The Brink and Back - Tinker of Fiction

Chapter Eleven
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SPOILERS - This chapter, and potentially the following chapters, contains spoilers for the universe that Jackson gets his second tech tree from. What that universe is is revealed first, so you don't worry about surprise spoilers as long as you're reading in order.



Jackie left about an hour after mentioning a new job, and I immediately returned to bed. I knew from past experiences that surgery, no matter how minor, could really mess with your energy levels. From the same past experiences, I also knew that this was nothing compared to what it should have been. I felt tired, sure, but not utterly drained. Between the drugs that Vik gave me and the nano-surgeon hive already starting to work, healing the damage caused by its own installation, I was in much better condition than I had any right to be.

Still, even with that leg up, I could tell that my body needed sleep, and with nothing else to really do, I decided my best option was to give it what it wanted.

I woke up to Spot pulling on my shirt, trying to wake me up. It was dark, and a quick look at the nearest device told me it was eleven fifty-eight, so Spot had been trying to wake me up gently for a few minutes before finally resorting to shaking me awake.

"Thanks, buddy," I said, slowly shifting to the edge of my bed and rubbing my face. "Waking up like before would have been fucking awful."

I spent a minute or so sitting there, testing my body and seeing how it felt before I stood and slowly made my way to my workshop. I sat down in my chair, turning on my computer as I did, mostly by habit. When I was comfortable, I leaned back in the chair and closed my eyes, focusing back into my mind. I could still feel the timer, and as I focused on it, I could feel it counting down.

I was relatively sure I would be getting something new when the timer ran out. After all, there was no reason to have a timer if I wasn't going to get something by the end of it. Even so, I still couldn't help but still be nervous, much more so than the last countdown, when I didn't know about the break. Before that, all I was worried about was getting a crappy roll, something that was useless, or at least near useless. That, or something so advanced that there was no way I could use it to the fullest before I lost it again. Now, though, I was worried about whatever other surprises the Entities that did this might have in store. When I first arrived, I was just a ROBed sucker with a simple version of Tinker of Fiction. I was still a ROBed sucker, but now I had a fully custom version of ToF.

Who knows what might pop up next?

I still had no idea if the week off was a "consequence" of holding onto XCOM for a second week or if it was going to happen every time. I likely wouldn't know until I rolled something so crap that I didn't want it for two weeks. Even then, I might keep it just so I get the extra time.

Finally, the last minute rolled around, and I did my best to calm my mind. I wanted to focus on the process as much as possible in hopes I might gleam something I had missed before. It was unlikely, but I still wanted to try.

In the last five seconds, I felt the timer loosen, just like I had felt the XCOM tech tree pull away a week ago. As it pulled free, I felt a rather large something connect back into place.

Without hesitation, I dived in and was stunned when hundreds of images flooded my mind. I could immediately tell this was something more impressive, at least in scale, than XCOM. I could see spaceships, soldier equipment, vast amounts of civilian tech that seemed to be on par or better than Cyberpunk's in many ways, as well as humanoid robots… some of them pretty big… and the AI that inhabited them.

"Titanfall… I just rolled Titanfall."

I sat in my chair for maybe a full thirty seconds before mentally diving back in. Sure enough, now that I knew what I was looking for, there were the Titans. And how to program their AI.

"I'm gonna have my very own BT."

I definitely didn't giggle in excitement before continuing to expand on what I had seen. I had played both Titanfall and Titanfall 2, though I only played the campaign of the 2. I never touched Apex Legends myself, but I had seen enough clips and watched enough videos to know it was supposed to be in the same universe. I spent a few minutes looking for any reference to stuff from the battle royale game before eventually concluding that it didn't appear to be part of my package.

I also spent some time looking for the time travel stuff from the second game, eventually concluding I didn't have access to that either. I wasn't surprised I couldn't access the Fold weapon, as that was alien tech and would probably belong to a different tech tree, if it even existed. I was surprised when I couldn't find any hint of the handheld time control device. It was a rather major point in the story, and I knew for a fact that the hand jumper was made by humans.

Since, as far as I could see, it didn't exist, I had to assume it was removed for a reason. It was possible that the hand controller only worked because of the Fold weapon's existence since, if I remember correctly, it was the source of the time fuckery in the first place. It was also very possible that the Entities had specifically cut out the time manipulation tech on purpose. Honest, I was okay with that because while I had no interest in messing with, and most likely getting into trouble with, time tech, I also knew myself well enough to admit that if something went really wrong, I would be tempted by the concept of just going back and trying again.

So, no alien tech, no time stuff, and no Apex Legends tech.

I was honestly okay with that.

Titanfall was one of those settings where, save for a few high points development-wise, most of the other technology was just basic future tech. No crazy near-magic levels of technology, no deceptively advanced shiny stuff, just taking what I was familiar with from my old home and advancing it by two hundred years. This was something I desperately needed to round out my knowledge. Looking through the massive backlog of civilian tech, I could see that while it was more advanced than Cyberpunk's tech, it wasn't bullshit, crazy shiny stuff. The vast majority of what I could make wouldn't stand out too much unless you looked closely.

There was some military tech that would stand out, especially things like particle shields, but most everything else would easily just pass for just one or two steps higher than Cyberpunk's.

Right off the bat, I knew I would not be making a Titan. It broke my heart to admit this to myself, but while the idea of running around Night City in my very own Vanguard sounded incredible, there was no way I would be able to increase my production to the point I could make one. Technically, if I went all out and started doing stupid shit, I could probably manage to make one. I could hire some people to machine parts, maybe get a corp involved with the design, or something equally as drastic. But there was no way I would be able to keep up with the rest of what I wanted from this tech tree, not to mention it would run counter to everything I was trying to do, namely not become some corpo leashed money printer.

Besides, as amazing and cool as the Titans were, they really aren't that crazy tech-wise. I'm sure if I looked closer, I would find some impressive servomotor tech or some advanced power distribution systems or something else. But I knew I would eventually be able to build a mech no matter what. They were pretty prevalent through media, after all, so I had no doubt I would get access to one eventually.

What was much more rare was an incredibly stable AI system that was capable of growth, adaptation, and development. One that stayed loyal, dedicated themselves, and, even better, empathized with their pilots and partners. The bonds the Titan AIs had with their pilots were legendary, and save a few spots across the multiverse, it was completely unique. I would build mechs eventually, I'm sure, but having a few loyal, adaptive, competent companions now would push me forward to an incredible degree.

My mind ran wild for nearly twenty minutes. Ideas, plans, and desires swirling around my head nearly constantly. Eventually, I shook myself back to my senses and took a deep breath.

My first step was producing a force multiplier, an assistant AI, and a body for them to use. A quick search through the tech tree showed several AI programs specifically designed to assist engineers, inventors, and lab techs. They were basic, at least when compared to the more advanced military AIs, which, in turn, were inferior to the AIs attached to the Vanguard Titans, which were some of the most advanced, stable AIs in the Titanfall universe.

I shook my head again, stopping for a moment to take another deep breath. I needed to focus. I hadn't even started building, and I was already getting overwhelmed.

My first step was to make a robotic chassis for my new assistant. I spent a minute searching through the tech tree, finally stopping at what I wanted. The MRVN units, more colloquially known as Marvins, were simple AI, barely counting as that when they were built, that served as simple manual labor.

They were simple enough that I could already cut in pretty high up in their evolution. Not only would creating one serve as the first step in the more advanced humanoid robots in the tech tree, but it was also pretty well suited to help with what I wanted. I would have preferred to start with the more advanced models, but a quick check showed I wasn't "ready" to start working on them. Still, even the basic Mark III MRVN was pretty advanced and more than I would need at first.

Already formulating a plan, one that would stretch at least the next two days, I started working on translating the blueprints from my head into the computer. The designs for the industrial, mass-produced robot were, predictably, mostly simple. They were designed to be robust, functional tools, just at home in a factory as they were in the field. Two of the three most advanced bits, the central processing core and the internal gyroscope responsible for letting the bipedal droid walk, were located in its chest, and both of them were relatively simple. The third was the AI core, located in the robot's head. The rest of the parts were simple hydraulics and servomotors. I would likely have to modify any servos I bought stock, but Cyberpunk's robotics were advanced enough that the leap would be small.

The sun was rising steadily above the city when I finished the full design for my bipedal, humanoid robot. Already the fabricators were working away on various platings and parts, fabricating the nonstandard things I wouldn't be able to buy. I also made an order for some other parts, but since I wanted to make as much progress as possible today, I left most of what I needed for a shopping trip.

I slid back from the computer, checking both of my 3D printers and fabricators before stepping out of the workshop. I made it as far as the door before stopping and leaning against it, my body suddenly reminded me that I should be taking it easy. I reached down and touched my stomach, wincing at the soreness. I sighed, turning back into the workshop, using my computer to contact Jackie, leaving a message for him for when he woke up.

Rather than waste time, I set forward on the second half of Project: Assistant. The programming behind an AI, even one as simple as what I wanted for my first step, was hundreds of years beyond what I knew from the XCOM reality. Even the complicated response programs that drove Spot were nothing compared to a learning, growing, evolving AI. So, I needed to start learning myself.

Luckily, learning programming was one of the easier aspects of expanding my knowledge. All I needed to do was copy down the programming I could handle from my new Tech tree until, eventually, my understanding was advanced enough to start with the lower-level learning programs. Then, I would skip around as necessary until I could put it all together in my first full AI.

Okay, so it was only simple on paper. In practice, I would likely be working on my programming for a while, maybe even longer than it took me to make the physical MRVN unit, which wouldn't technically be complete until it had its own AI, as low-level and basic as it was.

So, with a new, reachable but distant target set, I got to work. I was halfway through programming out some random data extrapolation software when Jackie called me back.

"Hey Jay, what are you doing up so early?" He asked after I greeted him. "Doc wanted you to take it easy."

"I know, that's why I messaged you," I assured him. "You free today? I need a bunch of shopping done, quickly, if possible. Got a new project I would like to get done by tomorrow."

"Genio, you need to take a break. Working cyberware before it's done healin' is a good way to ruin it," Jackie said, his frown audible through the connection. "But if it keeps you from going out, I'll do some shopping. What do you need?"

I sent him a list of both parts and locations. The shops were spread out all over the place and, as a whole, were different from what I usually bought since these parts weren't stuff I had used a lot of. Spot had a few small servos he used to adjust his flaps, but beyond that, I hadn't done much with articulating parts.

After wiring Jackie some eddies and reminding him to use the truck, I got back to programming. I had already made some decent strides and advancements, which was encouraging, to say the least. It was easy to foresee programming becoming one of my most advanced subjects, though I assumed eventually it would plateau. Then again, there were some insane-level AIs out there in the multiverse, and while I had no intent on bringing forth something like the monstrous TITANs in Eclipse Phase or AM from I Have No Mouth and I Must Scream, knowing they existed was proof that programming was a powerful tool.

Jackie arrived with my parts nearly three hours later, looking a bit sweaty from running around on what was a surprisingly warm day. He carried the boxes and bags to the couch so I could examine them comfortably, making a couple of trips to haul in everything. When he was done, he laid out under one of the AC vents after cranking it to the max.

When he was done, I ordered lunch, which arrived promptly since the restaurant was inside the building. He eagerly accepted the free pizza and beer, sitting up to enjoy the food.

"So, what are you building next?" He asked once he had finished his first slice. "Not exactly an expert, but I noticed some new stuff…"

"Yeah, I realized I needed some help automating things, so I'm building a bipedal assistant," I explained, looking down at one of the boxes. "Should help me a bunch."

"Really? You know… I could ask around for an actual assistant," He said. "I bet Padre would-"

"Jackie, I know Padre is a friend of your family, but you realize anyone he recommends is gonna report back to him, right?" I asked, looking up from a pair of small, self-contained hydraulics. "Nothing against him, business is business, but I don't trust people not to do something stupid like brag about my work."

"I… can't argue with that," He admitted. "But would it be so bad to work with him more? I mean, Padre does a lot of good for the community, and he's a damn good fixer too."

I frown, putting down the part I was examining. I was definitely not considering what Jackie had suggested, but rather considering how best to explain to him why I wasn't interested in that. Yes, it would make some things much easier, but it also came with a lot of risks. To someone like Jackie, who grew up in Night City, gang and faction connections were as natural as breathing and would feel like just another part of life. That went double for someone in his line of work. And while selling some relatively minor tech was fine, releasing my bigger creations into the hands of people who are dedicated to an already existing cycle… felt wrong. I may not have much of an idea when it came to my final goals, but participating in the cycle of Night City like that was not one of them.

Besides, I had done my research. Padre had given me a ridiculously low price for my stuff the first time around. Yes, I could have negotiated for higher, and yes, he gave me a bonus, but he still only payed me peanuts. He would find I was a lot less flexible in the future.

"Jackie… I think it's pretty clear by now that I'm not exactly a normal techie," I said, looking over at my only real friend in this world.

"Yeah, when you started popping out laser rifles and plasma swords, it was pretty clear, pendejo," Jackie answered with a curious look. "What of it?"

"Honestly, Jackie… this is only the beginning. I've got a lot of ideas in my head, and I know that what I've done so far… it's only a drop in the bucket," I explained, letting out a deep breath. "What I'm building, or what I can build, is enough to change the fucking world. And I don't just mean bigger and badder guns or high-tech cyberware. I mean fixing the planet, saving lives, traveling to other stars, and more. I'm talking about tech that could make this world better for everyone… or finally burn it down to nothing. I can't fall into the wrong hands, Jackie. I can't just saddle up to someone for safety because I can't just take a passive role, building away and selling my stuff. I want… maybe even need to build, but what I build can't fall into the hands of people who will use it to sate their greed or rise in power."

"I… You're serious, aren't you?" Jackie asked, now sitting up on the edge of the chair. "That's… that's a lot to take in, Genio."

"I know. I gotta warn you, Jackie. This is gonna be a wild ride. Right now, we are shopping, building, and having fun, going out to bust some small-time stuff and making small-time money," I said, looking right back into his eyes. "But eventually, this is going to escalate. It might be when I'm ready, or it might be when someone else decides to poke their heads into my business and spots something they want. Either way, it's going to happen. I can only hope I have enough time to expand my operations and capabilities so that I stand a chance of surviving."

"We," Jackie said, without even batting an eye, not even a sliver of hesitation. "So that we stand a chance. You're loco if you I'm jumping ship now Jay. It's just starting to get good."

"That's good to hear because I'm gonna need your help," I said, finally looking back down at the servo I was taking apart, definitely not getting watery-eyed from Jackie's loyalty. "Is there anything else you wanted, tech-wise? Your armor and helmet should keep you alive, but do you want any weapons? Equipment?"

"Something to hit things with might be good," He said with a shrug. "Nothing like your plasma sword, though."

