AN: My degree is in Aeronautical Engineering with a concentration in Aerospace. I fully admit to geeking out over the planetary calculations and taking several minutes to actually run some basic numbers for the general gravitational force between Earth and various planets. So the quoted figures might not be exact, but they are very close for simplified two-body equations.
\/\/\/\/
Interlude: Goddess Interrupt
Taylor
"No," I stated, shaking my head. This was so incredibly stupid and pointless. How had this gotten onto my schedule? Had I pissed off Emily or Paige and they were getting back at me?
President Harding, leader of this Instance, frowned as he briefly met my gaze. He was only able to hold it for a moment before he dropped his eyes back down to look at the papers that he was shuffling in front of him. "Just like that, Your Eminence? Won't you even look at the proposals we have written up?"
"Just like that. This is ridiculous and a waste of my time."
"Your Eminence please I -"
"Okay, you know what, I'll humor you for a moment," I snapped. Leaning forward, I laid my crossed arms on the table and jerked my chin towards the papers. A quick burst of [Reach] and they flew up into his hands. He swallowed as he glanced up again, his gaze focusing somewhere on my cheek. "How many Thinkers have signed off on your plan?"
He grimaced. I didn't give him a chance to reply before I plowed on. "How many Tinkers? Got any of the Dragonites to look it over?"
"Yes!" he nearly shouted, the papers falling back down as he sat up straight, the smile spreading wide as he seized on that. One of the other idiots around the table just closed their eyes in response; at least that one knew they had already lost.
I already knew the answer to my question: Rebecca's first 'Rule of Negotiation': never make a query you don't already know the answer to. That this fool of a President hadn't picked up on the sarcasm in my voice…he was proving with every word that I was being punished. I was going to have to get someone flowers. Hopefully Madison knew. Madison always told me who was angry at me.
"Which Dragonite cluster? Fafnir?" I asked, still not showing anything in my expression.
He swallowed hard and slumped. "They said the proposal was -"
"Fafnir has been looking for an excuse to do his experiment for twenty years. He is on every blacklist throughout the Alliance with specific warnings that he is not allowed to comment on planetary calculations without direct oversight from Dragon Prime or one of the Core Shards. So, again, has anyone signed off on your proposal?"
"Your Eminence, the numbers are sound and -"
I hissed, slamming my hands onto the table. "No! You do not have permission to crack Venus! Do you have any idea the sort of problems that would cause for the Sol System as a whole if you delete a planet?"
One of the talking heads flipped a page in his own report and said, "We could do Jupiter instead Your Eminence. We initially were hesitant, as gas giants are more difficult to harvest compared to one of the rocky Inner Planets, yet it's still feasible. There's actually a better energy efficiency in doing so, even factoring in the distance. Plus with it being farther from Earth, there should be far less impact on us."
I had to close my eyes and count to two thousand before I could respond.
Having issues, Taylor[Avatar]? QA laughed.
Someone tipped you off about this. That's why you specified that I had to take this meeting for you instead of the one with Yutani Industries tomorrow.
QA snorted. We had been together too long, and she had learned the appropriate places to do that. Let's be real here, if it was me dealing with those fools I probably would have killed someone there. Likely that last idiot. Less of an effect? Jupiter? Anyone that bad at basic math is a danger to everyone around him. I'd be doing this Instance a favor.
I'm tempted to agree with you.
Opening my eyes, I tapped [Projection] and held up both my hands, forming an image of Venus over one and Jupiter over the other. "Scale, child. Scale is important. The barycenter of the Sol system is not the Sun. It is outside the Sun, largely because of Jupiter. Since you seem to like numbers Mr. Shut-the-Hell-Up-and-Don't-Speak-in-My-Presence-Again, not taking into account any other planets or even the Sun, the approximate gravitational force between Venus and Earth is 4.69x10^28. The approximate force between Earth and Jupiter is 1.21x10^30. That is, for your primitive mush you call a brain, twenty-five times larger. Jupiter is farther out, but Jupiter is far, far larger. And that doesn't even take into account the stabilizing force it has on the asteroid belt or how it gobbles up comets like candy, protecting your world from errant civilization ending impacts."
