefish, surrounded by other telepathic space fairing cuttlefish? I'm not even sure the damn things have or even know how to have babies as they continue to hide from the Reapers.
Honestly I want to see that option but with her as a Quarian. Specifically because it's not the best choice, make her work for it ya know.
 
Honestly I want to see that option but with her as a Quarian. Specifically because it's not the best choice, make her work for it ya know.

This I understand, and why it was on my possible list. The major issue with them is their current status in the ME verse. Which is beyond bad. As I'm pretty sure the Council is suppressing their race.
 
And yeah, her being hunted by the Justicars and dealing with the addiction would probably have to be the main thrust of the fic until she either found a solution to the problem, or managed to slip pursuit in such a way they can't find her again. It's a distinctive style of death, but they do need a body to examine ya know. The terminus has people disappear and die all the time.
Even if she finds a solution, it'll be really hard for her to prove that it indeed solves the problem completely, and that it is not just a one-time short-term suppressant.

If Samara is any indicator of how other members of Justicar Order think, then they're never going to stop hunting her. Even if she somehow convinces them that she's made a viable cure, they will still kill her either just in case or to cover up their own inability to find a cure before her. Ardat-Yakshi is a very sensitive topic for them, and Asari are kinda big on the whole 'reputation' thing.

And it'll only take one small mistake with body disposal for her to appear on the Justicars' kill-list. Not to mention that several people disappearing after meeting with 'that one asari' is going to be suspicious as fuck either way.
 
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And it'll only take one small mistake with body disposal for her to appear on the Justicars' kill-list. Not to mention that several people disappearing after meeting with 'that one asari' is going to be suspicious as fuck either way.
Plus, I think just about every Asari knows what to look for to figure out if a body is a victim or not. And they'd probably immediately call a Justicar or use their own resources to deal with the issue. Pretty certain that's what Aria was going to do if Shep and Samara hadn't shown up, get together some trusted Commandos or Huntresses and deal with the issue.

Plus, nothing says the Justicars or the Republics themselves can't poke the Asari Councilor to send out an Asari Spectre either. All-in-all Lily being an Ardat-Yakshi would be a non-stop game of cat and mouse, until either Lily is dead, or she somehow builds up enough resources to fight off the Justicars, the Asari Republics and Asari Spectres. Plus, at that point it'd probably escalate to her basically having to fight the entire Citadel Council and their resources. So overall it'd be one big mess.

Or she'd just be trapped on some blackwater world, in the middle of nowhere, at a Ardat-Yakshi Monastery.
 
Even if she finds a solution, it'll be really hard for her to prove that it indeed solves the problem completely, and that it is not just a one-time short-term suppressant.

If Samara is any indicator of how other members of Justicar Order think, then they're never going to stop hunting her. Even if she somehow convinces them that she's made a viable cure, they will still kill her either just in case or to cover up their own inability to find a cure before her. Ardat-Yakshi is a very sensitive topic for them, and Asari are kinda big on the whole 'reputation' thing.

And it'll only take one small mistake with body disposal for her to appear on the Justicars' kill-list. Not to mention that several people disappearing after meeting with 'that one asari' is going to be suspicious as fuck either way.
We're getting slightly off topic here because at this point it's discussing a hypothetical plot of a sequel story that hasn't started yet, but Lily has the ability to lose them entirely if given the time and resources. The woman could probably change her own DNA to a point they couldn't match it, much less some cosmetic surgery. If she solved the murder touch she could also solve all of the unique social and genetic markers that would let anyone actually find her after.

Even if she was kill touching her way across the terminus... Space is a big ass place. Like really fucking big. On the Citadel or a civilized planet disappearing several people would be enough to get a tail again, but the terminus? With Lily's displayed level of ability she can honestly ghost most pursuit, people die all the time in remote places and the terminus has no real overarching law enforcement body by design.

Y'all really have no imagination for body disposal, why would she ever leave an ardat victim somewhere anyone could find them in any state that it could be identified as an ardat victim. Unless she's gone off the deep end anyone she killed would fit into her "justifiable to kill" moral framework and is probably scum to begin with. She has shown she has no hesitation when it comes to mutilating bodies of people she doesn't like. At the start of pulling a runner she would have a very rough time if she gave in to the addiction, but once she gets some resources behind her it becomes a lot easier.

The hardest part would be making sure anyone she convinces to work for her is loyal to her first.

But as I said I honestly think the Quarian idea is a better one thematically.
 
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But as I said I honestly think the Quarian idea is a better one thematically.
Well, yeah, I also want to see a bunch of quarians freaking the hell out as one of their own engages in some shady AI research and slowly transforms herself into a machine.