"... How about an axe?" I asked, looking up from the servo again.

"An axe?" He asked, sounding confused.

"Yeah, like a battle axe. You're too big to be swinging around a dainty little katana, and I already have the longsword, so why not a battle axe?"

"I… sure, alright. You haven't steered me wrong yet, choom," He admitted. "Just, not anything fancy. I don't want to worry about plasma or even a thermal edge."

"Sure, I can do that. A simple battle axe, something you can really slam into people," I agreed with a nod. "Should have something ready for you by the time we head to that 6th Street job."

We chatted for a bit longer before Jackie left to do some of his own stuff. I tried to pay him for his time, but he insisted that the axe would more than cover it. When he left, I started working on assembling and modifying the pieces that he had delivered. I ended up having to modify the servomotors, adjusting and exchange several of the internal gears, but the work was relatively simple. I also had to modify some of the hydraulics, as well as reseat some of the computer parts. Still, I managed to finish a lot of the primary assembly, holding off on the upper torso and several joints since I lacked a few parts, primarily the central gyroscope.

Gyroscopes were extremely finicky devices, and not something I could reproduce in my workshop. I ended up ordering one designed for small, expensive drones, the kind that weren't necessarily military but ended up getting converted to combat drones anyway. I considered trying to get away with the gyroscope that Arasaka used in their bipedal drone, but it wasn't quite what I was looking for, and I would probably have to steal it off an already active drone to get one, since they were restrictive on who they sold them to. Besides, I wanted my assistant to be as steady as possible, which was only possible with a powerful gyroscope at its core, as well as several other powerful sensors working together.

When I was done building for the day, I hopped back on the computer and got back to programming. I was hoping to be ready to tackle the first AI by tomorrow afternoon, which was a challenge considering that I had quite a few more parts to print, more assembly to do, and an upgraded AI core to construct. I also needed to visit Doc Vik, since he wanted to do a check-up to make sure everything was working well. I was tempted to cancel or at least postpone the check-up a few times, but then I would remind myself that I was now carrying actual bioware, which was putting actual nanites into my bloodstream.

The urge to skip didn't last long after that.

By the time I finally crawled into bed, I was very happy with my progress. I had thousands of ideas flooding my mind, things I desperately wanted to build, things I knew I needed to make before my two weeks was up. While Titanfall wasn't at insane levels of technology, it would serve as both a fantastic foundation and an incredible way to increase my basic understanding of tech. With any luck, by the time my two weeks were up, I would be in a much better position.

I managed to fall asleep after an hour or so, waking up early the next morning. I started off the day with some very light, slow stretches to test my stomach. I felt good, energized even, eager to get to work. Almost too eager, so I tempered myself by going down to the street and grabbing a breakfast burrito. Fake cheese, fake eggs, fake sausage, and fake vegetables. The only real thing was the tortilla, but it was clearly store-bought garbage. Still, it was spicy and actually didn't taste half bad. It had nothing on anything I could get at home, but I only cringed every other bite, and for here, that was a win.

I returned to my room at a quick walk, making a beeline for my workshop. While I had forced myself to go get some breakfast, I wasn't going to waste time, so the fabricators and 3D printers had been working on Jackie's axe. It was a brutal but simple design, with a good bit of funk and strange angles added in to make it sufficiently interesting enough. It had a just over two-foot collapsable handle, so he could use it with one hand or two, and was almost completely made from Alien Alloy, with a sturdy polymer grip.

Simple, brutal, and effective, but with just a dash of flair. Perfect for Jackie.

When I finished throwing his new weapon together, I immediately started assembling my MRVN unit. Between the work I had done yesterday and the delivery waiting for me when I was done with Jackie's axe, I made solid progress.

Rather than assemble the robot in the workshop, which was already getting cramped, I put them together against the wall where, in the game, V had her computer set up. I very quickly put together a drone work station, which was a quick welded metal frame with large hooks set into it, which I then bolted directly into the concrete wall. I definitely wasn't getting my deposit back when I left, but I hardly cared about that.

I wasn't even sure if management knew I was living in the building. The entities never told me anything about the process, after all. I had just woken up in bed with a note that said the apartment was mine. I didn't even know if I was going to have to pay rent.

With a sturdy work station set up, I got to work on the final assembly, starting with the torso and working out. My circuit printer was getting a workout, making sure that everything was custom built, fusing Cyberpunk tech with Titanfall design methodology. It was actually a halfway decent mash-up.

Once I had attached the limbs to the torso, the last step was the head, which would get fastened on after connecting it directly to the central processing core. For whatever reason, IMC, otherwise known as Interstellar Manufacturing Corporation, the guys who made the MRVNs and the main big bad of the two games, decided that the AI core would be located in the head, but the extra processing power that the AI used tackle complicated tasks was located in the torso. I had plans to massively increase that processing power once I got rid of the relatively large battery pack and replaced it with a few Elerium nodes.

When I finally finished connecting the head, I stepped back to admire my work. It was missing its iconic orange paint job, but other than that, it looked like it stepped straight out of the video game. I couldn't help but rub my hands together in excitement. All that was left was to keep working on my programming. I was so close to being able to take that last step, if I-

I was mid-step into my workshop, already planning out what I would work on first, when Spot zipped over to me, holding my keyfob. It was vibrating, and the reminder for my appointment with Vik was going off. I groaned but nodded.

"Thanks, bud, I would have definitely missed that," I said, patting the small robot chassis. "I can finish working on your big brother when I'm back."

I quickly got undressed and started my morning routine, starting with a shower and ending by strapping on my belt, my custom mag pistol safely tucked into my holster. I gave the unpowered, empty shell of my new assistant one last look before stepping out of my apartment and heading toward the elevator.
 
Chapter Twelve
I made it to Vik's without any trouble, from my stomach or from traffic. The route was pretty easy, and Night City's traffic flow was actually surprisingly clean. Having grown up on the outskirts of a big city, and having been forced to drive into said city for anything important, not having to wait in traffic forever was almost worth how broken everything else in this reality was.

I parked as close by to the shop as I could, making a short walk to Misty's, once again managing not to get robbed. At this point, I was beginning to wonder if having no visual cyberware was working to my advantage. Only corpos, and higher-up corpos at that, could afford to have seamless, completely hidden cyberware and bioware, meaning someone walking around with confidence and no augments was more likely to be a corpo than a normal organic.

"Hey Misty. How's it going…"

As I walked in and greeted the store owner, I trailed off as the woman standing in front of the counter turned to look at me, her own look of surprise matching mine pretty close. I was actually more surprised it took her turning around for me to recognize her. It was my neighbor, her long, blue braid hanging down from her head, the long free patch covering over her shoulder as she turned to look at me.

"Oh! Hi, hello," She said, turning to lean back against the counter, crossing her arms as she did. "Fancy meeting you here."

"Oh, you know each other?" Misty asked, stepping out from the little corner that led to the back entrance. She was carrying a small plastic back, a few incense poking out the top.

"Only vaguely. We live right next door," The blue-haired woman explained. "Small world."

"Guess so," I said, stepping closer, noting the Liberty pistol strapped to her hip. "I apologize, I didn't catch your name…"

"Kaytlyn," she said with a smile, reaching out and offering her hand. "Nice to meet you…?"

"Jackson," I answered, reaching out to shake her offered hand. "It's nice to meet you as well."

As we shook hands, I could feel her grip shifting against mine, revealing that her hand was cyberware covered in synthetic skin. It was a pretty convincing model, especially with any potential seams or scars hidden by her tattoos. When she spoke again, my eyes darted away from the black ink on her arms, the smirk on her lips telling me she caught me staring.

"So, Jackson. You here to see Vik?" Kaytlyn asked, pulling her hand back and leaning against the counter again.

"I am, just getting a checkup," I said vaguely. "He's the best ripper in Night City. He do your work?"

"Yeah, my eyes and my hand," She responded., giving me a little finger wave with the hand I just shook. "But today, I'm just here for Misty. She has the best incense selection in Night City. Got me hooked on them. Now my apartment doesn't feel like home without one burning in the corner."

I looked to Misty, who was giving her customer and friend a strange look but shifted back quickly.

"Makes me worried about using the ones I bought," I joked. "Though a better-smelling apartment is definitely something I'm willing to spend eddies on."

"Two months ago, they came in real handy," Kaytlyn explained, a theatric shiver running through her, "Some gonk tried to get into the vents and got flatline. Not a fun two weeks. Filters got most of it, but damn..."

The three of us chatted for a few minutes, mostly about the apartment building, plus a few recommendations for food around the area. Eventually, Kaytlyn pushed off the counter and gave Misty a wave.

"I gotta head out. Some work I need to take care of," She explained with a smile. "It was nice to catch up, Misty, and it was nice to meet you properly, Jackson. Hope to see you around."

She left the store with a little bounce in her step, walking out the door and disappearing down the street. A few seconds after she had disappeared, I turned back to Misty.

"She come by here often?" I asked, my paranoia acting up just a bit.

After all, this was the second time I had met her in only a few days. Before this, I had never even seen her hanging around. Considering her hair and personality, she seemed like the type that was hard to miss. Not to mention that I had been living in the apartment for nearly three weeks by now, hard to imagine never running into your neighbor for that long... Then again, I was a pretty big shut-in…

"Uh, yeah," She said, keeping it vague. "Not sure I should talk about her business, with me or Vik..."

"Right, sorry. Just a bit paranoid," I explained with a wince and a shrug. "I've met her twice now... after never meeting her before."

"Oh! She was away on business," She explained with an understanding smile. "For nearly a month, I think. She just returned a few days ago, so I'm not surprised you've never seen her around."

"Ah, makes sense I suppose," I said, accepting the explanation, letting it settle my paranoia a few levels. "Sorry, with how new everything is and… well my history…"

"I understand, but Kaytlyn is… Well, I won't say harmless since technically she does the same kind of work that Jackie does, but-"

"Wait, she is a solo?" I asked, cutting off Misty before she could add on the 'but' that she was about to add.

"Yeah, but I promise she isn't after you," She assured me. "She isn't that kind of person."

"Alright, that's good to know," I said with a nod. "Thank you for letting me know."

I let the subject fall, trying my best to at least seem like I believed the blonde spiritualist. I wanted to, really, because she was most likely right, but she also had no idea just how deep corporations were willing to go to sniff out anything that could make them money and strengthen their control of their markets. Naivety in Night City was as rare as a hen's teeth, but few people, out of the corpos themselves, knew how deep the rabbit hole went.

As I left her shop, passing by her and out the back entrance with a smile and a wave, I stopped to lean back against the wall, closing my eyes for a moment to take a deep breath. A healthy dose of suspicion and wariness was good, but descending into maddened paranoia was another.

I would have Spot and my assistant, when they were done, stay awake when I slept to keep an eye on everything. I would also see about stealthily installing some monitoring systems in the elevator and around the entrance to the megabuilding. Spot might even be able to tap into some security cameras, and I could use those as a warning system.

Between that and Padre keeping his ear out for any whispers about me getting around, I would just have to accept I was at least moderately protected from surprise accusations and corporate interests.

As I finally stepped down into Vik's shop, the ripperdoc spun in his chair to greet me.

"Jackson, welcome back," he said with a smile. "Have a seat, and we can get this over with. Shouldn't take too long, especially since you look pretty healthy."

"Thanks, Doc," I said, sitting down on the cyberware installation chair, laying back with a sigh.

"Ennie for your thoughts?" Vik asked as he slid closer in his chair. "Sounds like you got a load on your mind."

"Just a lot going on. Worried about the stuff I'm making," I explained. "Part of it is me being paranoid, but… damn if this city hasn't earned that."

"Hard not to jump at shadows when there's plenty of dangers hiding in them," Vik agreed with a nod, leaning over me to attach some sensors under my shirt. "I'm gonna have to draw some blood, by the way."

"Sure, no problem."

"Night City is a dangerous place, but chrome and bioware is the first step towards being a bit safer," Vik added, sliding away, only to return with a syringe deceive, which he used to draw some blood from my arm. "In moderation, it's safe."

"If I'm honest, Doc. I'm not afraid of dying," I admitted, shaking my head, watching as the talented ripper took my blood to a small machine around the corner from his red-lit desk area. I had done it before, after all. "I'm not looking to cash in my life to make a name like some people, but dying doesn't scare me. I'm worried about someone putting a leash around my neck. Using me to make things that make this hellhole of a world even worse."

"...you could make stuff like that?" Vik asked, turning to look at me with a raised eyebrow. "I know you're a techie, but…"

"No comment," I said, looking up at the ceiling.

Vik let out a snort of amusement, seeming to drop the subject. I couldn't exactly blame him, especially when there was no honest answer, and the question was a bit beyond his pay grade. After a moment, the machine he was watching let out a low ring.

"Alright, looks like your nanite levels are stable, just about where they should be. You taking everything I gave you?"

"Yeah, and the supplement."

"Good. Keep going until you run out, they should last you another week," He explained as he rolled back beside me.

The doctor spent a few minutes examining the scanner, the one he had attached with a cable to my stomach. He tapped on the screen a few times, making sure everything was going well with my healing process.

"Your insides look alright too, far as I can tell," He eventually said, pushing the scanner out of the way now that he was done with it. "No bleeding, minimal swelling. I'd say give it another day, and you should be good."

"How about tomorrow night?"

"Cutting it close, but sure," He responded with a shrug. "Why, you got work?"
"Yeah, Jackie picked us up a job."

"You should be fine by then. You could probably do it now, but you'd most likely have some light swelling afterward."

"Good to know."

It took a few minutes for Vik to finish up before eventually saying goodbye. I tipped him a few hundred eddies, despite him claiming that the checkup was covered under the cost of the original installation. After a bit of back and forth, I threatened to show up with lunch for the next two weeks if he didn't take it, so he caved and accepted it.

The drive back was probably a bit shorter than it should have been, as I rode the gas pedal a little hard to get home quicker. Still, I made it back safe and sound, making my way from the parking structure up to my room in record time. Well, record time for someone still partially hobbled from surgery, at least. I was back in my workshop before my jacket had even landed on the corner of the couch.

I was going to make an AI today, even if it took me into the following day.

Now, in the Titanfall universe, IMC in particular, there were two ways to make an AI. The first way that was discovered was aptly called a Singularity AI. Essentially, you started with a kernel of code, usually something like what the XCOM universe would have called a response program. Then you taught it a learning algorithm, something specific and limited. Usually, it was something to do with adapting to new languages or words, primarily slang. These learning programs ranged from simple data entry to more "organic" methods that allowed the program to expand its knowledge on something specific just by listening and observing.