The President nodded, hurriedly trying to cover for his stupid staffer. "Yes, that's why we abandoned the idea, Your Eminence. Venus was a good contender, but we could explore other options like Mars or Mercury or -"
"I'm going to put this in terms you can understand, okay?" I said, speaking slowly and softly. He swallowed and quickly nodded. "You can't blow up Venus. You can't blow up Mars. You can't blow up Mercury. You can't blow up any planet. You aren't even asking to do this in an uninhabited Instance, you're asking to do it in your own. I refuse to evacuate your entire Instance because you moronic tapeworms are too lazy to file a few weeks worth of paperwork. If you want more power, then you can apply for it. Just. Like. Everyone. Else."
"I understand, Your Eminence." The President at least seemed to finally get that I wasn't going to budge. He grabbed a different folder and opened up to the first page. "There was another item that we had needed to discuss. The transport lines seem like they are being prejudiced against…"
Their voices drifted into a droning buzz that I tuned out. My clone back home had just heard Lisa yelling about Jane, Enola, and Missy calling in.
Taylor.
I heard it, I murmured back to QA. Have our clone tell Lisa to stall for a few seconds.
I'll tell her myself. I'm already there.
Don't you dare start talking to our daughter before I get there you crystal shard-monster!
Better hurry then! QA laughed, closing the connection down to its normal trickle.
"Stupid teasing shard," I muttered, standing up.
All talking stopped and I stared directly into the President's eyes. "I'm needed elsewhere. Here's your answer: No. None of this is discriminatory. You're all too lazy to use the bureaucracy that we have setup to get a larger energy budget and longer transport-portal windows. You want more stuff? File the fucking paperwork. Don't bother me again, or I'll have Brad take over rulership of your Instance for a decade."
I didn't bother to portal home. It would take too long. Instead I just popped my current avatar and linked my consciousness into the clone's body. As the refresh finished, I made sure to copy all of my normal power taps and body modifications, bringing the body back up to goddess-spec. I had already stepped into the living room as the final adjustment snapped into place.
The image of the girls was just finishing resolving in front of me. Perfect timing!
Except everyone was backwards. Oh, right, the projector was on Lisa's tablet. QA lifted a hand in greeting from her position behind my wife; whether the shard-girl was waving at me or at Jane and the others, I had no idea.
Either way, Lisa was in my spot.
"Budge over!" I shoved into place drawing a chuckle from QA and a squawk of protest from Lisa.
"I was sitting there, Tay!"
"Yes, 'was'. Past tense. My seat now!"
"You are squishing me!"
"Well then tell Colin to make the pickup field larger if you don't want to be squished, Lise." I smiled wide for the camera, waving to my kids. Missy's eye-roll on the second projection was almost audible.
"Hey, Mom! And Mom - again! And QA!" Enola shouted. Only one hand was gesturing wildly towards us, the other was wrapped around Jane's shoulder, holding her sister tight against her. That was…odd. Enola was a hugger, but she wasn't usually clingy like that.
"Hi, Mother. Hi, Mom. Hi Auntie Lise," Jane said. Her smile was forced. I didn't have to hear her over the Network to see that much. My eyes narrowed slightly.
"Hey, Taylor, QA, Lisa," Missy said. She was positively quiet compared to normal.
"What's going on?" QA and I asked at the same time.
"Was someone hurt?" I continued.
"Were you attacked by an actual threat?" QA asked simultaneously.
Lisa groaned and slapped her forehead. "Really, you two? Give them a chance to talk!"
I glanced up at QA, she sighed, dropping down to lean against the couch with her elbows against the back and her head to my right with Lisa to my left. "You're the one who started off human, you go first."
I nodded and focused on the girls. "Is everyone okay? Do you need help?"
Missy held up a hand before either of the kids could talk. She met my gaze and shook her head. "Everyone is mostly okay, but it could have been different if reactions were slower. There is an actual threat out here and I'm not sure where it's coming from, though I have my suspicions. I think this is more than just the Evil Brainwashing AI Warship."
I frowned. "Everyone is okay?"
"A bit shook up, but yes."
"Alright," I said, leaning back. Lisa rubbing small circles on my back helped to ease a small amount of my tension. I pushed the voices of the Network back, assuring them I was fine and letting them listen in through QA's avatar. "In that case, let's go in order: Enola?"
"Small talk is a thing you know," Lisa murmured. I ignored her and gestured to the chatterbox.
Enola perked up, releasing Jane's shoulder as she stood and spread her arms wide. "Me first? Cool! Okay, so, I've been tracking Evil Spaceship Man."