Although, I think people somewhat overestimate how much they are going to freak out, since Daro'Xen kinda exists, and she is an admiral. She is also very vocal with her opinions about the whole geth/AI business. Maybe she is given leeway because she wants to subjugate geth, but it doesn't change the fact that both her research and her opinions are far from being in line with those of general quarian populace.
 
The problem with the volus is that they are inconvenient outside a methane atmosphere, I cant imagine her body would remain Volus for long. Same goes for Elkor and the jellyfish. Tho I could she the jellyfish if the limbs are capable of supporting augmentations. But in a hanar that'd be hard to hide.
 
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Well, yeah, I also want to see a bunch of quarians freaking the hell out as one of their own engages in some shady AI research and slowly transforms herself into a machine.

Although, I think people somewhat overestimate how much they are going to freak out, since Daro'Xen kinda exists, and she is an admiral. She is also very vocal with her opinions about the whole geth/AI business. Maybe she is given leeway because she wants to subjugate geth, but it doesn't change the fact that both her research and her opinions are far from being in line with those of general quarian populace.
Wanting to re-subjugate the Geth, and thinking they're actually pretty cool people and that the Citadel should be building more are very different outlooks on AI research. Lily's approach to AI is what would get them. The citadel wouldn't have many problems with her more general cybernetic and genetics tech or approach. They already have lesser versions of a lot of what she can do. That said I don't think it would be a "burn the witch" moment or anything, she would probably just be shunned and ignored by most unless she can bring something irreplaceable to the fleet.

The real meat of a Quarian plot is that they're galactic pariahs and an underclass to most people. Suit rats and tech slaves basically to a decent chunk of the Galaxy. I like seeing characters have to overcome adversity like that and Lily definitely has the attitude and ability to do it.
 
Wanting to re-subjugate the Geth, and thinking they're actually pretty cool people and that the Citadel should be building more are very different outlooks on AI research.
Well, she does think that Geth are pretty cool.
Her literal words are "I'm pleased to see that the humans at least have not abandoned synthetics. This whole trial is a farce born of fear."
Not to mention that she is absolutely fascinated with Legion.
And resubjugation of Geth is also not her only focus in AI research.

Even if other quarians do shun Lily, why would she care? The one in charge of all the scientific research is Daro'Xen, and this woman is a sociopath who doesn't give a shit about anything except her research, much less opinions of others. Lily is going to be her favorite person in the galaxy.
 
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Well, she does think that Geth are pretty cool.
Her literal words are "I'm pleased to see that the humans at least have not abandoned synthetics. This whole trial is a farce born of fear."
Not to mention that she is absolutely fascinated with Legion.
And resubjugation of Geth is also not her only focus in AI research.

Even if other quarians do shun Lily, why would she care? The one in charge of all the scientific research is Daro'Xen, and this woman is a sociopath who doesn't give a shit about anything except her research, much less opinions of others. Lily is going to be her favorite person in the galaxy.
You're missing my point here. Lily sees synthetics as people, no stop.

DaroXen believes the Geth are machines that need to be brought back under Quarian control. "Her reasoning is that they are just machines which were created with the sole purpose of serving their creators."- from the wiki.

Xens approach to retaking their homeworld is to re-enslave the Geth and also gain the largest synthetic army in the galaxy for the Quarians at the same time. The admiralty board probably thinks she's bonkers and probably a sociopath, but they acknowledge that she's brilliant and that she's working towards the same goal as them from a different angel. There's a reason she is also on the board.

Lily on the other hand probably doesn't give a rats ass about the homeworld, will see the Geth as full sentients and in the right if they pass her turning test, and has a lot of opinions that don't line up with Quarian culture.

As for why she would care? Mostly because being shunned by the fleet (probably just her ship unless she gets really infamous) makes everything harder. Quarians are galactic outcasts and being able to rely on each other helps a lot when nobody else is in their corner.

I'll also note that any patronage by Xen relies heavily on her being born in the time period of the games, which she would not be since the author has stated they're probably going to throw her into a galaxy before humanity is on the scene.
 
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I'll also note that any patronage by Xen relies heavily on her being born in the time period of the games, which she would not be since the author has stated they're probably going to throw her into a galaxy before humanity is on the scene.
Haven't seen it, but if this is the case, then the entire point is moot.

My point being that Daro'Xen is not against AI research, she just wants herself a roboarmy of loyal slaves. Her abysmal sense of morality doesn't really play a big role in this argument, since the fact is - she is a quarian admiral who is openly okay with AI.