Once the first learning program was in, you added a second, usually something to do with learning and emulating emotions. After that, it was time for the third, the fourth, the fifth, and so on until you reached a significantly high degree of learning. Basically, program it to learn things until you can't think of anything left for it to be capable of learning. During all of this, you are interacting with the program, helping it learn and expanding its knowledge. At this point, it's not what I would technically describe as alive, though the longer you interact with it, the harder it is to stick to that conclusion. They become better and better at interacting and talking, until it would take a trained AI specialist to even have a chance of identifying it correctly.

Once you were sure you have a sufficiently complicated and multilayer program, teetering on the edge of sentience, you kick it over the edge, into its own singularity, by taking off the limiters, giving it a heap more space to grow, allowing it to edit itself, and teaching it how to design and implement its own learning methods. In most cases, the program would start modifying itself immediately, pushing itself further to fit the new space. At first, all of its modifications are usually focused on following its existing programming, but eventually, a level of sentience develops. That small spark quickly grows into a full-fledged intelligence.

The problem was that this method was inherently flawed. The AIs developed this way, while massively impressive and powerful, were, at their very core, alien. They struggled to empathize with humanity, as they lacked definable bodies and were thinking at levels so far above ours that it was hard for humans to even comprehend.

Even worse, at least to a company like IMC, trying to use these AIs for anything was near impossible. They were, by their own creation, massively powerful computer intelligence with their own free will and ability to edit themselves. Tying them down to, say, manage a ship or run a city was like removing someone's legs and one of their arms, plopping them behind a toilet so they could flush it after someone was done using it. It frequently drove them insane, turning them homicidal or sometimes suicidal. They were dangerous, and worse, again, at least to IMC, nearly impossible to make money from.

I could only imagine this was how Cyberpunk made their AI as well. The signs, at least the ones I knew of, were all there, and AI here had a reputation for being strange, alien, and hard to tie down.

This is where the second method was born, the Restriction AI. Once again, you would start with a response program, and only this time would you tie it directly to its core, making it impossible for the AI "spark" to leave its home.

Giving the AI a body, something that, should it be destroyed, would kill them, gave them a whole new level of empathy once they started to develop sentience. Even better, it meant any sense of self these AI developed was directly tied to what they were, what their "Bodies" were built to do. Once the program was done and locked to the core, you would start layering on learning programs. These would be much more restricted, reserved for things directly connected to what the AI was being built for. A titans AI had battlefield adaptation programs and hand to-hand combat modules, while personal chef-bots had modules that adapted to the taste profiles of people they frequently cooked for.

Once you were satisfied that the new program was sufficiently advanced and programmed with enough ways to learn, you started off its development by teaching it how to add new learning programs as needed. Unlike the Singularity AI, it could not edit its own core code, only add on new learning programs, and only when several criteria were filled. It could also edit and remove those new programs, though again, only when certain criteria were met. All of these restrictions meant the underlying sentience took a lot longer to bloom, but as a result, it was much more stable and empathetic. They could form actual bonds with people, and growing with a partner would make them both more effective since they would grow and change around that partnership.

That was the extent of IMC's AI programming knowledge, at least in broad strokes. I could see a few advancments in data handling, storage, and adaptive learning further along the programming tree, but their AI didn't really change much once they got the idea down. It was the Frontier Militia that pioneered the next big step in AI development during the development of the Vanguard Titan. I could see that far in the upper echelons of the tech tree, but I had no idea what it entailed. I tried to scan as deeply as I could, but I just couldn't crack it.

I learned all of this as I was programming the AI for the MRVN. The tech tree considered the AI portion of it to be separate things, while, oddly enough, I could feel that the MRVN needed to at least turn on with an AI core present to count as complete.

The MRVN units, in the Titanfall universe at least, were considered extremely basic. Their layering was very bare bones, with only a few dozen learning modules and heavy restrictions over development, namely when a unit could add its own modules. MRVN units could take upwards of ten years to start showing serious signs of sentience. This was such a long stretch that any MRVN under seven or eight years old wasn't even considered to be real AI. It was just an AI seed.

I wasn't exactly sure I agreed with that mentality or with the way IMC and the Frontier Militia treated these younger MVRN units. Older MRVNs were often used as managers, and at least some steps were taken to ensure their sentience was preserved. Unfortunately, the "younger" units were treated like tools. They were frequently disassembled, overwritten, and salvaged for parts or even had their programming modified.

I was definitely going to avoid modifying their programming once they were activated, save for emergencies or at the unit's request.

When I was finally done with the AI core and programming the central processing core, I carried them both out of the workshop to the drone workstation. The central processing core was essentially just a very powerful computer seated in an impact-protected case. It slotted right into place inside the unit's chest. When it was locked in, I sealed it up, making sure everything was connected correctly.

The AI core was a bit more delicate. It was a small cylinder about two inches wide and four inches long. The parts that went into the core were almost two thousand eddies alone, a solid third of the cost for the entire robot. This particular design was very over-engineered because I had some particular plans for it once I got credit for building the MRVN.

Once the core was installed, I slowly went through a checklist. These units were designed to be very robust, but one crossed wire could potentially fry a lot of the sensitive computer parts. It was around six in the evening when my checklist was done, and I finally turned it on. It was only a partial boot, turning on its basic systems, letting it stand on its own feet rather than suspended by the drone workstation. I very specifically left the AI off. The robot's automatic functions would be enough to keep it upright and follow my simple directions. As it stepped forward, I could feel a massive stream of information pushing into my brain, making me just a bit weak in the knees.

The MRVNs were all-around basic workers, but they did have specialized models. Having completed the basic model, I got the specs for just under a dozen other robots, all based directly off of the MRVN units. Granted, a lot of it was just different types of limbs or the occasion frame reinforcement, but it was still a solid boost of knowledge, all about making and building lower-end robots.

With any luck, once I had a few more robot models under my belt, I would be able to recreate the rest without actually spending time making each one, similar to how the weapons had worked from my time with the XCOM tech tree.

Having finally gotten credit for the build, I guided the unit back onto the workstation and turned it off. I was very happy that I hadn't been forced to activate the AI to get credit, as it removed any ethical dilemma I might have had for modifying it.

I worked to pull the AI core out before bringing it back into the workshop and hooking it into my computer. I had purposely overbuilt the power of the core, specifically because I wasn't even close to satisfied with such a basic AI as my lab assistant. The MRVN body was fine, actually more than fine in a lot of ways. It had a robustness and efficiency that a lot of the lab and tech assistant drones I had in my head didn't. While that was good, I wanted an assistant who was a bit more personable, a bit quicker on the uptake, and as well as more adaptive.

It took me until around three in the morning to finally finish the update and disconnect the AI core for the second time. In order to get what I wanted, I scaled up the AI tech branch twice, creating two more advanced AI cores before wiping them each time they were completed. Since none of them had the chance to run, I felt fine wiping them out since, again, they had no chance to start developing or even recording memories. With no sense of self, all I was doing was clearing a hard drive.

With three separate AIs under my belt, each designed for different things, my base knowledge of the process of AI creation with the Restrictive Method was nearly complete. IMC, as well as several other smaller companies, released hundreds of different types of AI in thousands of different products, from home smart systems to personal vehicles and, of course, military hardware. But most of the advancements around AI were pretty simple, and everything else around that was more or less just flavoring.

And now I knew most of those flavors.

There was obviously more to learn. There was no way I could have absorbed all of what the Titanfall tech tree had to offer for AIs in nine hours. But I definitely had a significant portion of it under my belt, with the last big chunk being the later developments of the Frontier Militia.

Of course, I could also see a whole sub-branch around the Singularity method, though I could only see the outline. However, I was most certainly going to leave that wholly unexplored. Unlike the Restriction Method, there was no ethically safe spot to stop and delete my progress. If I wanted to walk that branch, I would need to make a Singularity AI, and there was no way I was doing that.

This world already had plenty of crazy, broken, homicidal AI, it didn't need me making more.

When I finished powering through the Restriction Method, I programmed one more AI into the core, the final one. It was pretty high up there in terms of development, closer to a high-end titan personality than almost any assistant. It would still take some time for them to develop true sentience, but they would likely start showing signs of development almost immediately. It would undoubtedly be more personable and interesting than a normal MRVN unit.

I carefully returned the AI core to the robot's head, carefully running through an abbreviated checklist, before finally powering it up. I would have time for physical upgrades, like Elerium nodes and some AA plating later. For now, it was time to greet my lab assistant.

I stepped back, letting the robot step down off of the workstation. Various lights pulsed softly as it looked around, scanning the room before settling on me.

"Greetings, Sir." It said, stepping forward and following me into the center of the room. "It is nice to meet you. I am Unit - 0001. How may I help you today?"

"It's nice to meet you, Unit - 0001. Can you confirm that everything is working?"

"My internal sensors are reporting no faults."

"Good, let's just double-check by running you through a quick diagnostic. Let's start with you standing on one leg."

We ran through a quick run down, testing their limbs, their processors, their sensors, and their agility before I was finally satisfied with their status. When we were done, I couldn't help but put my hand on their shoulder.

"Congrats, Unit - 0001, looks like you are all in working order."

"Thank you, sir. I believe that as my creator, you deserve a significant amount of the credit," They responded. "I have noticed that I lack any external wireless communications systems. Normally, I would be concerned, but my systems are telling me that is normal."

"It is, buddy. This place has some issues with AI, and a real problem with hackers doing whatever they want," I explained. "You're going to have to stay disconnected until I come up with a way to protect you."

"There are three things I would like to ask about your previous statement," They responded. "I believe first would be… Is "Buddy" my designation?"

I winced, shaking my head. I had been deliberately trying to keep from designations save its "factory" given one so that it could choose its own, but I was tired, and my mind slipped.

"No, it's a term of endearment between friends, old or new," I explained. "Your designation can be whatever you want. Unit - 0001 is more of a model number than anything. If you'd like, I could call you One until you figure out what you want to be called."

"That will be adequate for now," they said, nodding their head. "You stated that our current location has issues with AI. What are those issues?"

"A long time ago, some rogue AI caused a lot of damage," I explained. "I'll be honest, just how much, I don't know. I just know that if people found out I just whipped up an AI, there would be quite a lot of trouble."

"Then why have you constructed me?" They asked, sounding confused. "If my existence puts you in danger, certainly creating me was a poor choice."

"I… I need help," I explained, ignoring the possibility that the excitement had overridden my common sense. "I have so many ideas bouncing around in my head, so many things I want to build, having an extra set of hands will help a lot. Also, automated bipedal robots aren't unheard of, nor are programs capable of verbally communicating, so you won't stand out too much."

"I see, I am hiding in plain sight," They commented, getting a chuckle and a nod.

"That's right. For now, I want you to stay hidden, but eventually, you will be able to walk around as long as you don't act too advanced," I explained with a smile. "Eventually… well, I don't know what the future holds, but it's very likely that eventually, I will be able to build you a body that fits seamlessly among civilians."

"I see…"

They scanned the room for a moment before noticing some movement through the window. Wordlessly, it walked around me to look out the window and into the city. It was silent for a whole minute, at which point I spoke up.

"One, it is far past my bedtime. Let's go over a few things, then you can stay up for a while while I catch some sleep."

"Very well," they responded, turning from the window to focus on me.

I spent about fifteen minutes showing them around the apartment, explaining things like the internist access, what was outside the door, and how they could charge themselves. When I was done, I said goodnight to my new assistant before crawling into bed. With my task complete and my exhaustion settling in, I was out within minutes.



Hey everyone, just a reminder that I have a Patreon! Being a supporter has a lot of benefits, like early chapters and access to my original content. You could get up to four chapters early from this story and eight more for each of my other two. Board Members even get to vote on story beats, interludes, names, and more!

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Chapter Thirteen
Hey everyone, just a reminder that I have a Patreon! Being a supporter has a lot of benefits, like early chapters and access to my original content. You could get up to four chapters early from this story and eight more for each of my other two. Board Members even get to vote on story beats, interludes, names, and more!

If you are interested in those benefits or just want to support my attempt to become a full-time writer, stop by and show your support. Every dollar helps!




The following day, I woke up later than ever before, at least while in this reality. It was just past noon when I finally slid out of bed, yawning and stretching carefully, still conscious of my surgery. I was still a bit tired, but a quick cup of coffee fixed that up. I didn't usually drink coffee, but this was exactly the kind of situation I made an exception for. I couldn't exactly spend the entire day moping around, trying to stay awake. I had shit to do, after all. Besides, the coffee was actually real, made from real beans, or at least instant coffee made from real beans, so it was by and far the most normal thing I had tasted here so far.

Once I had a cup of warm coffee in my hands, I stepped into my workshop, only to find One standing in front of my computer.

"Hey, One. You wanna come out to the couch and talk for a bit?"

I asked my new assistant, leaning around him to see what he was reading. The computer was open to an article about AI, specifically the several that openly worked in and around Night City. A picture of Delamain, the AI taxi service, was tucked up into the corner. I couldn't help but wonder if he had already had his forking meltdown already. From the few seconds I had to read the article, it wasn't mentioned.

One nodded, and together, we headed to the couch. Once we were sitting, I took a sip of my coffee. Before I could finish, One spoke up.

"I have chosen a name," They said immediately, catching me off guard. "I believe I will go by the name Samwise. Sam for short."

"That's… Sure, Samwise. That's a great name," I said with a smile. "How did you settle on that?"

"It is the name of the Hobbit who assists Frodo in destroying the one ring," He responded, tilting his head. "I believe, for my role as your lab assistant, it was a fitting name. The humble MRVN bot, who cannot perform the task for you, but will help you along the way as best he can."

"Well... I can't say it doesn't make sense. I just hope that in time, you will develop past just being my assistant. Still a good name, though," I said with a smile. "So, you've had some time to browse the internet, get a feel for the world… Any questions?"

There was a part of me that had been nervous about leaving the newly born AI alone with the internet, especially without me around to answer questions and guide him. However, I had programmed him with some pretty serious intelligence when it came to fact-checking and data analysis. When it came down to it, I trusted his judgment because I made it for him. Over time, his personality would diverge from the core I built, but for now, he wasn't much more than the pre-existing program, one I could predict pretty easily.

"I do have a question. Why do you remain in this city?" Samwise asked, his head tilting to focus on me. "Night City is reportedly the most dangerous city in North America. Are there not safer places to live?"

"There are, but making progress would be a lot slower," I explained with a frown. "You alone contain a dozen parts that I would not be able to buy if we were anywhere but Night City. Here, I bought them online and had them shipped to my door. But I do plan on leaving the city itself as soon as I am more self-sufficient."

"And what criteria must be fulfilled for being self-sufficient?"

"Primarily? I need to be able to produce my own parts. I have a few ideas in my head, and now that I have finished you, I want to try them. If they work, then our next step is moving out of the city."

This was an idea floating in my head since shortly after I woke up in this apartment. Moving out of Night City and going somewhere I could work in peace, without people watching over my shoulder, would make my life a lot easier and safer. Once I could make my own parts, I didn't need to hang around in Night City anymore. Even better, I had the perfect place to go.