"Evil Spaceship Man?" Lisa cut in, her voice completely deadpan. "No. Just, no. I did not raise you like that. You have the attention span of a goldfish sometimes and there's nothing wrong with that; but I'll be damned if you take after Taylor with naming things once you get 5 minutes away from home!"
"Hey! I've gotten better!" I protested.
"Linker Bug."
I felt a blush spread across my cheeks and turned back to the girls. I would let her win this round, I had more important things to focus on.
Enola giggled, her hand over her mouth, Jane also smiling behind her. Oh…sneaky, sneaky. As ditzy as Enola could be, it was easy to forget sometimes that she was Lisa's kid first and foremost. She knew exactly what she was doing - most of the time.
"So anyway, I tracked the bad AI thing to Omega. Garrus and I found out that other races called it a Reaper. I'm almost certain that there is more than one, because basically every reference was in the plural."
QA held up a finger. "Garrus?"
"My Turian buddy!" She fiddled with her Armstool and a hologram floated into view in front of her. I would have to remember to thank Colin for outfitting my kids with those things. "I swiped him from C-Sec. They were totally wasting his potential. Such a rebel. You guys would love him. Strangely focused on accuracy though…How many times can you calibrate a single gun?"
"Never enough!" a distant shout came from somewhere behind Enola.
She laughed and jerked her thumb towards the noise. "See?"
"Enola, dear, focus, sweetie," Lisa sighed.
"Right! Okay, so, Garrus and I found the name of the brainwashing starship, we figured out it was leading us to Omega, but this place isn't really that bad, all things considered. I think Aria liked me so I had an easy time here. Bet it didn't expect that, hah!" She pumped the air again, though she ended up frowning. "But I think she was more interested in screwing you, Mom. Moving on! So, we were getting to the Geth terminal, so that I could hack it and download the data I needed to track this Reaper thing, and we ran across a kid that had gotten away from a merc group."
I leaned forward. "Do you mean got away like 'I wanted a career change' or got away like 'oh god help'? It's an important distinction, Enola."
"Oh agreed, Mom." She scowled. "And it was the second. Jerks were trying to kill her because she destroyed some of their stuff. Apparently being held captive doesn't give you the right to blow up their shit, according to them. Garrus and I firmly disagreed and helped her continue blowing up their shit as we went to the terminal."
"Good call," I nodded.
"You'll like Gillian, Mom. Both of you will. QA, you might not, she can't take a shard, she's biotic. Real strong. A prodigy I think. Anyway, you guys'll love her! I'm adopting her; so you'll get to meet her soon. So yup, once we got to the terminal I started trying to decrypt and decompile it, but Geth programming is incredibly counter-intuitive so it was going slow. My squishy organic brain just can't do what they do, and the shards are independently intelligent, unlike the geth. But I made it work, and then everything was in Geth! I can speak French, I can speak Klingon, I can even speak binary, but they don't use binary, and Geth is a weird language."
I just stared at my daughter as Enola paused for breath. "Please tell me we're coming back to how I'm now a grandmother."
"How none of the other spawn have managed to beat Enola there is the bigger mystery," Lisa muttered. "God I feel old."
"You're too young to procreate," QA said, frowning. "Taylor, tell her she's too young. She's barely more than 50 years old!"
I inclined my head and opened myself up to the Network briefly. All of the shards were confused. For as long as they had been with us now, they still barely understood us. "QA, you understand, but you don't get it. Humans don't work on your timescale, even with us being so much longer-lived now. Most humans don't wait as long as Enola has. Our family is unusual in a lot of ways."
"You guys done? Cool." Enola nodded once. "So yeah, I'm adopting Gillian, I can't read Geth, the Blue Suns are continuing to send people into the meat grinder, and Garrus keeps being noble and protecting us while I try to learn Geth. This is when Missy and Janey showed up."
She was not going to give me more information about the girl - apparently my new granddaughter - right now. Damn that kid! Letting out a breath, I looked over to my next target. "Missy?"
Missy nodded, dropping into a seat as she crossed her arms. "Jane and I approached their position with our team. We found Enola's group under attack, and took care of the stragglers, then met up. After exchanging information, we left Legion -"
"Hold up," Lisa said. "Is that the Geth platform I sent to shadow you guys? You got it to choose a name?"