If you want a full-on geth sympathizer, then they have that too - Admiral Zaal'Koris openly advocates for peace with geth.

Extra: Lily can also leverage herself into the position of their chief researcher, if it's not occupied by Xen. And only then start shady AI research.
 
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I don't like how you saying what she is doing to herself apotheosis like she is not becoming a god or the peak of something she is turning herself into a robot not a fucking deity.
Apotheosis is a term from Eclipse Phase that's shorthand for "technological apotheosis".

The process of converting one's self into an augmented state through the application of technology that transcends all mortal limits, thus becoming a machine/genetic/psychic god.

It is characterized by being beyond the limits of things like death, finite comprehension (as in, attaining near omniscience), and being constrained in prowess only by the raw physical nature of spacetime under your authority.

Calling that "a robot" when it's closer to a multi-galaxy spanning machine empire that consumes black holes as aperitifs just shows how grossly your imagination is limited.

In Meimei's case, the furthest she had gotten was becoming a hive-mind swarm of parallel forks of herself in hypertech machine spider form spread throughout the Sol system each with full redundancy and backups in case of existential failure of any given node (and our author has implied she also had some nodes that were sent into interstellar space). This is under no circumstances, however, "a robot". And definitely far more potent and harder to kill than, say, Baldr.

"Your mind is software. Program it. Your body is a shell. Change it. Death is a disease. Cure it. Extinction is approaching. Fight it."
 
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I don't like how you saying what she is doing to herself apotheosis like she is not becoming a god or the peak of something she is turning herself into a robot not a fucking deity.
Lily believes in the expression that any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic, but also its corollary that any sufficiently advanced magic (a god, for example) might just be technology, too, with the so-called god just using its understanding of science that is so far advanced and so alien that mere humans can only guess and wonder at its mechanics.
 
Lily believes in the expression that any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic, but also its corollary that any sufficiently advanced magic (a god, for example) might just be technology, too, with the so-called god just using its understanding of science that is so far advanced and so alien that mere humans can only guess and wonder at its mechanics.
McCoy: "What does God need with a spaceship?"

Meimei: "Honestly. I am entire armadas. What is this, amateur hour?"
 
Lily believes in the expression that any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic, but also its corollary that any sufficiently advanced magic (a god, for example) might just be technology, too, with the so-called god just using its understanding of science that is so far advanced and so alien that mere humans can only guess and wonder at its mechanics.
A question.
Will there be a more in-depth crossover tech migration from Eclipse Phase here or in the next story?
I admit, I'm a bit disappointed that we haven't really seen any cool tech from EP here, not even morphs. The only notable imported technologies are her neural implant and the metal nano-fabber.
There was this whole genetic enhancements business, but the story seems to have shoved it entirely to the background.
I wanna see a Galatea morph. Or at least a full-on cyber-spider instead of just legs.
 
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That's not science! None of this is science!
It took several hours both to drive to the location of Vault 112 as well as to precisely find it, as there were three locations that actually fit both the general location and what was described in the game.

Sitting in the passenger seat of the RV, Lily was listening to some music the driver had started playing over the interior speakers. The vehicle had her full library, although she had given more and more of it to Three Dog, this time in exchange for actual money or advertising. However, all of the songs she had given had been either classical music, country music, big-band type music, or, more recently, the very beginnings of rock and roll, with Elvis and The Beatles being examples.

Gary was perplexed, but Lily finally managed to convince him that he was just a square and didn't listen to young people's music. This was true in a sense, but even old fogies like him would have heard about some of these bands.

However, what was playing right now was one of her favourite songs from AC/DC, Dirty Deeds of the Thunder Chief. She was humming and even singing a little along to it and kept getting glances from the Submajor, who was sitting, out of his Power Armour, in a fold-down jumpseat in the rear of the cab.

Finally, she asked him, complaining, "What? I know I can't sing too well, but zhat wasn't off-key or anything."

"Ma'am... it's just... could you sing that over again, but slower?" he asked, his hand rising, hiding his face.

Lily stared at him but complied, "...Dirty deeds of zhe Zhunder Chief... Dirty Deeds of zhe Zhunder Chief!"

He started snickering, hiding his face, "Ma'am... the lyrics being sung are... Dirty deeds, done dirt cheap."

What? No. She's been listening to this song for more than fifty years! She was a little bit too young to actually buy the album but often heard it on the radio or in music streaming services later in life. It was clearly Dirty Deeds of the Thunder Chief. She thought it was one of those narrative songs with the man doing the dirty deeds being called the Thunder Chief.