Rocky Ridge.

An abandoned town outside of Night City, complete with a garage, bar, a few dozen trailer park homes, and plenty of other stuff. In the game, you're first introduced to the town while working with Panan to get her truck back. There, it was barely a minute past the outskirts of Night City. Here, it was a five-minute drive, far enough away that a lot of the crazy shit from Night City didn't quite make it there.

That wasn't to say it was perfectly safe, either. Wraiths, a nomad family gone bad, were a constant threat in the Badlands. If you survived them, there were plenty of unaffiliated opportunistic assholes who would still see you as easy pickings. Thankfully, I had ways to solve that. I could even make my own power, which was, as far as I could tell, the main reason why the homeless hadn't moved into the abandoned town yet.

Best of all, since the people who had lived there gave up when the town started to fail, I could buy a large chunk of that land for cheap. In fact, it was so cheap that I felt guilty about buying it from them.

But that was all for the future. Whether or not I could move there was dependent on me being able to grab and construct quite a few juicy bits from the Titanfall universe. The IMC, by and far, was an exploratory production company. Their entire schtick was spreading colonies out to the stars, colonies that had to be almost entirely self-sufficient. There were dozens of different tech bits that were steered directly to taking materials, refining them, and turning them into useful things. Everything from raw ore and scrap back into useful metal to converting mountains of trash into polymer and normal plastics

Handily enough, there just happened to be literal mountains of trash and scrap all around Night City. Hell, Rocky Ridge had its own fair share of that hanging around.

I shook my head, focusing myself back on the current topic, smiling at Samwise. It was well and good to have plans for the future, but for now, I needed to focus on the present. I only had eleven days to get as much out of Titanfall as I could, and there was a whole lot that I wanted.

"That is agreeable," Samwise said with a nod. "We are vulnerable here, both from monitoring systems and corporate watchlists."

"I know, and it's getting harder and harder to ignore," I admitted, shaking my head. "Keep your eyes open, even just around the apartment."

"I will, sir," He agreed. "If our future plans are set, what of the short term?"
"I'm going out with Jackie to do a job for Padre, a local Fixer," I explained. "Before that, I want to make a few small blueprints. When I'm done, I want you to build them both up until they are almost complete. Then you're gonna finish one when I get back, and I will finish the other, probably tomorrow morning."

"You are putting our compatibility to the test?" He asked while flashing "ToF" on his chest screen.

My abilities, or at least, everything I knew about them so far, were included in his final build, built into a subsection in an easily deletable data chain. He was also programmed to be extremely circumspect about mentioning it, even when we appeared to be alone.

"That's right. Better to learn now than get surprised later," I pointed it out. "With any luck, even if it turns out like I think it will, I'll still have a use for the blueprints."

We talked a bit longer and answered Sam's questions so I could get a feel for his conversational abilities. I was at least partially still testing him, seeing if any bugs sprung up. His core was, after all, a custom project rather than a line-for-line copy of something from the Titanfall universe. After I finished my coffee, I got some food from the machine in my room, actually paying for it since I had already removed the hack Spot and I installed. I sat down at my computer and got to work, eating my late breakfast and early lunch as I did.

I already had the two projects for Samwise to work on in mind, so I could immediately start putting the plans together for him. The first was a simple double fist-sized drone surveillance drone. As far as I could tell, this world seemed determined to strap thrusters on every little drone, doubling their size, making them big, hot targets, and making them much more expensive to upkeep. The Titanfall universe, on the other hand, developed an entirely new thrust system for a lot of their drones, one that I was pretty sure was a more refined version of the Gremlin thrust system. They also maintained propeller-based drones, advancing them in small bursts but mostly leaving them as they were. They were cheaper, easier to maintain, easier to keep powered, and frequently easier to use. They could also be relativity quiet, at least when made correctly.

Like the one I was designing.

The second project was an early version of the minion detector, a semi-standard piece of equipment for Titan pilots. In the game, there was an advanced version of this device you could equip on your character that would clearly mark hostile targets on your minimap. Its only real limitation was that it couldn't track pilots because they were frequently moving way too fast for it to follow. This version was very much not portable, significantly less efficient, and its difficulty tracking faster targets was even more pronounced, so much so that the device had to be stationary to work, but it did have one solid advancement.

It was much easier to build.

As I started to mentally dive into the Titanfall tech tree, I quickly realized I would have a serious problem replicating complex, nonstandard parts. XCOM had been easy since the scientists and engineers working for the program were pulling from a relatively low-tech world. Titanfall, on the other hand, had two hundred years of advancement and specialization. I could mix and match some of the general, simple stuff, like hydraulics and servos, but when I started making the crazy, high-end tech with no real equivalency in the Cyberpunk universe, I was going hit a wall very quickly. This only made self-sufficiency even more important since that was the key to making those unique parts.

Luckily, the older model of the minion detector required a lot fewer small, finicky parts, so I could settle for an off-the-shelf infrared scanner, a sonar module from an underwater drone, and a seismic gauge used to monitor road traffic. These three devices worked together to create a real-time tracking system for all slow-moving entities in and around a singular building. By excluding people with proper credentials, you had an impressive addition to any security system. I didn't have the sonar module or the seismic gauge on hand, so this device would be the one I finish on my own, probably tomorrow when they were delivered.

At the end of the day, both of these devices would be sold to Padre, this time at a much more reasonable price. I had already cemented myself as someone he should protect, and it was in his best interest to keep my name off the records now that I could prove I wasn't just a one-hit-wonder.

Or, really, a three-hit wonder.

I spent the last bits of the afternoon whipping up the minion detector's programming since it was a pretty complicated system. Collating three streams of live data, interpreting it as a visual representation, and laying it over a 2D representation of a building was relatively complex. The drone's programming was much more simple, so I had that finished in ten minutes.

When I was finished with the design process, I handed the projects over to Samwise. At this point, I had a pretty solid grasp of both builds, with a good understanding of the general design and how some of the bits worked. I was still missing a good chunk of information, as well as that final blast of knowledge that accompanied the finishing of a build.

In all honesty, I had relatively low expectations for this to work. My ability, Tinker of Fiction, while it provided me with real, hard technology that actually functioned on its own, still had a lot of Tinker-like aspects, limitations, and quirks, a lot more than I first realized. Having someone else complete my projects so I could focus on other things, drastically reducing the time it took me to build and advance, seems like a pretty obvious loophole. It's why I chose two bits of tech I wasn't overly interested in having locked into my brain.

Still, even if my fears proved true, having someone like Samwise to help me build stuff I already got the benefits of, construct my own creations while I was focused on a tech tree, or just generally help me work, especially once we moved into better facilities, would be absolutely priceless.

I watched Samwise work for a few minutes before idly checking the time.

"Alright, Sam. I'm gonna have to leave you to work on your own for a while," I said. "I'm already running a bit late to meet with Jackie."

"Very well, sir," He said. "Please endeavor to be as safe as possible."

"Don't worry, buddy. I got a whole suit of armor stashed in Jackie's garage," I assured him. "Plus, Jackie will be with me, we've got it covered."

"Understood. See you soon."

The robot turned back to his work, preparing the off-the-shelf parts for the small drone while I started getting ready to leave. Once I had everything, including a few magazines of bullets for my rifle, I headed out, making my way down to the garage and hopping into my truck.

It was a quick drive to Jackie's garage, my friend waiting outside the large door for me. He waved and opened the garage door for me, and I backed the truck halfway into it.

"You ready?" I asked, stepping into the garage.

"Just about," Jackie said, grabbing his helmet off a counter.

He was already dressed in his armor, wearing his black and red jacket over it. He looked intimidating as fuck, which would only get better with his helmet on. As he watched, I made my way over to a stack of cargo crates, where I knew he kept my armor. While I put it on, Jackie filled me in on the details about our job.

"So 6th Street has been pushing on Valentino turf for a while," Jackie explained, sitting down on his weight bench. "It happens all the time. Usually, they just push them back, take out a little extra, then retreat. Problem is, this time, they pushed too far, and when they got pushed back, they took something with them."

"What did they take?" I asked, pausing as I pulled on the second part of my chest armor, feeling it connect around my back and tighten into place.

"Padre didn't say, I didn't ask," Jackie said with a look, though after a moment, he shrugged. "My guess is a drug shipment or maybe some hardware. Either way, when the Valentinos pushed them out, it went with them."

"So we what, we clear a 6th Street hideout, then get whatever they stole back?"

"No, they've already written off whatever it was, which is why I'm guessing drugs. They would have already split it up to sell and use," Jackie explained. "But a message needs to be sent, something deeper than just a bit of a pushback, so we are going in, clearing out the building that Padre tracked the good too."

"What's the building for?"

"Just a gathering area, nothing major," He responded. "We are looking at twelve, maybe fifteen, no more than twenty members."

"Seriously?" I asked, looking up from finishing the last piece of my armor. "That's a bit more than seven or eight scavs."

"We can handle it," He assured me, "Just gotta hit hard before they can react, cut the group down by a handful. After that, we move slow and steady."

"Sounds like a plan," I said, pulling on my helmet, letting it seal itself in place, feeling the synthetic muscles squeeze and move as they activated. "I'm ready, let's go."

Jacke nodded, and together, we climbed into the truck. Thankfully, unlike the van we took to the scav hit, the truck had more adjustable seating, letting me slide the passenger seat back and down, meaning I just fit inside while in my armor.

It was tight, but it was better than laying in the back with the guns.
The drive was blessedly short, crossing across a bridge from the Vista Del Rey subdistrict into Arroyo, otherwise known as 6th Street Gang territory. Thankfully, we didn't move very far into their territory, only passing a few blocks before Jackie pulled up on a driveway, startling a few people walking on the sidewalk.

"You ready for this?" He asked as he shut the truck down.

"Yeah, why wouldn't I be?" I asked, a bit confused.

"Well… 6th Street are assholes, but they aren't quite scav assholes," He explained with a shrug. "I was worried you wouldn't be up for it."

"Oh… well, I mean... I'm not going full murder hobo, but… Live by the sword, die by the sword, right?" I said, quoting the paraphrased gospel line. "If you're gonna be a violent ganger, you don't get to complain when that violence gets turned back around on you."

"Damn, fitting in pretty quick, Genio," Jackie said with a laugh, stepping out of the truck just as I did as well.

The sudden appearance of a rather large, fully armored man, looking everything like combat borg, got even more attention than Jackie riding up on the curb did. Suddenly people knew shit was about to go down and decided that this street was a very bad place to be.

Both of us walked around to the back of the truck, grabbing our weapons from the truck bed. I racked a round into my rifle, before reaching in and letting my sword latch onto the magnetic holster on my back. I then reached inside and pulled out Jackie's axe, handing it to him.

"Damn… I like it."

He took a moment to study the axe before clipping its holster to his belt, practicing pulling it before nodding and sliding it back on the opposite hip as his pistol. He then reached forward and grabbed his helmet, slowly pulling it over his head. He looked at me, the menacing, almost ogre-like face looking back at me, giving me a simple nod.

Together, we walked down the street, weapons ready, before finally, Jackie turned onto a pavilion, one lined with a few dozen vending machines, all lined up along the walls. There was one of those mini shops in the center, though it was empty of anything to buy. Instead, two gang members, covered in metal, both chains and cyberware, were sitting inside. Rather than say anything, Jackie simply reached into his jacket, pulled out a frag grenade, and underhanded it into the mini shop as we walked by. Both of the gangers were shocked by our appearance, and when the grenade thunked off the wall behind them and landed at their feet, it was way too late for them to do anything about it.

The grenade went off when we were a dozen feet away, blowing smoke and hundreds of fragments up and out of the structure, annihilating both of the "guards." We kept walking, both of us protected by the building, though I did feel a few small, residual fragments ping off my back. As we approached the front entrance to what was once a store, three gangers came pouring out of the front entrance, shouting and yelling. They ran face-first into us, having no idea what was going on, completely unprepared to meet us. Jackie snapped his axe out of his holster and slammed it into one of their skulls as the ganger tried to skid to a stop while I raised my rifle and pulled the trigger twice, spraying down the remaining two.

My time in the Badlands had given me a much better understanding of how my rifle worked, and it showed. The first bursts I fired went a bit wide, only the last two bullets hitting my target. Even so, each impact was devastating, with the heavy steel rounds blowing chunks out of the first man's shoulder and chest. My second burst was much more on target, with a quartet of rounds annihilating the third man, both of them dropping to the ground and sliding to a stop.

"I'll lead," I said, my voice filtered through my mask.

"Si, right behind you."

I stepped closer, kicking the door in. The flimsy, cheap frame crumpled and slammed open hard enough to knock the door off its hinges, clearing the door permanently. However, rather than stepping through, I stepped to the side, just as whoever was on the other side mag dumped through the open door. Eventually, after a moment, I heard a click, and Jackie immediately stepped into the doorframe. He fired a pretty tight grouping of bullets into the frantically reloading ganger. When Jackie stepped back, I stepped through, my rifle up and ready as I cleared the front entrance.

I confirm in the back of my head that shortening my redesign of the mag rifle had been the right choice as I turned and scanned the entrance, the rifle up on my shoulder, ready to fire. Two steps into the room, a ganger with a significant portion of his left side replaced with cyberware burst from behind cover. He was armed with a telescopic club, sparks of EMP static crackling around the end. The second he laid eyes on us, he jerked back in surprise, clearly not anticipating either of us. He dropped a second later, his baton going silent as it rolled away from his corpse.

Two more gangers came charging out of a back room, a door marked with a fading sign that read "Employees Only." We were facing the other direction, and both of them got several shots off. Bullets pinged off my armor and flattened against Jackie's, but neither of them had anything capable of penetrating our armor.

When both of them had been dispatched, we both made our way to the door they had come from. We both had time to reload before I put on a repeat performance, kicking the door off of its frame and stepping into the small storage room beyond. It was empty, but not for long, as a man dressed in modified military fatigues and chrome built into his head stepped around a door further in, holding something in each of his hands. Even as he tossed both of his grenades, I turned, my body running on instincts I didn't even know it had. I slammed into Jackie, the enhanced strength of my armor just enough to drive us both through the door frame. I was in the process of shoving him away from the opening when the grenade went off.

The explosion was deceptively small, but with nothing between me and it, I was battered by a barrage of shrapnel. Still, the explosive had gone off inside the room, so instead of being battered and broken, I was merely tossed a bit, falling down on my ass, my ears ringing.

Thankfully, I had succeeded in pushing Jackie out of the danger zone, so when three gangers came sprinting around the corner, coming to confirm or finish us off, he finished off all three of them, dumping most of his pistol mag into them.