"We did yeah, and yes it is. So, we left Legion with Enola to help with the translation and Tali to help Garrus with protecting them and Gillian. Then Jane and I went off to track down the Blue Suns leadership."
"As well you should have," I responded. My eyes were narrowed and nostrils flared as I pulled the relevant information from the Network's storage. "Zaeed Masanni. Unwilling to resettle in an alternate Instance, like most malcontents. Grudge against the Alliance as a whole - for some perceived slight that I never figured out. Driven by personal success." I scowled. "I personally warned that jerk that if he wanted to go and build a fiefdom of his own, that was his right, but if he pissed off the neighbors, or flouted local laws, I'd come for him. Humanity cleans up its own messes. Putting a hit out on a teenager most definitely crosses the line."
Missy nodded. "Yeah, I was there with you that day, Tay. My memory is nowhere near as good as yours, but I remember. Besides going after kids in general, that's why I got so annoyed."
"So you and Jane went after him and his gang?"
"Mercenary group, Tay, but yes," Missy said. "We found their base easily enough. Cutting through the rabble was also simple. They kept trying to shoot at us with various types of rounds, even after seeing how nothing was having any effect. At the time it just seemed like they were being the normal idiot grunts. In retrospect, they may have been distracting us. If everyone is shooting, what attention are we going to pay to one more bullet, right?"
I shook my head. "That doesn't make sense. Why would the mercenaries let themselves be killed?"
"I think they were just that stupid, Mother." Jane sighed. "The Batarians did the same thing. Missy pointed out during the fight that, really, they might not be entirely wrong to keep trying. Just because we're near invincible doesn't mean we are invincible. They could have thought that they would be the one to get lucky."
"And then they would have gotten a pat on the back, maybe a promotion, and a bonus," Lisa said. She licked her lips. "No, I think Taylor's right, this doesn't track. Mercenaries are smarter by their very nature. They don't last long if they can't learn, and shooting at someone who is laughing off your best shots without a care in the world, at worst would have mercs running for the hills, and at best throwing down their weapons in surrender. Mercenaries know when a job is too much and they fall back, or they quit, that's how they survive. They wouldn't throw away their lives for a bonus that would be spent in a week."
Enola nodded fast enough that her hair flipped in front of her face; she blew it back out of her eyes with practiced ease. Taylor had to hold in her snort of amusement at seeing the familiar gesture from her daughter. "It's the Master effect, Mom. Garrus and I ran across another similar group before we left the Citadel. I doubt they were far along, just enough to feel confident and a bit addled."
Missy's head snapped to the side, her gaze focusing on a point just to beyond the projector's display. "You didn't say anything about that before!"
"You didn't give me a chance, Aunt Missy! Why did you think I asked you to blow up the big spiky thing in their base before you left?"
"I thought it was dangerous!"
"It was! It was projecting a Master effect! I mean, probably. I would have had to study it to be sure, but Aria was nice and I didn't want to leave a potential problem in her back door, or try to lug a Master artifact through her station as we left. That wouldn't have been very respectful to Ms. Pirate Queen."
I looked at QA, and we silently polled the Network. Lisa tried to calm Missy down as I collated the responses. Finally getting a consensus, I grunted and looked back to the camera. "Enola, we're all in agreement that it was probably better to destroy it, rather than risk transporting the thing. However, in the future, I expect you to verify if there truly is a Master effect on similar artifacts before blowing them up. Safety is paramount, yet, we need to know for certain if others are being affected by these beings, and if they can leave tech behind that influences people on their behalf. Missy, Jane, if either of you see similar items to what you damaged as you continue on, make sure that Enola or Legion has a chance to look at it first. Hopefully the Geth are immune and if they are not, Edi should be able to help restore Legion."
Both of them nodded as the argument petered off. Finally, I lingered on Jane, and smiled encouragingly as I gestured to my youngest. "Alright kiddo, you're up."
Jane winced, but sat up straight as she squared her shoulders. Taking a deep breath, she started, "After we had taken out a lot of the grunts in the Blue Suns headquarters, Missy dropped me off at the central platform. I was going to take care of Zaeed, while she finished mopping up the rest. He went on a stereotypical villain motive rant about how none of the little guys could ever accomplish anything or amount to much while our family was around. He said that he was going to hurt us, no matter what, and that he knew that he'd signed his own death warrant by standing against us so directly. It didn't matter to him, he just wanted to strike a blow any way he could, and he truly believed that the people backing him could help him do so."