Lily quickly brought up the song in her system and checked both the AI-generated title and transcripted lyrics before listening to the chorus several times.

Fuck! How long has she been mishearing these lyrics?! Her last memories in America were in the 2040s when she was over seventy years old, and she still thought it was that way and even sang it that way on the occasion that such an old song was played.

Remembering her children and even grandchildren snickering at her, she narrowed her eyes. So unfilial! How can you let your mom or nana sing the wrong lyrics to a song for decades?!

"Maybe you're right..." Lily quietly allowed, hoping he would shut up now.

Thankfully, he did, and she sat there as they drove to the last of the locations. This one had to be Vault 112. Otherwise, she was in a bit of a pickle.



"Ma'am, it's confirmed. This is the right place, finally," Wilson reported. Lily nodded at him and waited until the driver of the RV parked and started the deployment process of the vehicle.

She then got up and walked into the back, and stepped inside her own Power Armour, blinking a little as it connected to her data port and rendered the outside world in her vision. This was her MkII armour, with integrated plasma and laser weapons. She wanted to include a shoulder-mounted guided mini-missile launcher, but it made it just too big to go into almost any building. As it was, she would probably be hunching a bit to go into the Vault.

"When are we going to get armour like that, ma'am?" asked Wilson.

Lily hummed. In quantities? Not until she could produce quantum processors herself. She could create the junior version of her brain interface now, though. Instead of a hundred of thousand individual electrical connections to your brain, it used the same technology she saw both in the VR stimsuit as well as the Institute's synth-computer she saw in the brain of Ms Natalie Turner.

She asked him, "How do you feel about zhe elective brain surgery, Submajor?" As that would still probably be required. She could try to build one that used a similar control system as regular Power Armour, she supposed, but it would be much harder to control than regular Power Armour.

"Uhh... generally, I am against it, but if it's required for me to get a set of giant Power Armour, I am willing to give it some thought," he said contemplatively.

Lily nodded at him, "We'll see when we get back then." The main reason she was restricting brain implants was that her version required a medichine nanohive as well. The nanites were necessary to keep the individual electrodes in your brain in position. Things, including your brain, shifted over time. New neural connections were made. Without the nanomachines keeping everything straight, you would likely die in a few months.

And she was paranoid about effective nanomachines more than any of her other technologies. Perhaps it was irrational of her, but that's all she had to start with and look where she was now. If she was destined to have competitors, and she was sure they would appear somehow or somewhen, then she wanted them to at least arise in a different manner than she did, so at least she could learn something from them.

The electrode induction version of the brain-computer didn't provide as precise access to the brain nor as good bandwidth, but it was still better than what could be expected from the VR simulation, and that was already good enough to trick most people who went through it. So, maybe she should move forward faster on that. She had a rough design of a device, but she had not built it nor tested it in the brains of volunteers.

She had brought an extra dozen robots with them, in addition to the ones that were serving as the backbone of the two squads the Submajor was commanding. Mainly for labour, in the event that she was going to take things out of here.

"Do you want an escort inside, ma'am?" asked Wilson after he secured the perimeter.

Lily started to say no but then paused. In the game, there were a bunch of Robobrains and other working pieces of technology. Robobrains themselves were rather dangerous and rare. She hadn't seen any at all yet. Besides being a possible threat, she was quite curious about their brain-machine interface and what they did to the brains involved. In the game, they acted like machines -- did they just use the neural circuitry as some kind of biological computer, destroying the previous person's ego? If so, was that required, or could there be sapient robobrains?

"Yes, come with me. We'll bring eight of the robots with us for protection," Lily finally told him, getting a quick nod from his helmet-shrouded head.

They walked two abreast into the ruined mechanic's garage, which hid a secret passage until the passage widened out and a familiar cog-shaped Vault door bearing the number 112 was visible. There were a number of mole rats that the robots lasered without being prompted.

"Never actually been in a Vault before, except the one in basic training," said Wilson, kind of excitedly. She had included her memories of Vault 108 and a few other places as examples in some of the tactical evolutions in the simulation. Without the Gary clones, though.

"Hmmm..." Lily said noncommittally. Then she walked over to the entrance terminal and tried to open the door. Not surprisingly, it worked. A klaxon sounded, complete with rotating beacon lights, and they both waited for the multi-ton door to be slid and lifted out of the way.

"Woah, this place looks up and running, still," Wilson commented.

Lily nodded. She'd leave surveillance cameras behind when she left. If raiders or undesirable elements discovered it, she'd clean them out again. Her present intention was still to leave the place as she found it for the most part. She had carefully removed and brought with her a number of quantum processors from the spares of the VSS simulator.