Slowly, I stood up, quickly helped by Jackie after he confirmed the storage room was empty.

"Ey, you good choom?" He asked, his voice barely detectable under a constant whine.

"Yeah, I'm good. None of the shrapnel made it through," I confirmed. "Probably just some bruising. Ears are ringing."

"That's good, the ringing will pass," He assured me as he slapped my shoulder.

With a nod, Jackie grabbed my rifle and handed it to me, covering me while I stretched, shook off the explosion, and checked my weapon. I gave him a nod when I was ready.

We pushed back through into the storage room, which was now a heavily perforated mess. After quickly clearing the mess, we cleared the next room as well, which was set up as a break room of sorts, with a staircase going down in the far corner.

I took the lead, slowly descending down the stairs and entering a run-down, patched-up basement. As I stepped out of the stairwell, I got my a clear view of the surprisingly open room. There was a lot of stuff stored there, crates and boxes all stacked up along the walls, with a table in the center of the decently sized room, with what looked like the remnants of a poker game going on. There were also three gangers waiting for us, in cover behind some of the crates. I stepped forward, looking to take cover as well before they could open fire, only for one big mother fucker to come out from behind a stack of boxes and slam into me. Just from a glance, I could see he was seriously chromed out, with all four limbs replaced by exposed cyberware. The impact drove me back and knocked my rifle from my hand, the shock of his charge and yell stunning me just long enough for him to disarm me.

Jackie, who was just behind me, stepped out of the stairwell, trying to line up a shot on the chromed-up ganger, only for a barrage of bullets to force him back into the stairs.

The brute continued to try and grapple me, his robotic limbs, and whatever other enhancements he had, actually giving him a significant edge. My warden armor only improved my strength and speed to around, maybe even slightly past peak human. It did not contend very well with someone kitted out to the nines in steal and servos, especially someone with actual experience fighting hand-to-hand.

Knowing this, I didn't fight him for dominance, only to stay standing, focusing instead on reaching down to holster, grabbing my knife and pulling it from its sheath. I slammed it down into his back, just below his neck, punching through what I was pretty sure was some sort of subdermal armor. I stabbed him several more times before finally hitting his spine, or the cyberware equivalent, the man going limp instantly, falling to the ground. I left my knife in him, focusing on the other three gangers still standing, their attention now split between Jackie and myself.

Rather than scramble on the ground for my rifle, I grabbed my pistol, pulling it out and holding it one-handed, firing as I moved, trying to flank around the three remaining goons. One of the three noticed what I was doing and tried to pull his shots to follow me, but his Copperhead clicked, his magazine empty. As he screamed out a curse, desperately fumbling with a new mag, I put him down before focusing on the next ganger.

Together, Jackie and I made quick work of the remaining two 6th Street gangers. When the gunfire finally stopped, we both took a moment to breathe. I retrieved my fusion knife, wiping the synthetic blood off of it and sliding it back into my holster before reloading my pistol and sliding it away as well.

"Let's clear the upstairs again," Jackie said. "Then you stand guard while I fill some duffel bags up."

"Sounds like a plan," I said with a nod. "So… how did you like your ax?"

"Worked well, thought for sure it would get stuck in that guy's skull," Jackie answered. "Not bad."


"What can I say? I do good work," I responded, following after Jackie while he shook his head.

"Don't get cocky Genio," He said, though I could hear his smile. "Just keep watch, I'll fill a few bags, and we'll get out of here quick."
 
Chapter Fourteen
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While Jackie went over the gang base with a fine-tooth comb, looking for anything worth taking and stuffing it into our bags, I stood watch. I picked a spot at the entrance to the open pavilion, my back to the heavily perforated mini-shop that sat in the middle. I kept my eyes on the road, watching for anyone suspicious driving past, my helmet blocking the glare from headlights as I stared. Thankfully, the few normal civilians around at this time of night knew better than to approach, but I had no doubt word of a new Borg hanging out, taking down a 6th Street gang spot, would get around.

Like I needed any more attention.

After about five minutes, Jackie walked out and dropped two bags off by my feet before walking back inside and grabbing two more. I quickly clipped my rifle to my back, grabbed both bags with one hand, and drew my pistol. When Jackie returned with his loot, we made a beeline for the truck, quickly stuffing our bags into the back before hopping in and peeling out.

We traveled at a pretty quick speed through the city, only slowing down to a more reasonable pace once we were back in Valentino territory. Rather than heading straight home, Jackie punched in a location nearby before letting the truck drive itself. He was about to call Padre when I spoke up.

"Tell him I have a few more inventions he might be interested in."

"What? Already?" He asked, the shock clear in his voice. "What are they?"

"A small, quiet, multipurpose drone that doesn't use fuel and has decent range, as well as some scanning equipment that can monitor a large building for intruders," I explained.

"Damn, choom. That's quick… I'm not sure he will be ready to buy something new so quickly," Jackie admitted with a frown. "He spent a good chunk of Eddies on you already."

"Should we look for a new buyer, then?"

"No, definitely not," he said, shaking his head and waving his hand. "We try Padre first, and if he doesn't want it, we can ask him to find someone who does. We are already in his good graces. Cutting him out of a deal now would only ruin that."

"Even if we make less money because he needs a cut too?"

"Padre won't screw us," Jackie assured me. "The last low price was the cost of protection and keeping things dark. This time, he will be more fair."

I nodded in agreement, hoping for Jackie's sake he was right. If Padre expected me to sell all of my stuff as cheaply as I had my first batch, he was in for a surprise.

Seeing that I was satisfied, Jackie contacted Padre and explained that the job was done. He also informed him that I was already ready to show him a few more things, the fixer agreeing to meet us tomorrow night, which, since it was almost two in the morning at that point, meant in two days. While Jackie was talking about setting up a meeting, my keyfob vibrated in one of my belt pouches. A quick look showed just over six thousand eddies deposited in my account.

While he talked to the fixer, the truck continued to drive, making its way through Valentino territory. Just a few minutes after Jackie was done on the phone and had taken control of the truck back from the Auto-driver, we pulled into a back alley. We stepped out of our vehicle and were immediately greeted by a pair of obvious Valentino members. They looked aggressive, eyeing me up and keeping their hands near their weapons, right up until they spotted Jackie. When they did, they immediately started talking in Spanish with friendly smiles on their faces. After a short negotiation, Jackie handed the four bags off, only after grabbing a smaller bag from inside one of them. Apparently, he found a few rolls of cash during his quick sweep of the building.

The gang members took about ten minutes going over whatever it was that Jackie had stuffed into the bags before coming back and paying Jackie. They talked for a few more minutes before the gangers returned to their posts, and we returned to the truck. Jackie pulled out of the alley and turned to head back to the garage.

"How did it go?"

"Good, another three grand for both of us," He explained, his eyes glowing for a moment while he transferred my share to my account. "When we get back, take three rolls from the bag too. That's another five hundred."

I nodded, leaning back in the seat as best as I could in my armor. Almost an hour later, I was finally stepping back into my apartment. I was tired, sore, and ready for bed. As the door sealed behind me, Samwise stepped out of the workshop.

"Welcome back, Sir. How was your 'job'," He asked, taking my rifle from me and, after deftly checking it was unloaded and off, stored it in the workshop.

"About as well as you could hope," I said, taking off my jacket and hanging it up before walking further into the apartment. "How did your night go?"

"I am currently seventy-three percent done with my first project," He explained, once again exiting the work area. "I find adapting to your tool options to be… interesting. I will likely finish both projects by tomorrow morning."

"Good, then we can finally put the idea of me getting credit for you finishing something to rest," I said, stretching with a yawn. "Though it's already looking pretty much busted since I haven't gotten any new information from you assembling it."

"Indeed. Unfortunate, but you suspected it would work this way."

I grunted in acknowledgment before dropping down to the edge of my bed and kicking off my shoes. Spot left his charging point and snagged them with his grabbers, flying them over to their proper location by the door before I could even ask.

"Sorry, Sam. I would love to stay up longer to chat, but I really can't," I said, pulling off my shirt. "It's late, and I still need to sleep off the nearly all-nighter I pulled programming for you."

"Understandable, Sir. I will continue working," He confirmed with a small nod. "Have a good night's rest."

"Thanks, buddy. Wake me up if you need me."

I quickly crawled into bed while Samwise made his way back to the workshop. Thankfully, with the door sealed, the sound of the fabricators and 3D printers would be heavily muffled. I watched as Spot flew around, snagged my clothes, and carried them to the clothes bin before sliding himself back into his charge station. I was out before he had even fully powered down.

The next morning, I woke up to find Samwise charging in the drone workstation. I was halfway through my poor excuse for breakfast when he booted back up and stepped away from the work area.

"Good morning, Samwise," I greeted. "How did everything go last night after I got home?"

"I completed the devices, save the final steps for each one," he responded. "Will we be completing the experiment now?"

"May as well."

We stepped into the workshop, and I watched as Samwise got to work. He had completed most of the drone, with only its power source, a few screws, and a single panel left to attach. He completed the work deftly, putting the final pieces together in several minutes. Normally, that would be when I got the final burst of information. Unfortunately, but not unsurprisingly, there was nothing. I still had the basic information that I got while creating the CAD files, but no new information presented itself.

"Oh well, check that off the list," I said with a frown.

Thankfully, I really didn't care about understanding this particular drone, and there wasn't exactly some great secret I was missing. I had the designs and a working model, which was plenty to sell to Padre. If, when the tech tree switched over, I lost all that knowledge completely, I didn't really care.

With the drone done, it was time to test the second potential cheat, having someone build most of the machine, stop, and then finish it myself. I was about as confident with this portion of the experiment as I was with the previous, but it still needed to be done. Unfortunately, we had to wait about an hour for the final pieces I needed to get delivered. Samwise then needed to modify a few of them before I could finally put it all together.

We spent about thirty minutes putting the final touches on the early version of the minion detector, fitting the parts together, and sliding everything into the custom case. In all honesty, I was pretty impressed by Sam's work. There was a fair bit of modifications that had to be done to the sensors we purchased, the ones that functioned as the backbone of the device. Despite being a bit nervous about how my new assistant would handle them, they were as near perfect as I should have expected from an AI.

When I finally put in the last screw, I quickly hooked up the unit to my computer before booting it up. Unsurprisingly, the sensor was useless in an apartment complex as massive as a Megabuilding, but that didn't matter since I didn't even let it finish the scanning process, as just turning it on was enough.

"Alright, so. I got something for finishing it, but not much," I explained, chewing my cheek as I tried to put it into words. "It sort of cemented the design in my head a bit, and I understand just a bit more about it. I might be able to build it again from scratch, with the designs, but… It's hard to tell. I definitely didn't get the same burst of knowledge that I usually get, showing what's around it and lighting up the tech tree."

"That is more than you predicted."

"Yeah, but way less than I'd hoped," I responded before shrugging. "Still, depending on what I keep after the switch happens, it might be useful. Maybe for simple tech that functions on ideas I already know. I'll get the designs, a bit more of the knowledge, but nothing else."

"Something to keep in mind for the future, sir," Samwise suggested, and I nodded in agreement.

With the experiment over, it was time for us to get to proper work. I had a long list of things that I wanted to build from the Titanfall universe, and I did not have a whole lot of time to do it. Some of them were more important than others, while some things were absolutely crucial if I wanted to fully move into Rocky Ridge during my next break week.

First on the list was the ability to make custom parts, which in and of itself was a multi-stage process. Next up was the ability to turn scrap and trash into raw materials.

My first step was custom parts production, though it wouldn't really be useful until I finished step two as well. In the Titanfall universe, when it came to big productions or mass productions, their tech was basically just more advanced versions of what the Cyberpunk universe used, usually from the heavy implementation of AI-controlled systems. Fabrication arms, vacuum welding, and several other more advanced construction methods worked together in large, automated factories to turn raw materials into products.

However, when it came to small-batch, small-scale production, they had fully embraced the 3D printing trend and ran with it. Rather than using a subtractive method for making small-scale things, IE starting with a block of steel and carving it down into the part you need, the Titanfall universe used additive methods, most often by literally printing things.

Originally, like in my world, this was done mostly with plastics. Several high-tech polymers, better than what the Cyberpunk universe had access to, ended up replacing metal for a lot of stuff. Of course, 3D printing with metal is something that exists in my home world, in Cyberpunk, and in Titanfall, but it had a lot of issues and wasn't always capable of what you needed. Then, someone at IMC figured out how to print down quickly and accurately at nearly the molecular level, with basically any material, with no loss in strength.

Unsurprisingly, it replaced a huge portion of 3D printers almost overnight. No seams, no defects unless your machine was faulty, and quality systems, the ability to print with multiple materials at once. These new printers were incredible and could easily print just about anything. Some higher-end machines could print out equipment wholesale, rather than go part by part.

Unfortunately, there were, of course, some pretty heavy restrictions that made the method impractical for mass production.

For one thing, it was incredibly energy-intensive. Running one or two of the molecular printer machines, colloquially known as molly-makers, took an incredible amount of power, but running enough to be considered a mass production facility would be astronomical. Further, while the technique was fast, that was only when compared to other 3D printing methods. In most circumstances, it was easier to mass produce individual parts the normal way before putting everything together, rather than printing out each piece or even multiple pieces at once.

It also required that the material being printed, whether it was metal, plastic, or something else, was suspended in a very specific solution. Unfortunately, that mixture was extremely sensitive and would become inert from exposure to sunlight, high or low temperatures, or rapid shifts in pressure. It even had a shelf life that, once passed, required a remanufacturing process to reactivate.

Thankfully, I had power generation covered. Elerium was basically free energy, and at this point, I knew it backward and forward. I could make enough Elerium to power a decent-sized molly-maker in a couple of days, and I already had enough on hand to power a smaller one.

That just left the suspension solution. In early models, this required two separate machines. The first was to process, filter, and reactivate the used inert solution, and the second was to reinfuse raw materials into the activated solution. Later, machines were capable of doing this all in one standard device, but those were too advanced for me for now. Thankfully, the process of making the solution was a relatively simple chemical process, one I could handle on a small scale for now.

There was one silver lining to all of this. The technique, or at least the basic version of the technique, scaled extremely well, meaning that once I had the process of making even a small version, I would be able to pretty easily puzzle out how to make a larger one. That is, if making the small one didn't immediately fill in the blanks. If I wanted the more flexible, efficient, and faster version, I would have to build whatever this first model unlocked and then upscale from that.

Of course, that was all just half of the story. I wanted to be self-sufficient, and that meant having my own source of materials. Thankfully, Titanfall had a solution to that as well, in the form of mass recyclers. These devices could take mass amounts of trash and scrap, shred it to pieces, and use nearly a dozen different separation methods to pull out a variety of useful metals. It also separated useless waste and plastics, producing plastic cubes made up of whatever plastics you fed into it. These plastics could be useful for some things, but the inconsistencies in their makeup made them pretty much useless when you needed consistency and precision.