"Did he say who they were?"
"No." Jane shook her head. "However, there were enough cues he gave off that I'm fairly certain that it was two different groups. One, backed by someone named Tim, was the original entity that had contracted the Blue Suns to kidnap Gillian. Somewhere along the line, a second group reached out to him - likely once they realized that Enola was inbound - and asked him to capture or kill my sister. He switched to using Gillian as bait, then tried to kill her when she annoyed him, figuring that would still get Enola to come after him directly."
Lisa's eyes were narrowed to slits and her hands were clenched. "I don't like where this is heading."
"I can take care of myself, Mom," Enola said, rolling her eyes.
"Sure," Lisa agreed, "but you are neither as durable as Dean, nor are you as destructive as Anne. You're a Thinker kid. You solve problems. You're a detective, not a fighter. That's why you grabbed a Turian bodyguard isn't it?"
"I'd survive if the worst happened. It would hurt, but I'd survive. And…I like Garrus, he's…cute." Enola leaned back, staring up at the ceiling, a small blush on her face.
I had to bite my tongue and swallow the first thing I was going to say. Before I could regain my composure, QA beat me to it. "Enola, reshaping you and rebooting your memories is not as simple a process as you think. Especially since the Network has collectively agreed to leave the final memories intact during the reboot. You get all the pain of dying, despite your new form not having a scratch. It's not something humans enjoy and it's one of the reasons we're leaving those memories."
"Intuit would also need to return here so that Shaper could help it rebuild your body," Lisa said, scowling.
Enola nodded, still not looking down from the ceiling.
I needed to hammer the point home. She wasn't a child anymore and she couldn't be so cavalier about this. "Enola, the shards are specialized for a reason. Intuit wouldn't be able to rebuild your flesh without returning to Sol. You're not a projection and even if you were, it can't do projections. It's not configured for that sort of thing. Yes, you would technically survive, but you'd be in limbo for a while too, and Intuit would be vulnerable during that period. You're extremely powerful and smart, but you're not just going to instantly respawn - not if you're away from Sol. Please be careful."
She nodded again. "I know. I'm just…I don't know, used to working at home. Sorry. I'll be more careful, I promise."
"Thank you sweetheart," I murmured.
"You better," Lisa agreed.
I glanced at the others and they waved for me to go ahead. Turning back to Jane, I said, "Alright, honey, now that we've sufficiently reminded your sister that death is not cheap, what else happened when you confronted Zaeed?"
Jane squirmed in her seat, refusing to meet my eyes. Finally, after several seconds of silence, she whispered, "He sh-shot me."
Lisa frowned, cocking her head to the side, while QA just leaned forward squinting.
"How is that different from the other mercs?" Lisa asked.
"You say that like it's something important, Jane," QA said.
Neither of them seemed to understand. QA really should have. Besides being my other half, she had helped raise Jane. Jane called her 'Mom'. She had taught Jane how to Shard. QA should be able to recognize the girl's tells. Maybe as much as Jane was a hybrid, she was still too human for QA to truly understand her…
I stood and moved closer to the camera, making sure that I was nearly filling the frame as I knelt down. "Are you okay, baby?" I murmured.
"It hurt, [Mother]." Her voice was barely audible and even though I shouldn't have been able to hear the concepts through the quantum link, I could feel it in the tenor of her voice and the impact on my skin. Inside I raged and beat against my mental walls, outside I was calm as an icy lake. My daughter didn't need the roaring Hebert Temper. She needed a rock.
And I needed a way to leave Sol and hurt whatever had harmed my child.
"It pierced my shoulder and it locked a section of me into place. One place, Mother. The bullet felt like [Sting]," Jane continued, her voice growing slightly stronger as she spoke. She licked her lips and lifted her head to meet my eyes. I ignored the gasp and the curse behind me and held Jane's gaze nodding. "He tried to kill me, actually kill me. If I hadn't had Reflex active he would have succeeded. Even with Reflex it was only because I can twist in ways that regular humans can't that I was able to get my head and torso out of the path of the bullet."
"You said it felt like Sting?" I clarified. Lily's partner was already shouting that it had been in Sol with us for decades and enjoyed the Network, that it would never do anything to endanger someone beloved by the Network. I quieted it with a mental smile and pat on the head and refocused on my youngest.