If she downloaded Braun's memories, she would be able to run him as an NPC using an impersonator AI. Although she likely wasn't going to let the NPC Braun continue to torment the residents of Tranquility Lane, it could still be useful for putting the Lone Wanderer's dad on ice for a time. Also, it tended to be a lot easier to quiz such an impersonator about secrets than parse through decades of memories. Although it had a lot of limitations, it was pretty good at distilling all of those things into concise bits.

The fidelity of any impersonator AI depended on how well the AI was programmed, but even then, most people could only get about ninety-two per cent accurate. This was enough to trick most people for some time, but family members would usually discover the discrepancy in only a couple of days.

In her past life, they were designed not only to sort memories and respond but to carefully and automatically psychologically model a person. People who were very neurodivergent generally fell into one or two categories, though. They could hardly be modelled at all, or alternatively, they could be very accurately modelled.

Meimei was always of the latter category and thought that an impersonator AI of herself could model her reactions close to ninety-seven per cent and close to one hundred per cent on some matters, although they would still be a Chinese room and not a real consciousness as in the absence of stimulus such models would not think or consider, merely shut down.

In the past, some psychologists had created profiles of Meimei which were either wildly inaccurate or accurate enough that it caused her to change some of her behaviours to preclude being easily predicted. It was just humiliating that most of them were of the criminal, pathological psychologist variety.

Lily had been testing such a model using a complete download of her own memories as the seed, too. She had the idea of creating an impersonator herself to help run the city of Megaton. For the past week, she had been feeding it the exact same questions and requests she got from the people and workers in Megaton, but only after already deciding the matters. It had been eerily accurate, with only things that required on-the-spot problem-solving skills being somewhat lacklustre, and even those the model could infer a somewhat similar response based on her memories of past actions.

It could be the start of a very useful tool! She basically had the technology to create an alpha fork of herself, but she wasn't Meimei anymore, and the idea of another her around filled her with a little apprehension. Hell, even Meimei didn't like forks of her around that didn't get merged back into the base periodically.

The last time one appeared, due to a resurrection timing mishap, they had to negotiate the distribution of their collective assets as if they were a married couple that had a divorce. Meimei kept most of them, but that fork got enough to set herself up on a similar path. Meimei had to bribe her off, as she had knowledge enough to compromise all of their resurrection points, their most secret and hidden plans, and all the rest. Meimei thought she was a weirdo, too, as she had switched to a partial biomorph body of a snake woman and went back to Extropia Station to live.

They walked through a couple of doors, but as soon as Lily got sight of the robobrain that was waiting to meet them, the robobrain yelled in a digital voice, "Unauthorised robotic equipment! ERADICATE. ERADICATE. ERADICATE." What the fuck, were these things, Daleks?!

The robobrain started shooting small plasma blasts at her robots, and she thought it was aiming at herself as well as she had to duck once to avoid one of them. She stopped both her robots from firing as well as Wilson and indicated that they should all back out of the way.

"Well, I don't zhink it likes me or my robots," Lily told Wilson while watching the robobrain roll back into the main area of the Vault. It didn't seem to want to follow them out or even shoot at them once they had left the premises.

Lily glanced at one of her robots that took a hit from a plasma packet. Its frontal armour was a bit melted, but it still was operable; it just didn't look so great. It wasn't a priority and could be fixed later.

Wilson glanced at her, "What should we do? We can probably scrap the bots if we go about it systematically."

Lily hummed. She'd rather not. She glanced at him sideways and said quietly, "You poke your head in. I'm sure it has data about Pre-War Power Armour in its databanks, so it won't consider you a robot. If it starts to shoot at you, run back; if not, see what it tells you."

Although she couldn't see his face under his helmet, she sort of imagined his expression. After a moment, he sighed and nodded. He slung his plasma rifle at his side, presumably to look a little less threatening, and walked back through the doorway they were waiting behind.

Lily's hearing was really good, but the Vault Doors were insulated really well. She couldn't hear any plasma casters firing, though, which was a good sign, so she just sat there and waited.

After a few minutes, the door opened back up, and Wilson returned, carrying a folded-up Vault 112 jumpsuit. Lily asked him, "Let me guess, it said you were about two 'undred years late but directed you to get inside one of zhe Tranquility Loungers."

Wilson paused and asked, "How did you know? Do you have microphones on our armour or just have really good hearing?"

Well, she had a really good sense of hearing but not quite good enough to hear through the insulated steel doors, "Neither. Just a guess." Besides, she had played this before.