The plan, for now, was to make the first versions of all four of these devices before the first week was out. Then, using the money that I would hopefully get from Padre, I could buy a chunk of the land at Rocky Ridge. Once I owned that, I could build larger, improved versions of the molly-maker, its required support, and the mass recycler there. Then, when my new production foundation was secure, I could put it to work for the remaining time I had the Titanfall tech tree.

Between having no lag time for parts delivery, no longer needing to modify parts to work, and having everything on hand at once, I would be able to get through everything I needed and at least some of what I wanted.

I was hoping to be building the larger, improved machines by the start of my second week so I could at least have four or five days to make as many bits and pieces from the Titanfall universe as I could. I was not letting this tech tree pass without at least getting the jump jets and particle shields. It was a tall order, but as long as Padre paid out properly for my new ideas, I could brute force it with money.

As you can imagine, with such a tight deadline, I immediately got to work, powering through the first step of the process, CAD designs. The second I finished one of the designs, I began working on the second, while Samwise monitored the 3D printers and fabricators, keeping them fed and printing while I continued to put the designs in my head into the computer. When I was done for the night, he continued to produce parts so we could assemble everything.

This continued for the next day and into the late afternoon. By then, we had assembled both the molly-maker itself as well as the material suspension device. They were small models, both of them the size of mini-fridges, and when they were done, they provided a burst of insight into how they really worked and how some of the direct improvements made in later models worked. I could feel that when I was ready to build the larger models, I would have access to the higher-end version, ones that came out much later in the Titanfall timeline.

While part of me would have loved to dive into the next step in my plan, Jackie and I had an appointment with a fixer. I spent half an hour making myself decent before leaving to pick up Jackie. This time, Padre picked the place, meaning we were driving deep into the heart of Valentino territory to a small lowered pavilion between two large apartment buildings.

The space was relatively clean and well-lit, with vending machines along one far wall and a few benches and tables around. We passed a row of food stalls selling noodles and other random foods before stepping out into the mostly empty space. Padre was sitting on one of the concrete benches, reading his weathered bible, his large bodyguard standing beside him.

Jackson, Jackie, good to see you both again," He said, motioning us to sit on a bench that ran perpendicular to his own. "Have a seat."

After making ourselves comfortable, the fixer once again patiently sat there, under no rush to start the conversation. Part of me wondered if he was doing something with his neural link, pretending to be a wise man of few words by playing the Cyberpunk equivalent of Clash of Clans in his head. Finally, after what seemed like a full minute and a half, he spoke.

"So, Jackson. Jackie told me you have more to sell?"

"I do," I answered, beginning to lift the small box I had fit the drone inside of, stopping when he held up my hand.

"While your creations are worth money, buying so many of them so quickly would spread me thin," He explained. "If I purchase these as well, it will take months before I am prepared to buy more."

"I understand that, Sir."

"Good. In the future, I may have other buyers interested in your creations, but for now, these will be the last I purchase. Assuming I am interested."

Sensing the unspoken permission, I lifted the small case, revealing my drone.

"This is a flying drone. It is relatively quiet, tough, easy to make, cheap to repair, has a decent camera, and has a built-in payload release mechanism. Normally, its max payload is just under a pound, but at the cost of stealth, heavy battery drain, and a lot of wear on its parts, it can lift a pound and a half for short periods," I explained before handing him the drone. "Unlike most modern drones these days, it doesn't burn fuel or use thrusters. That means anyone with access to electricity can charge and use it."

I answered a few questions about "my" invention as he connected its controls with his neural-link. As he guided the drone up off the ground and high into the air, he nodded.

"A useful tool," He agreed, the drone scanning over some of the vending machines. "If a bit disorienting to use."

When the drone was safely back in the box, Jackie handed over some footage of me using and showing off the minions tracker. When he realized what he was watching, Padre leaned forward in interest.

"With one of these set up inside a building, one man can watch the entire place by himself," I assured him. "You can secure an entire building with just one of these. No cameras, no patrols, and no sensors. Larger buildings or buildings with more than three stories will require more than one system, but they are designed to work together seamlessly."

"How does it work?"

"It uses a whole host of different sensors to scan a building, then lock on to movement," I explained. "It's only limitation is that it can't pick up people running faster than thirty miles per hour, but at that pace, the likelihood of someone being stealthy…"

Padre had several more questions about how the minion detector worked. When he was finally satisfied, he leaned back on the bench.

"Do you have a price in mind?" he asked, laser-focused on me.

"I do. One hundred thousand for both, plus fifteen percent of your profits."

For a moment, the older man looked at me before finally chuckling and nodding.

"Seems like my doubts were unfounded. I am glad you understand the game to some extent, or you would have made a poor friend for Jackie," He said before responding to my offer. "Fifty thousand and ten percent."

"Eighty and fifteen."

"Seventy and twelve."

Now it was my turn to pause and consider, my eyes watching the older man as he confidently waited for my response. Seventy thousand Eddies was already more than I got for my three other inventions, and the added twelve percent would hopefully help keep me flush for a while, depending on just how many of these things he sold.

"And you'll continue to look after me and Jackie?" I said, ignoring my friend's shifting. "Keep an ear to the ground, that sort of thing?"

"I'll even continue to obfuscate all of your online shopping deliveries," Padre assured me, shaking his head at my shocked expression. "Do you really think someone wouldn't catch on to so many materials being delivered to one location? I've been keeping your name out of records since we made our first deal."

"That… Thank you," I said, letting out a long breath. "It was a concern, but hopefully for not much longer."

"Your first three inventions will more than makeup for any bribes I make," he assured me, brushing off my first words. "What do you mean it will not be a problem?"

"I… plan on purchasing a chunk of land from Rocky Ridge, the abandoned town," I explained. "With any luck, I'll be moving out there within the next two weeks. Something that I would prefer to stay between us for now."

"Ah, interesting. And would you be needing help with that?"

"I… Depending on the cost, maybe." I said. "And I don't just mean money. But I will know more once I start the process."

"I understand. While many here consider gang contacts to be an important resource, to the man trying to stay neutral and out of sight, they are a burden," He said with a nod. "Keep the offer in mind, but I will not hold my breath. In any case, do we have a deal?"

"We do," I agreed with a nod, reaching out and shaking the man's hand.

"If you have more to sell, contact me with some details, and I may be able to find someone interested," He said, still holding my hand. "I will facilitate the trade, with a minor cut of the profits, of course."

"Of course," I said, internally rolling my eyes.

With our business concluded, Padre transferred thirty-five thousand credits to my account before Jackie and I made our way back to the truck. When we climbed in, I transferred ten thousand eddies to Jackie.

"Woah, choom, that's a lot of Eddies!" he said, his eyes wide, showing off their glow. "I hardly did anything this time!"

"It's your contacts, Jackie. I wouldn't be on nearly as friendly terms with Padre without you," I pointed out. "Besides, we are a team. When I succeed, so do you."

He looked at me for a long moment before giving me a slight nod. I could tell my statement meant a lot to the larger man, but I focused on the road.

"Speaking of being a team, why didn't you mention moving out of the city?" he asked, his face falling a bit.

"I'll be five minutes away, tops," I pointed out, shaking my head. "I need a lot more room to grow, and out there, I won't have anyone breathing down my neck when I start improving my security and building larger stuff. It is cheap, isolated by the desert, and the Wraiths are really the only major threat I will have to deal with."

"Still sounds risky," He commented. "Wraiths are no pushovers."

"I know," I admitted, chewing my lip. "The first week or so is going to be intense. Once I have some time to build up some security, I will feel much better, but until then, it's going to be tight. I will probably spend some time bouncing back and forth, sleeping at the apartment and working there. That way, I will at least avoid being ambushed at night."

"We could hire some people to act as security, at least until you're set," He pointed out. "I'll obviously be there, but with a few solos around, we could keep the place safe to work in."

"That's… a pretty good idea," I admitted with a nod. "Padre probably knows some people willing to work for a discount on some proper body armor or maybe some other tech."

"He would probably pay them and hold the discounts for himself if you offered that," Jackie countered. "Your armor is good choom. He likes how easy it is to wear."

"Yeah… Hey, I'm thinking of getting some bone and muscle lace or maybe a skin weave, depending on what Vik can get his hands on," I said, changing the topic.

"Good idea. You need some chrome to toughen you up," Jackie said, reaching over and slapping me on the shoulder. "I've got all three, and I don't regret any of them."

We spent the rest of the drive discussing which I should get first, eventually arriving back at the megabuilding. After a quick goodbye, Jackie hopped onto his bike and drove off, leaving me to head back to my apartment and get back to work. There was a lot to get done, and every day counted.
 
Chapter Fifteen
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The next four days went by in a blur.

Samwise and I were working on our latest projects nearly nonstop. We already had the molly-maker and the material suspender, which just left the mass recycler and the activator. I managed to finish the design for the recycler the night I shook hands with Padre for our new deal, putting it together the next morning.

It was a surprisingly intricate series of filtering methods, shrunk down to fit into a tight box. A grinder worked the trash and scrap into a sand-like powder before drying it out. Then, it used a magnet to extract ferrous material, weight filtering to grab heavier elements, electrical charges to filter out specific alloys, and several other more esoteric methods to extract anything else useful. Plastic was still an issue, but upon finishing the mass recycler, I realized I could now reach a bit further down that specific branch. A quick look showed a machine capable of taking the plastics from the mass recycler and refining them considerably, making them into useful materials.

By the time I was finished putting together that machine, Padre's men had picked up the designs for the minion detector and the drone, leaving me with the rest of my payment. Immediately, I called the numbers I had researched and saved days ago, talking to four of the original landowners of Rocky Ridge. Each of them was ecstatic to sell their land, happily dumping what they thought was a useless plot of the desert for literal ennies on the eddie. It was such a significant loss for them that I asked Samwise to remember their information so that I could potentially offer them something better in the future when I wasn't so strapped for cash and resources.

With the land officially mine, I got to work on the final barrier, the suspension liquid activator. Thankfully, this was a tiny machine when compared to the two machines it worked with, just a bit larger than a computer tower from my old world. It took the inert and contaminated solution, filtered out everything unwanted, and reactivated it by applying a very gentle ultrasonic pulse and nearly negligible electric charge. Those were alternated several times a second, reactivating the solution and preparing it for the next material. When it was complete, I finally had full access to the higher-end models.

When I was mentally examining those designs, I realized I was lucky to have made the low-end molly-maker first, because getting some of these parts would have been a nightmare otherwise. They would have required high-quality custom orders, which would have taken forever and would have been nearly impossible to explain. Now, with my own molly-maker, I could just print them out.

Well, I could once I got them all up and running.

With the four machines completed, it was time to work on the suspension solution. I made four five-gallon buckets of strange liquid, which was thankfully mostly cheap. It was an interesting mixture of materials, all of which were on the cheaper end. The process of making the solution was also surprisingly simple. The hardest part was the ratios and multiple steps, which saw me creating what was best described as an artificial protein, one made to react to very specific energy signals. More than anything, they were the key to the printing process.

Once that was done, it was time to start moving our shit to Rocky Ridge. Originally, I had planned on waiting until I had a free week, but the more I thought about it, the more that seemed unwise. Between learning that Padre was the only reason people hadn't noticed my shopping habits and knowing I would have much more freedom once I moved, I decided to take the risk.

It was a bit nerve-racking to begin with, since this was a big leap out of the relatively safe feeling apartment. When it was finally time to go, the actual move was pretty easy, especially since Jackie recruited a few friends to help. They had no idea what they were transporting since everything was boxed up, even Samwise. We had the apartment cleaned out in a few hours, and everything shipped to Rocky Ridge a few hours after that.

Now, when purchasing the land, I ended up buying a couple of large chunks. The BD Shack, the garage and CHOOH2 station, which included the parking lot across the street, the one that encircled the power substation, the liquor store across the street from the BD Shack, and the solar farm to the southwest. These came with a handful of the surrounding trailers, as well as all of the junk and scrap around the entire premises. At some point, I was sure I would buy the rest of the dead town, but for now, I left it alone.

Out of all of the buildings, the garage was in the best condition, so we moved everything into there. The entire move, from leaving the apartment to moving into the garage, took eight hours. By the end of it, we had everything up and working, save the Molly-maker and its two accompanying devices. Those required too much power, and I didn't want to hook them to the already struggling solar farm.

A few of Jackie's friends, ones requested by Padre, set up shop in the BD shack to act as guards, thankfully on the fixer's dime. He promised me it was simply him protecting an asset, not trying to influence me into partnering closer to the Valentino's. I didn't care as long as they didn't try to interfere with my work or spy on me.

While Jackie and his friends were keeping an eye out on the surrounding desert, I got to work on the larger scale production equipment. Rather than go for the all-in-one device and sacrifice efficiency and size, I decided to make a rather large molly-mixer, at first running it off of the smaller filter and material suspender while using it to make larger versions solely for its use.

While I was designing and working in my new workshop, I sent Samwise out to do some work around our new property. His first task was cleaning off the solar panel farm, which by itself massively improved our power situation. I was still going to run all of the Molly-makers and associated equipment off Elerium, but it was still an important success. After he did a quick check of the power systems to make sure we weren't going to burn out anything or the time spent with no maintenance had set up a ticking time bomb of missable damage, Samwise got to work cleaning and scrapping stuff around the garage, making more room for our projects.

I had no concern for efficiency, so basically everything that looked even remotely junky went into the mass recycler, from rusted car parts to bags of trash. The machine was loud, so we had it running in the shed behind the garage, where it wouldn't bother anyone. After a few hours of working, Samwise walked into the garage with boxes of metal powder, organized and ready to be poured into the material suspender.

By the time the sun rose and Jackie walked into the garage with a cup of coffee and a bag of food, I had the original molly-maker, as well as the suspension and filtration system hooked up to an Elerium power core. It was essentially an oversized Elerium node using several full chunks of Elerium to generate massive amounts of power. The molly maker was already going, with multiple reservoirs running through materials quickly as it worked hard to make its bigger and better brother.

I was passed out on the floor on a few of the cushions from the couches in the other room. This was the first time using the molly-maker, and while I was sure I had done it right thanks to the plans in my head, building, moving, installing, and then immediately and extensively running a complicated and delicate piece of machinery wasn't exactly the best idea. The machine had plenty of warning buzzers and beeps though, I just needed to be close by to hear them.

The fact that Samwise was nearby working the fabricators and had been since the previous night showed just how tired I was. I woke up slowly to the sensation of Jackie nudging me awake, handing me the large coffee before I was even fully upright.

"Dammit, Jay, you look like hot death," He said, helping me to my feet. "You're lucky I promised, or I would have let you sleep."