"Yes, but let me finish first. My shoulder was locked into one dimension and it was just pain. It felt like it was dying. I was able to isolate it from the rest of my body and cut that part of myself off, but it took a good chunk of my arm with it."
"And after?"
"I, uh, killed him. Quickly and violently."
"Good."
"He was already lining up for a second shot and…"
"Jane," I said, cutting her off. She swallowed, blinking up at me. "Don't ever apologize for killing someone who is trying to kill you. I'm proud of you, baby."
"…Thanks, [Mother]."
"I've always been proud of you, I may not say it enough, but that's because it's obvious. And you shouldn't get too big of a head unlike your illustrious mom beside me," I said smirking. Both Lisa and QA scoffed protests while Jane cracked a small smile in response. Perfect. "Now, tell me what you learned about this threat."
Jane nodded. "It was eezo, but it had been manipulated into an energy state that made it react like it was a knockoff Sting projectile. We haven't had much time to examine it yet. Intuit is looking it over with Enola. The best guess we have at the moment is that this may be why the shards have issues with eezo in general."
"Can you explain that hypothesis more?" QA chimed in. "None of my memories have anything like that."
"We think that all eezo may have the potential to enter this pseudo dimensional-collapse state, but that the work required to force such an effect is colossal. It's almost a different element at this point. Intuit said that it struck some very old memories in it when it saw it. This is an extremely early guess, but I think that Sting's effect may have been based off of a naturally occurring variation of eezo that it took and refined. Someone saw humanity and our shards, had a general idea about how to activate eezo to this alternate state and…"
"Set a trap," I finished. I narrowed my eyes, shaking my head. "Someone used Zaeed's grudge to set a fucking trap for my family."
"The good news is that we all survived, and anyone who may have seen me hurt was killed. So they may not think that their fancy bullets worked."
"They shouldn't know how to make them to begin with!" I hissed. "If Sting based its work on a variant of eezo, that would have been millions of years ago. Nothing would have been around back then that could feed this sort of thing to an agent, except another Space Whale. And they are not this subtle. None of this makes sense!"
Enola leaned over, meeting my eyes. "Mom, it would if…if these evil spaceships are, well, a lot older than we had thought. I had initially been going on the assumption that they were about 100 to 300 thousand years old. But, what if they've been around longer? These things are called Reapers. What if that's what they do? They 'reap' the Milky Way regularly. Like a Cycle, their own Cycle. If that did, they would be bound to have come across evidence of the SWs at some point right? Just by sheer chance. Soo…"
"Fuck me," Lisa muttered. "Evil AI spaceships that developed crude tools to fight the Whales, the Whales don't know that they exist because they probably don't come around often enough to cross paths with an active infestation, and now they're testing their tool on the closest things to the Whales they can find, us."
"It would make sense," Enola said.
I growled. "Okay, new plan. We wipe them out. All of them. No survivors. This is no longer an idle, interesting investigation. This is a me-damned war. These things want to try and kill my daughters. The void will hear their screams of agony before I'm through with them." Everyone nodded. "Missy, Enola, find the source of these things. Jane, I want you to -"
"No."
I blinked, my train of thought crashing as I stared at my daughter. "What?"
"I'm not coming home, Mother."
"Jane this is not a debate, if Enola had been hit with that sort of round there is a high chance that Intuit could have still rebooted her afterwards. You don't have that fallback. You're your own shard."
"I know," Jane said, her voice firm, unyielding. It reminded me of me, back when this had all started, before I had ever even left the loft over the factory. "I'm still staying. I'm not going to let them scare me. So they hurt me? So what. That just means I need to be more careful. I can still stomp almost everything in front of me and I'm still one of the biggest guns that you can send out. Besides, Intuit said that it would take a lot to change normal eezo into this special version. It's not going to be something we see often."
"Unless they've been stockpiling it for a war," I spat.
"I'm still staying."
I glared at her. After several seconds, I twisted to look at Missy.
"Missy? Your opinion?"
Missy sighed, lifting her shoulders in a shrug. "The kid knows what she's doing, Tay. We can't coddle her forever and we can't keep her chained up in Sol, as much as we may want to. I don't like this anymore than you do, but if she wants to keep going, then I think we should let her. She's not a baby anymore. I'll watch over her, you have my word. She's partly my girl too you know."