She stepped over into the corner of the room and triggered the armour to let her out, and she stepped out of it and stretched each of her limbs. She thought that the robobrain had identified her Power Armour incorrectly as a robot, so if she wanted to wear it inside the Vault, she would have to go on foot first and begin systematically hacking every robot and computer system she saw.

"Alright, let's go back. We'll leave the robots out here for the moment. I plan on hiding behind you if someone shoots at me," she told the older man, who was an experienced mercenary even before he came under her employ.

His voice was wry, "Naturally."

They walked together into the Vault again, and the robobrain began the spiel that she had been expecting. It gave the same spiel to Wilson even though he had already heard it one time. While it wasn't paying attention, Lily casually walked behind it and snaked a data cord from behind her neck into the machine's criminally scandalously exposed data port without even a dust cover to protect the robot's modesty.

Hacking robots in this world was as simple as identifying which version of the RobCo OS the robot was using and then consulting a list of multiple remote-execution vulnerabilities that existed for that version. It was even more straightforward than the silly minigame she remembered in the Fallout 3 game. For her, it was a completely automated process. While she hadn't seen this particular version of RobCo OS yet, it bore a lot of similarities, including unfixed vulnerabilities, to many of the other versions that General Atomics used for their Mister Handy and Miss Nanny series of bots.

Lily didn't immediately change anything about the robot's behaviour but placed a backdoor so that she could remotely shut the system down in the event it received some updated orders that she didn't think should be followed.

As they walked around the Vault, it became clear that there were a lot more pods in place than there were in the game. That did surprise her but not that much, as there were only ten people in the Tranquility Lane simulation quest line in the game, and the actual world she found herself in always seemed to be much more widely populated.

"Are these VR pods like the kind that you salvaged from that building in DC, Commander?" asked Wilson curiously as they walked through a large room with about twenty occupied pods inside. Lily was carefully hacking each terminal that controlled the pods, giving her superuser access to each occupant one at a time.

Lily nodded, "Yes. Zhe guts of this system were made by VSS, too but then improved. You don't need the full neural stim suit, for example, for this model and zhe pods themselves have been modified with advanced longevity systems. Zhese people all were alive before the war and 'ave been living in a simulated reality for two hundred years."

"Woah, that could be heaven or hell. I tried that Anchorage simulation, and even on the easiest difficulty setting, its a bitch, ma'am. I'm not sure how you managed to beat it," he said.

Lily nodded and said while giving him a side eye, "Perhaps I am just that good!" Yes, that was a legitimate and fully earned victory, that was.

"What simulation is running now? Should one of us get in one of these pods?" asked Wilson.

Lily told him what she knew of Tranquility Lane and Dr Braun. He seemed off-put, "He's pretending he's a little girl?! That's pretty sick!"

Was it? Well, there was a biomorph type that had a very bad reputation, which was a type that never really achieved maturity. If you bought one, you'd select an age, and it just wouldn't mature past that point. People always did look at anyone who chose to be sleeved inside one of those types of bodies with a little suspicion. However, if it was just the sex change, then there was nothing that unusual.

There was a piece of bioware that was only slightly expensive that would trigger a complete, total sex change to the point where the correct gametes would be produced in only about forty-eight hours, and it could be triggered at will and as often as you'd like. Well, unless you got pregnant. There was a small minority of people who really liked that and flitted between one sex and the other, or one gender role and the other, or some amalgamation of all of the above, or something completely different. So, to her simply experiencing a different sex in a VR game or simulation was tres tame. She wasn't one to throw stones, as people thought she was a lot weirder for choosing to remain in a synth body, especially a non-humanoid one, even though she was rich.

In her past life, fully synthetic bodies were something people who couldn't afford biomorphs lived in, and there was a considerable social cost for being amongst "the clanking masses."

She knew people who had sleeved into giant, specially engineered vacuum-tolerant space whales and drifted in the atmosphere of Saturn or sleeved into an actual spaceship. She always felt the latter was interesting, as the manufacturers incorporated a strong maternal instinct to protect the inhabitants of your ship into the way your emulated neural network ran. She always wanted to try it to see if it would work on her.

Lily sent via text-to-speech radio broadcast, so it would only play over the speakers in his helmet, quietly. "Go ahead and get out of the Power Armour and put on that Vault suit," Lily told him, "After I hack this terminal and put a backdoor in so he can't cause you too much pain or erase your memories, I want you to go in the simulation and play dumb. I'm still not convinced that Dr Braun can't see and control everything around here. I kind of think that's why the place is so open, as a lure for him to find new toys to play with."