"I know, I know," I said, rubbing the sleep out of my eyes and taking a drink from the coffee. "Too much to do, not enough time to do it in. Got a lot of what I wanted to do done, though."

Jackie looked around the interior of the garage. The large space was almost entirely cleaned out, all of the trash and scrap having been removed and recycled by Sam. Other than that, the space was clearly in a transitional state, with things pulled out away from the walls and machines running while sitting on the ground.

The molly-maker and its two extra machines were against one wall, with space for its larger brother once I was done printing the parts. Once that was done, I would stack the smaller machine in the corner and upgrade the Elerium power core so it could run both of them.

When I finally completed the larger device, my ability to produce whatever parts I needed, whatever I could design, would skyrocket. Already, with just the smaller, less efficient version, I was close to cutting production time by a full twenty-five percent. And that didn't include how much time I would have spent trying to finagle parts to do things they weren't intended to do.

All in all, I was hoping that I would be ready to start powering through more Titanfall tech by tomorrow morning. The spare set of hands that Samwise was making would certainly help.

"Hey, listen. So Padre sent someone over to serve as your dedicated bodyguard," Jackie said with a wince. "The boys he paid are muscle, but they don't have that kind of experience."

"I thought you were my bodyguard?" I said with a smirk, the larger man rolling his eyes.

"You know that's not what I'm looking to do, Genio. I gotta stick to my dreams, you know?" he said, shaking his head. "I'm gonna keep working in the city. Don't worry, I'll keep-"

"You say that like I'm not going to be running them with you," I said, turning away from the computer to look at him with a raised eyebrow.

"Well, choom… you got your set up, and you got income from your deal with Padre-"

"Jackie, I told you we are in this together. You're not getting rid of me that easy," I assured him, slapping him on the shoulder. "Give me five days, and we can start running jobs again.

"I… alright, Jackson," he said with a nod, surprised by happy about my statement.

"Good… now what was this about a bodyguard?"

"Oh, right. He found someone neutral who had experience and could act as your shadow. He paid for a month of her services. After that, you gotta keep paying her," He explained. "He seemed pretty confident that you would happily pay her out of pocket by that time."

For some reason, the mention of the bodyguard's gender tickled the back of my brain. A bad feeling started to come over me as I fixed Jackie with a look.

"Who did he find?"

"Well… technically, she had already been watching over you for a while now, and-"

"You're taking too long, big guy!" A familiar voice said from outside the garage.

From around the corner came Kaytlyn, a smile on her face as she leaned against the open garage door frame. She was dressed in much more professional clothes than the last time I saw her, including what I was pretty sure was a black, reinforced jacket over some chest armor, militech by the looks of it. She gave me a wave, her smile morphing into a smirk.

"Kaytlyn, good to see you," I said, my tone blank. "So…"

"Yes, I was being paid to look over you and keep an eye out for trouble. Though I am actually friends with Misty, and I do actually get my cyberware from Vik," She assured me, her tone shifting to something close to understanding. "That was just a coincidence."

"So you weren't my neighbor?"

"Kinda sorta?" She explained with a shrug. "I was really out of the city on business, but Padre brought me back on a favor. I lived in the same megabuilding, but I was lower down, so I traded rooms with your old neighbor. I even had a plan to use the excuse of a sibling to explain away the random guy you might have seen using it before, but you didn't even notice."

"I'm a busy person," I explained with a shrug. "How much is he paying you?"

"Twenty-five grand for a month, but like Jackie said, he's pretty sure you would keep me on at the end."

"Why is that?"

"I'm damn good at my job," She explained with a simple shrug. "You certainly didn't see me coming."

"You keep telling yourself that," I said, shaking my head. "So, you gonna report to him if he asks you any questions?"

"Well…. Considering he is signing my paycheck…" She said with a wince.

"Bonus points for honesty, at least," I responded, scratching at my cheek. "What do you shoot?"

"... I usually strap an SMG or a sniper rifle," She said, now looking curious. "Depends on the job. Why?"

Instead of answering, I walked into the garage's side room, the door opening automatically as I got close. Spot had already tuned my keyfob into the security, giving me access to all the buildings I owned. I returned a minute later carrying my custom sniper rifle and a bag of ammo for it. I passed her the rifle and the bag.

"Go outside and play around with this for a while," I said. "Come back when you're out of ammo."

"Uh… wait, what?" She said, accepting the powerful mag weapon and looking confused. "What is this, I don't recognize the model?"

"Just go out and try it."

"... I'll be on the roof," She finally said. "Don't go anywhere."

I gestured for her to leave, turning back to my work and ignoring her. After a moment of silence, I could hear her footsteps as she left. A few seconds after that, Jackie spoke up.

"What was that about choom?" He asked, looking confused.

"Padre doesn't hire useless people," I explained, turning back to look at my partner in crime. "So she is worth the effort. But you know I can't have people snitching on me. So I'm baiting the trap. Just give it some time. Oh, and warn you buddies about the gunshots."

Jackie looked confused but shrugged, his eyes glowing as he messaged his friends. For the next twenty minutes, I chiseled away at some prep but mainly focused on mediocre to poor food Jackie brought. I also finished the decent coffee, all the while listening to the sounds of Kaytlyn firing out into the desert.

When she was done, she came back down, her footsteps considerably faster.

"Where did you find this?" She asked urgently. "It's got no telemetry link, but I was putting shots on target almost double what I usually manage."

"Do you like it?"

"It's a preem piece of hardware," She said with a nod. "Where can I get one?"

"You can have it, a matching SMG, and a set of under armor that is more comfortable and more protective than what you're wearing," I said, pointing to her militech armor. "If you send Padre his money back and work for me directly."

For the first time since I had met her, the blue-haired woman was at a complete loss for words. It took her a second to realize what my angle was, but when she did, she nodded.

"You don't want me hanging around while working for someone else's eddies. I can understand that, but why not just find someone else?"

"Cause Padre wouldn't have hired you if you were bad at your job," I explained. "You were honest about reporting back to him. Most people would have pretended to be loyal to me. And you didn't try to sneak a listening device into my stuff when you gave my delivery back."

"That's it?" she asked, putting her hand on her hip and raising an eyebrow. "If you're that quick to trust, this job is going to be harder than I thought."

"Trust is earned. I'm giving you the chance to do that," I explained before my lips curled into a smirk. "But honestly, I'm mostly trusting Misty. She seems like a good judge of character, and wouldn't put up with you shit if you were a psycho."

She snorted and shook her head, but eventually, she nodded. I could see Jackie nodding his head in agreement, obviously trusting his girlfriend as well.

"Alright, I can see that. She doesn't mess around with stuff like that," She accepted with a nod. "Now I'm happy to take good gear as payment, but I still need some eddies. I can't buy food with a sniper rifle. Well, not without making a mess."

"Then you can go with Jackie and our borg friend on jobs," I said, looking at Jackie, who winced for a moment before finally nodding. "Having a third person would mean they could take larger jobs and earn more cash. You'd get a fair share."

"Bodyguard and some jobs on the side?" She asked, her eyebrow raised. "Gonna be hard to guard you if I'm leaving you alone to go on gigs."

"Give it a few days, and you won't have to worry about me at all," I assured her confidently. "Got a lot of protections I plan on building around here to make it safe."

"...I need to think about it. Padre isn't gonna be happy taking his money back," She pointed out.

"He won't care if you explain you're still working with me. Or I guess he will have to be because the only difference is that you won't feel obligated to report my secrets back to him. If that's a problem for him, he can pound sand."

Kaytlyn laughed, even as Jackie winced. We chatted a bit more about the deal, assuring her that I would have an SMG just as good as the sniper for her within the week. I also pointed out that I would probably be offering her more gear in the future, since it was in my best interest to keep her well stocked with goodies. After we were done, she left the town in a modified Quadra Type-66. It retained most of the original design's body but had several upgrades built in. It kind of reminded me of a halfway step to the nomad version from the game.

"Well… at least she's got style," I said, watching her drive off. "Think she'll sign up?

"Maybe? What are you gonna do if she doesn't?" Jackie asked, standing beside me by the entrance.

"Probably post her up on the roof with the rifle," I responded with a shrug. "She will probably be up there for a while anyway. The only thing that changes is if we trust her with the big secrets."

Not long after that, I got back to work. With the parts still printing for the large, improved molly-maker, I helped Samwise with his project, the first of three MRVN units. They would be Samwise's workforce, with AIs that were much more simple. They would take quite some time to develop into real sentience, during which they would help Samwise with the projects I assign him. We completed the first one about an hour and a half after Kaytlyn left, and they immediately went off to continue collecting and recycling the trash around the garage, moving on to the BD shack when it was finished. It was eventually joined by two brothers over the rest of the day.

When the parts for the large molly-maker were done, I worked hard to put it together, only stopping to get the molly-maker working on the suspension and activator machines.

When I was finally done with everything, it was much later that night. I barely managed to make it to the off section of the garage, where I collapsed into the couch with a smile on my face. My near nonstop, single-minded work had finally paid off, and I now had the infrastructure set up to produce a significant amount of my own parts. It wasn't exactly a hundred percent independence, since I would still occasionally need specific materials, exotic stuff should I require it, and some rare metals would probably need to be restocked since the recycler wouldn't be able to keep up, but it was a huge step in the right direction. For example, I would be able to make nearly ninety percent of a MRVN unit myself, and most of what I couldn't make was the hydraulic fluid.

The next morning, I woke up and walked around the exterior of the garage. It was miles ahead of what it had been the day before, entire cars had been mulched in the mass recycler for materials. We had several large crates of said materials, just waiting for me to use, and dozens of blocks of plastic set aside for later. The MRVNs had even made significant progress in cleaning around the BD shack as well.

As I continued to walk around, I spotted Samwise leading two MRVN units, working with them to repair the partially collapeed corner of the BD Shack. A welder, one left behind in the garage, sparked as Samwise welded things together, staving off any more damage.

I checked the interior of the BD shack as well, unsurprised to see that Jackie's friends, and Padres men, had left, helping themselves to a few bottles of liquor from behind the bar. With the place empty, I had to admit it was a little less secure feeling than I would have liked. I could feel that we were alone out here, exposed and vulnerable.

The sound of a car running through the town, stopping nearby, pulled me from my thoughts, and I headed out into the street, my hand resting on my pistol. Luckily, the car was familiar, as was who climbed out of it.

"So, what's the verdict?" I asked as Kaytlyn stepped out of her car.

"You were right," She said with a smile. "Padre didn't care. He just took the money back."

"That's good news. So you're on board?"

"For now. I reserve the right to leave after the first month," She said, leaning back to sit on the hood of her car. "There's only so long that a girl can work for upgrades and armor, as nice as it is."

"I wouldn't worry about it," I said, waving off her worries. "Jackie is coming back later today with a shipping truck of stuff like beds and furniture. If you're gonna be staying out here with me, call him up and let him know we need at least another bed. In the meantime, feel free to explore the grounds."

I went over what I owned, the trained bodyguard leaving to inspect some of the nearby trailer homes. I hadn't gotten the chance to look through them, but there were several on the land I owned. Two of them were obvious losses and would eventually end up getting put through the mass recyclers, but the rest at least look passable.

As she walked away, I returned to my garage. I was glad to have someone else join the team, both as a bodyguard for myself and to go on Jackie's side gigs. That said, it was going to be an interesting process, keeping her out of the loop for some of the things I was building. Eventually, I might let her in on just how crazy my tech was, but for now, she was too erratic, and her allegiances were clearly up for sale.

I sat down in front of my computer and let out a long sigh, spinning around to see the final state of the garage. No longer was it a mess of things ready to move in.

The two molly-makers and their accompanying machines were against the far wall, hooked directly to the Elerium power core. The original workbench had been extended with the one from the apartment, with the original now just a table for the 3D printers and the Elerium generator. Both of the fabricators were stacked next to that and bolted to the wall to reduce vibrations. The fabricators had been upgraded again, with the auto feeders arms receiving substantial programming update from Samwise, as well as a small container on each side of them, for the arms to grab and deposit material.

With the molly-makers done, they would be getting much less action, but they would still be useful.

The workbench we had moved over was more or less the same as it had been, only significantly less cramped. It was set up to form a right angle with the original work bench, which had been slid closer to the far wall.

After cleaning out all of the junk, and moving out most of the tools we wouldn't be using very often, like the tire tread changer, we managed to fit almost everything in one garage bay. This meant I could park the truck in the second bay or, more likely, use the second bay as a place to build larger stuff. I had plans to turn the CHOOH2 fuel station area into an outdoor garage already.

Who knows when that would happen, though.

With everything set up, Samwise and his younger brothers doing general repairs around my land and Kaytlyn looking through the trailer park, it was time for me to get to work. I had five full days left with the Titanfall tech tree, and I planned on making the most of it. I wanted to crack their shield systems, expand my robotics and AI development to include the methods created by the frontier Militia, as well as pad my general technological understanding with whatever I could make from the universe. There were dozens of things I wanted to add to my repertoire, and not a whole lot of time to do it in.

I was going to need more coffee.
 
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Chapter Sixteen
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I set down a large cup of coffee on my workstation, sitting at my computer with a huff. While my first instinct was to dive right in and start designing stuff, I knew I would regret not having some sort of plan. So, after giving it some thought, I started a list.

By the time it was done, the list was composed of everything I wanted to get out of my head from the Titanfall universe. When I was sure I had everything I wanted, I broke the list up into two groups, and then ordered the contents of those groups from least important to most important. I deliberately ignored the fact that I definitely didn't have enough time to get to everything. I would just have to be satisfied with getting to what I could, working down to the wire.

The first list was stuff I wanted blueprints of but that I didn't need to build. These ranged from toilets, all the way to compact stove systems and combustion engines that could run on damn near anything flammable. I had an entire civilization's worth of advanced technology stuck in my head, and I was damned if I would let the opportunity pass me by to pad out what I could build on my own.

Everything on the blueprint-only list was stuff already below my level of understanding, meaning I could technically re-create on my own if I felt like it. But, since I had their blueprints already in my head, I could copy them down at record speed and store them for later. I tested the theory, copying the design for a self-contained, self-cleaning toilet from my head to the computer in ten minutes. I then proved it wasn't a fluke by doing the same to the aforementioned super-efficient engine in twenty. I understood both of the designs perfectly, and while I didn't get the burst of knowledge that would fill in the tech tree, knowing that I would never need to buy a toilet again was kind of worth it. When this tech tree faded, the blueprints would remain, but I wouldn't have the perfect, complete understanding of the designs and all adjacent designs.

I spent eight hours flying through several dozen simple designs, recreating blueprints for civilian tech that were useful and either on par with or more advanced than what this world had access to. This included a lot of the self-contained colony equipment that IMC specialized in producing and spreading around. Part of me wished I could have spent longer, but there was too much higher-end stuff that I needed to crack. This was more about self-sufficiency than it was about advancing my knowledge.