I scowled, crossing my arms. "I despise when people use logic against me. Fine. Okay, Jane, you can stay out there for now. However, I expect regular reports, even if it's just to call in and say that your day was boring and you're coping by buying a Space Hamster. I also want to send more help to you three while I raise the fleet."
"Taylor," Lisa said, her hand dropping onto my shoulder. "We can't."
"Bullshit we can't!"
"If we send more people, our enemies will know that we're worried and they will ramp things up on their end. We have to take it slow and sneaky-like. We find where they are first. Then, we go in with overwhelming force and crush them into a singularity. Sting bullets aren't dangerous in small quantities; we don't want to give them an excuse to ramp up production."
"And if they already have?" I asked, trying to keep my voice calm and probably failing utterly.
"They won't. They don't know if it works and they're AI. AI are efficient above all else. Look at Theresa and the Dragonites. They don't commit to something unless they know that there is a benefit, and the Geth are the same. The good thing about AI is that even while they are very similar to organics, they don't seem to have that same, let's say, 'irrational itch' that we do. They're resource conscious and almost always inherently rational. They stick to what they are sure of. Once these things know that their round works and once they know for sure that we're escalating, then they will ramp production. Until then, they will keep things efficient. Probably."
I looked to QA. My other half sighed, and nodded. "I think she's right. It's what a pure shard would do as well."
"Fine," I spat. "But if Lung just happens to find out about a new fighting arena wherever you find these things nesting, don't be surprised."
"I won't, Mother."
"Got it, Mom."
"Thanks, Tay." Missy looked to the side and sighed. "Hey, we're getting close to the Mass Relay. Anything else you need to talk about girls?" Both Enola and Jane shook their heads.
I bit my tongue and reigned in my temper as I tried to force a smile onto my face. "Alright, I'll let you go and concentrate. Enola, remember what I said about resurrection not being simple. Missy, take care of our kids. Jane, sweetheart, you be safe out there baby. I can't come and find you like when you were a child. Be careful."
"I will. I love you, Mother."
"I love you too. Take care girls." Both of the connections closed down and I leaned back against Lisa, my eyes closing.
"Dammit," I muttered.
"Agreed," she responded. Her hands started to kneed my shoulders, and I let my head drop to rest on my chest.
"Sometimes I really despise being tied to Sol."
"Technically we could leave to help for a short time," QA mused. She dropped down onto the couch, her chin resting on her hand as she crossed her legs. "It's probably pointless though. We couldn't take the whole Network and our combat capability would be vastly diminished without the others. Hmm, I wonder if we could lure these enemies to Sol instead."
"We have to find where they're hiding first," Lisa said. "Don't go putting the cart before the horse. I'll call Rebecca and see if she can reach out to her contacts in the STG. Maybe there are some records of encounters with the Reapers. If they are old instead of just old, then I guarantee you that either the STG or the Asari have hints about them."
"The Asari huh," I murmured. Groaning, I let my head loll back, meeting Lisa's gaze. "I'm going to have to talk to Aria aren't I?"
"She does have good contacts on Thessia," Lisa said. "While we could probably get names through other channels, she would be fastest."
"You just want to win the bet with Madison," I muttered. "Fine, win the damn bet. I'll call the crazy, lusty, pirate queen and see what info she can give us and what contacts she can pass along. If it gives us a better chance of being able to help our daughters…I can bite that bullet."
QA laughed. "You two have fun with that. I'm going to go and consult with Sting, Simmy, and Monarch. Maybe between the four of us we can figure out a counter to this activated eezo. No one is going to touch the Network's child again if we have anything to say about it."
Her avatar vanished from the couch and Lisa folded her arms around me.
"You know that Jane would have come back if she was really scared, right, Tay?"
"I know," I murmured, holding her arm and hissing her hand. "That's part of why I'm so worried, Lise. I don't know if she's scared enough. The rest of us, we can all more or less survive a few pop shots from a Sting-analogue - as long as it's not followed up by a planetary scale bombardment. But Jane…"
"We have to let her grow up. Even if that means that she gets into dangerous situations."
"I know. It doesn't mean I have to like it though."
Lisa kissed the top of my head. "And that's why you're a good mom, Taylor."
"Thanks." I pulled her tighter to me, chuckling softly. "I still think that I'll be a better one once I atomize those things threatening my daughter though."
Lisa laughed. "Spoken like a true parent, Taylor. Spoken like a true parent."