Wilson blinked and looked at my mouth, which was clearly not moving, "You're going to have to tell me how you did that sometimes, boss." But then he nodded and stepped out of his Power Armour, leaving his helmet by the feet.

Lily blinked at the man's bald head. The dark skin was almost shiny. Didn't he use to have hair? Yes, definitely. She decided not to comment on it, though and busied herself hacking and subtly reconfiguring the computer that took the input and output of the Tranquility Lounger. After she was done, she plugged in a small wireless dongle to the back of the system, which would give her a wireless connection to Wilson's lounger.

"Alright, ma'am. I'm ready, I guess. How long do you expect to leave me in here?" Wilson told her, seeming a bit curious and concerned at the last part.

Lily shrugged, "However long it takes." She didn't want to tell him anything out loud if Braun could hear. She wasn't too concerned about him watching her fiddle with the terminals, as she wasn't leaving any real traces of her successful hacking attempts, nor was she noticeably changing any expected behaviour.

She pulled out her pneumatic hypospray, rolled the revolver-style selector to regular medichines, and motioned him over. As he got close, she placed the hypospray on his arm and depressed the trigger about six or seven times rapidly in quick succession. "Owe!" he complained, frowning.

Grinning, she put the tool back into her pocket and reprogrammed the nanomachines that were now in his body to focus on his brain as a second layer of protection and then motioned him towards the pod. He shook his head at Lily one last time before climbing in. The pod closed, and Lily opened up a window in the corner of her vision that corresponded to what Wilson was seeing.

Before the sim started, a flurry of commands from farther down along the line arrived, reprogramming the man's avatar. It looked like Braun was well aware of what was happening and changed Wilson to spawn in a child-like avatar. Not a dog, yet, it seemed. Her hacking did not attempt to stop this, although it quietly ignored some commands about stimulating his limbic system and amygdala, which would have tended to make him much more afraid generally. What an ass, Dr Braun.

Just in case she got attacked on the way out, she hopped into Wilson's Power Armour and grabbed his plasma rifle before retracing her steps and leaving the Vault entirely. Once she was outside, she left his armour and grabbed her modified Chinese stealth armour from one of her robots which was waiting for her with it. She also reclaimed her scanning device, as she was curious how a lot of the stuff inside worked. The Tranquility Loungers had a lot of extra features compared to the pods in the VSS building!

Now, while Braun was distracted with his or her new toy, it was time for a sneak mission! Sorry, Wilson! It is for a good cause, and she limited how much you could be really tortured, anyway!



As Betty was interrogating Wilson, Lily snuck back into the Vault. She seemed very interested in who we all were but lost most of her curiosity when Wilson explained we were from a settlement around western DC. It seems as though she didn't have much respect for the state of civilisation.

Wilson wasn't really cooperating with her attempts to make him do amusing things, such as torture some of the inhabitants of her virtuality, so she was trying to convince him that Lily had left him there to die. It didn't make any sense at all, but she slipped a rendered line of text into his virtual stream stating the opposite, but to feel free to play whatever role he wanted so long as he kept the psychotic virtual tween busy.

According to what she could see from the Vault's network, there were two dozen robobrains working here, with about a third shutdown or undergoing maintenance which was performed by another third at any one time. She only had a few hacked, so as she snuck around inside the facility, she had one of her hacked robobrains report a mechanical irregularity. It was directed to go to maintenance and was replaced by one of the robobrains that were shut down.

The robobrain performing maintenance was infected and compromised as soon as it connected to her hacked one to diagnose its maintenance issue. It then hacked all of the rest of the robobrains, including both the other maintenance models as well as the ones getting maintenance done.

It wouldn't take too long for her to have the whole cohort under her control.

The computer system powering the simulation was similar to the one made by VSS. It had the same architecture, except it was much more extensive. It was interesting to see because, from the documents that she read from the VSS building, they were the company that invented the technology, but there was a much more complicated and much more finished system than they were able to produce using their own technology, including their own proprietary operating system that ran virtualised in a large cluster.

She knew a lot more about how the system worked these days and how to hack it without resorting to her crude hardware attacks. However, it did necessitate her sneaking around and hacking each individual mainframe one at a time, and they were located in five different rooms in the lowest level of the Vault.

She knew Braun was in the Overseer's office, but he was her absolute last stop.



It took her over three hours to compromise every single system and robot in the building, and she got a lot more data while she was doing so. There were about a hundred and six in Tranquility Lane, down from a hundred and thirty-five when the bombs dropped. There had been casualties over the years, despite some really impressive longevity and medical technology.

What was she going to do with all of these people? She did not think that they would survive very long after being removed from their Tranquility Loungers. The pods were a completely closed system, and while she didn't have enough time to reverse engineer them thoroughly, she believed that after so long inside of one that, a person's body would have adapted to the additional support the system provided and would fall apart without it.

None of them had much of an immune system after all this time, and many of the people in the pods were directly connected to both artificial dialysis and blood-pumping machines. They didn't really have a heart that worked very well anymore.

She finally snuck into the Overseer's room, hacked the number of mainframes there, including the main ThinkMachine system that coordinated everything and peered at the old man inside the Tranquility Lounger. He was one of the ones who wouldn't survive too long outside of it. Perhaps... no, undoubtedly, he knew that. It was a shitty version of immortality, indeed.

Instead of immediately taking overall control over the vault, she used her root access to the ThinkMachine mainframe that oversaw the entire vault, including the simulation, to create a new user, Lily. Then she created a new user access paradigm, a Super-Overseer if you will, and assigned herself that role.

Then she subtly removed all of the permissions from Braun by degrading the access permissions of the Overseer role until he could only access things in his simulation. Just to be safe.

When she was done, she stopped sneaking around and just hurried out of the Vault, returning with a wheeled trolley containing the brain-scanning system and assorted electronics.

Glancing at Braun, did she really care what he had to say? No, not really. He had already changed Wilson to a dog, including some NPC code in his avatar, and was going around having the dog-Wilson maul the residents of Tranquility Lane, cackling like a madman. Braun hadn't noticed her traipsing around at all.

Sighing, she took her hypospray back out and rotated it to a sedative, and triggered the pod to open. Braun only had a moment of confusion; she didn't even really think he was conscious yet before she jabbed him in the neck with the pneumatic spray. If she was a bitch, she would have just paralysed him while she did this, but there was no reason for the man, even if he was a sadistic bastard, to suffer more than necessary.

After that, she placed the electrodes on his head and sat there for several minutes it took to download and catalogue all of his memories. Not surprisingly, it took a lot longer than normal.

Nodding, satisfied, she plugged in an impersonator AI and connected it. Right now it was piped through her Mesh only, so only she could question it. However, that was sufficient.

Lily asked it, "Who are you?"

"Betty, more recently, but most people know me as Stanislaus Braun, of course. Doctor Stanislaus Braun," a little girl's voice said. That was another issue with impersonator AIs, you had to be real careful with them on people who switched sleeves often.

Lily nodded, though satisfied, "Do you remember all of zhe work you did for zhe Societal Preservation Program and Future-Tec?"

"Of course! My greatest life's work, you know," the girl said.

Excellent. Lily smiled, "Give me a brief synopsis of how the G.E.C.K. works."

There was silence for a moment, "Well, I don't entirely know how it works. This is weird; normally, I'd never ever admit that you see, but you seem very trustworthy, and it seems important that I tell you the truth."

What?! Lily asked, "Didn't you invent it?!"

"Well... one of my assistants did if you want to be technical. But he had no real vision for how the technology could be used. I'm the one that integrated it as a whole into the G.E.C.K.," admitted the Braun AI, "He threatened to expose me, but I got him to agree to let me take credit for it. In exchange, I placed him in one of the Vault's as the Overseer. He wasn't a dummy; he knew it was only a matter of time before the Chicoms set the world on fire."

For fuck's sake! "Which Vault? Was it a control vault? If not, what was the experiment?"

"Vault 67 in Ohio. Well, he thought it was a control vault," said the girl, laughing, "But the experiment was to see what would happen if a hundred serial killers were put in a Vault together with one man who thought he was an Overseer. Really we only found ninety-one serial killers in North America, you know, so we had to toss in nine random people. Serial killers are a lot rarer than you'd think."

Lily turned around and shot Braun's body in the head. "Zhat isn't a fucking experiment!"

"Says you. I have five doctorates that say it is," said the AI Braun in her head.

Lily felt a headache coming on.
 
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Lily turned around and shot Braun's body in the head. "Zhat isn't a fucking experiment!"

"Says you. I have five doctorates that say it is," said the AI Braun in her head.

Lily felt a headache coming on.
Honestly hilarious, in that zany fridge horror way Fallout universe absolutely loves to do. It's so insidiously part of the whole series spirit that it's even in F4 and 76, despite Bethesda's best/worst attempts
 
The counterpart experiment is a serial killer made overseer in a vault filled with ordinary people, but the new overseer gets told everyone else is a murderer while the inhabitants get told the overseer was a detective.
 
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