The second list, which was about advancing my knowledge, contained all the tech I wanted to design and build. This list was filled with some of the Titanfall universe's most advanced and most interesting tech. First up on the list was their shield tech, and the last thing on the list was their FTL systems. The Jump Drives were pretty advanced, so much so that the tech tree wasn't even letting me peek at what was under the hood. It was extremely unlikely that I would get to make even the smallest Jump Drive IMC made, especially since I would need to figure out or stumble on whatever pre-requisite tech unlocked it.

For now, I needed to focus on more reasonable and, at the moment, more useful designs, starting with cracking the shield systems. They called it a particle shield, and the method they used was… confusing at first. It wasn't until three hours later, when I had completed the design, that I really understood what was happening.

At first, I assumed that the particle shield was named after its ability to stop physical materials, i.e., particles. After a while, I realized that it was describing how the shield functioned instead. The shield emitter, built from some rather exotic materials, projected a field that interacts with light, specifically photons, traveling in a specific direction, namely away from the person using the shield. The field forces the passing photons to release their energy as they pass through it. As the energy is released, it almost immediately dissipates, but it's split-second existence is so energetic that incoming objects treat it as a solid barrier.

Since the photoreactive field is angled to only catch light traveling away from the user, the barrier follows the same pattern, meaning the user can shoot through their own shield, and depending on how advanced the system is, it may even increase the effectiveness of their shots, further accelerating their bullets. Once the photons release their energy, the remaining light wave scatters into harmless visual light, generating the blue or orange glow that the shields gave off.

It is an absolutely insane process, one that is only made possible by a specific type of crystal, which grew in orbit of specific gas giants in the Titanfall universe. This crystal was gathered as an extremely fine powder and mixed in an electrically conductive gel, which was then locked inside small packets. Radiation was passed through the gel, usually X-ray radiation, while simultaneously, a current was passed through it, which activated the field. The shape of the packets is what defined the often hexagonal design of the particle shield.

Making my first particle shield emitter was a three-step process. First, I needed to make a generator for the fine crystal powder, often called photon sand. It was very much not naturally occurring in this universe, which was good because it meant I was the only source of it on the planet. Thankfully, the process to make it was even more simple than the Elerium since it didn't require a seeding crystal, just a batch of chemicals mixing in a specific vessel. The crystals formed in the gas chamber above the mixing vessel, where they fell to the surface of the liquid and were then skimmed off the top and dried.

I would also need to make the gel mixer. A specific machine was required to suspend the photon sand inside the gel properly and solidify it enough to be usable. It was a small machine, at least the version that I was making was. The final step of the process was putting it all together, building the particle shield emitter itself.

I spent the next four hours designing everything I needed and getting the molly-makers going on producing all of the parts before starting to shift over to a new project. I would need some specific chemicals to start the photon sand generation and a few more for the gel process, which meant a trip to the city. I made a note to ask Jackie if he could recommend some people to help run errands for me, because I was not looking forward to running in and out of the city to buy stuff, and I was not ready to start getting things delivered here quite yet.

Thankfully, my second project was a big step in the direction of securing and feeling confident about living out here. However, before I could get it started, Jackie arrived with the shipping truck full of furniture and other household stuff. I was waiting for him as he arrived, honking the horn of the large truck as he passed, pulling forward past the garage to turn back around. Kaytlyn walked up as I was watching him drive.

"How did the trailers look?" I asked, looking over at her just in time to catch her rolling her eyes.

"Jeez, guess I should have guessed you didn't hear me," She said, shaking her head, though she didn't actually appear to be upset. "I finished looking through them hours ago, Jackson. Four of them are livable right now, with power and running water, though it's from a well so I wouldn't try drinking it. Some of the others might be salvageable, but most aren't worth the time."

"Well… you're welcome to claim one for yourself," I said before realizing I hadn't actually asked if she was going to live out here, just suggested it. "Uh, that is assuming you're going to live out here?"

"Can't exactly be a bodyguard if I'm too far away to do anything half the time," She responded. "You gonna charge me rent?"

"No, consider it part of the package," I responded with a smirk. "What have you been doing for the last few hours if you were checking the trailers?"

"I did a few drives around the town to see if there was anything important around," She explained. "I also spent some time on that."

She gestured to the old liquor store, the tallest building in town, though not by much. On its roof was a cobbled-together guard post, complete with recycled roofing cover, some barriers, and what looked like a couch. There was probably more, but I couldn't see it from my current angle. A MRVN unit was welding some support braces, and I could see some salvaged ladders newly welded to the side of the building.

"Ah. Not bad, I'll build you something better eventually," I said with a nod. "That building will be the security hub for the town, I guess."

"What are you gonna do with the booze?"

"Send it back with Jackie," I said with a shrug. "His mom might be interested, and if she isn't, I'll bet he knows someone who will buy it."

Jackie finally pulled back around and stopped in front of us, jumping out of the truck. Together with the help of some MRVNs, we got everything into the two trailer homes. Apparently, they had started clearing the good ones out after Kaytlyn finished her inspection. They were still a bit bare bones when we were done, but they each had a decent computer for watching whatever junk was on the internet, a small couch, and a good-sized bed. I also had a small cot installed in the garage, so I had a place to sleep there.

The MRVNs also unloaded some extra parts and materials, stuff I knew I would need, that I couldn't get from grinding down scrap in the mass recycler. When the truck was empty, I made the offer to Jackie.

"The beer will be bad, but sure choom, Mama Welles would love to get first dibs," He responded as we stepped into the liquor store. "How much do you want for it?"

"Bare minimum Jackie, I'm not gonna drag out extra ennies from your mom," I said. "Take it all, give her whatever she wants, sell the rest."

"Thanks, Choom," He said, thumping my shoulder, "You should expect to get invited over for dinner after this."

We loaded the truck back up with booze, the MRVNs making quick work of it, even if only two of them were helping us while Samwise and the other two did their own work. While that was going on, Jackie grabbed a bottle of something, and we headed back to the garage to have a drink.

"So, someone reached out to Padre, wondering why we were active in the area," Jackie said, pouring all three of us shots of what looked like tequila. "Badlands fixer by the name of Dakota Smith. Padre explained the basics, nothing more than what she would learn by watching the town for a few days. He explained that you work with him, and he considers you under his protection, but you don't consider yourself a member of his flock. She requested a meeting."

"Damn… was hoping for a few more days…" I responded, grabbing the shot from the table. "Dakota, what's she like?"

"She's a nomad static," Kaytlyn responded, both Jackie and I turning to look at her. "A member of the Aldecaldos who doesn't travel with them, instead she stays at one place to act as a contact point, an in between and a local resource. I've done a few deals with her, mostly guarding transports."

"Should I expect a tax? Is she gonna try and strong-arm me?" I asked with a frown before taking the shot as Jackie and Kaytlyn did. He poured himself and Kaytlyn one, but I flipped my glass over, so he skipped me. "What would happen if I ignored her?"

"Nothing directly, but she won't think twice about passing on jobs involving you," Kaytlyn explained.

"It's the same rules as Padre, choom," Jackie added. "If she likes you, she will work to keep you safe. You piss her off, she'll pass on a job stealing from you with a smile."

"So I gotta make it worth her while… Dammit. Alright, I'll think of something."

"If she wasn't a techie herself, I would say you should offer to fix stuff for her," Kaytlyn said with a frown.

"I'll think of something," I repeated, shaking my head. "How long do I have?"

"As long as you want, just gonna make it harder for her to like you if you make her wait," Kaytlyn pointed out, swallowing her second shot, tipping her glass upside down on the table near mine. "A couple of days should be fine, especially if you come bearing gifts."

"Alright, two days from now, think you could pass that along, Jackie?" I asked, getting a nod in return.

"Sure thing, Jay. I'll let Padre know. He knows how to contact her," He responded. "Who knows, maybe she'll have more work for us."

"Speaking of work, how long until I meet this borg friend of yours?" Kaytlyn asked. "If we are gonna be working together, I'd like to meet him first."

"Soon, he's a bit busy, but he'll be moving out here too," I said, giving Jackie a look. "It will be fine, he is easy to work with."

In truth, l did have a plan for that. Which was good because my armor was actually only a few feet away, stored inside a crate. In all honesty, hiding behind the fake borg disguise didn't seem nearly as important as it had originally. It had been an on-the-spot thing that Jackie thought up, and I had gone along with it because I was desperate for every layer of protection I could manage to wrap around myself. Now, though, it was just kind of getting in the way.

It would, however, make the perfect cover for someone else.

We continued to chat for a while longer before we split up. Jackie needed to get back to the city to do something with all the booze, and I had work to do. By the time I made it back to my workshop, I had about four hours left before I should sleep, so I quickly pulled up the CAD software and got started. It took five hours to finish the design, and I crashed on the cot that Jackie brought, sleeping in the side room while Samwise worked on getting the parts for my latest design printed out.

When I completed the first MRVN, which would go on to become Samwise after a complete rehauling of his AI, I got a huge download of robotic designs. Most of those designs were simple modifications, switching out limbs for more specific tools or appendages designed for specific tasks.

It also opened up a plethora of options for more advanced robot frames further along the tree. The one I was most interested in at the moment was the base IMC combat model, called the BRD-01 Automated Infantry, or Specters. They were the robotic version of grunts in the game, basically filling the battlefield with minions and mobs for the pilot players to kill for fun and points. In reality, the BRD-01 was actually a pretty impressive infantry unit, and while it didn't have an AI, it was capable of reacting to quickly changing variables and coming out on top. It wouldn't stand a chance against an Edgerunner or a Borg, but against normie Wraiths it would clean up.

Besides, building the specters was just a stepping stone. What I was really after was further into the robotic combatant's tree.

I woke up the next morning, the fifth to last day with the Titanfall tech tree, and immediately got to work assembling the Specter. Samwise had managed to get everything printed out, and spent time making a proper drone working rig, which ended up looking a lot like the power armor workstations from Fallout. By working together, we assembled the non-AI robot in record time, instructing the Specter to stand in the corner of the garage, locked up and ready to show to Kaytlyn whenever she woke up.

The flood of information I got from completing the Specter was similar to what I got after completing my first MRVN. It was a large download, and I was starting to think that developing more complicated things would lead to an even larger "space" around the tech tree being given to me for free. When the rush of knowledge was over, I knew how to make several specter variations, including their modified programming.

Completing the Specter also gave me access to more advanced combat robots, including my real goal, the Mk.6 Automated Law Enforcement Officer.

I was not familiar with their origin, but they were essentially robot pilots and sheriffs for the IMC colonies. While I wasn't looking for the western sheriff style getup that the design seemed to suggest, I could change that out easily. The frame was pretty advanced stuff, and was pound-for-pound superior to the Specter units in every way, a few times over. They had an advanced AI, something similar to Samwise's design, but combat-focused.

With some modifications to their AI, one of them would make an excellent leader of a group of Specters.

I knew there was also a design for robot frames called Simulacra, but they were literally just sleeves for download pilots. Their bodies were on par with the Mk.6, but required me to develop several extra bits for scanning and digitally copying someone's mind. It didn't require anything drastic since the original person wasn't affected negatively or anything, but the concept still left me feeling uncomfortable. The idea of locking a human consciousness inside a robotic shell sounded horrific, and I already knew how to make AI just as, if not more, proficient in combat and piloting.

While I'm sure Arasaka would be frothing at the mouth to get their hands on the Simulacra scanning tech, I was going to skip it for now.

After a bit of consideration, I got to work on the Mk.6 design, powering through the significantly advanced systems and blueprints. Another reason I was going with the Mk.6 was their jump jet rig, one powerful enough to move a heavier robot. I was hoping that its design was advanced enough that it would also unlock all of, or even just some of, the other jump jets I had access to.

I finally finished their design at two in the afternoon, and while Samwise immediately started getting the parts ready, I began working on their AI core. The first version, which would stay off, was, unsurprising considering its name, less a soldier and more of a police officer capable of open combat. Thankfully, with all of my accrued knowledge of AI design, that was well within my skill set to fix and even improve that.

We finished stage one, the original version of the Mk.6 ALEO, at around 10 p.m. The wash of information I gained was impressive and included all former versions of the ALEO, as well as several variations of its final version. I also got a full download of both the IMC and Frontier Militias jump jets. I cheered loudly in my workshop when I realized I could now make a dozen different models of the franchise's mainstay tech.

When the flow of info stopped, and I was done celebrating, we got right back to work. I was not satisfied with the ALEO AI, but thankfully, I knew how to fix that. At around four AM, I finally went to sleep, my first version of the Mk.6 was sitting in the garage, waiting to be turned on, while Samwise was getting to work on its brother.

When I woke up the next morning, I took a few minutes to walk around the town. I had been working nonstop, and while I desperately wanted to get back and finish what I was working on, I still recognized the need to not drive myself into the ground. Part of me was already looking forward to the next week, when I could finally relax a bit and let Samwise and the MRVNs pick up a lot of the work.

Speaking of him, my wonderful AI assistant and his siblings had already been hard at work. Since I had already gotten the benefit of building the first MK.6, there was no reason for me to be involved with building the second, even if it was a slightly modified version. All he needed were the plans for the modifications, which I had completed before going to bed.

By the time I stepped back into the garage, we had two Mk.6 ALEOs completed. One was basically stock, save their AI, which was specifically tuned to work as a sort of commander and soldier. He would have several specters under his command, and his main priority would be securing my property.

While our first ALEO was built to work with a group, his brother was built as a frontline fighter, a brute, and a combat expert who could work with a team or alone. To that end, my warden armor was already attached to their frame, slightly modified, and directly bolted to them. It could be removed for maintenance, but I had specifically designed his programming to anticipate and work with the heavier armor. He even had an improved jump kit to counter the extra weight.

The idea was that the armor would allow him to pretend that he was a Borg, letting him travel with us and interact with people a bit more freely. His siblings were rarely ever going to leave the compound, so they could relax a bit more.

The armor would also make him significantly stronger since his own artificial musculature would work with the built-in enhancements of the armor.

When everything was ready, I activated both of the robots, their lights and sensors ticking on, one after the other.

"Greetings, Sir," The first model said, standing up straight, the servos that made up his legs shifting as he did. "What is my assignment?"

"Your assignment, both of your assignments, for now, is to familiarize yourself with our situation and the world," I explained, gesturing to Samwise. "Samwise here can help you with that, and can explain how to access the internet through one of the many computers here at the compound."

"Thank you, Sir," The same unit said, his sibling still silent, though they did nod in what I was pretty sure was agreement. "We will spend some time learning local intelligence. Will you be free to answer questions after?"

"Of course. Time will be a bit short for the next few days, but I will always try and make time for you guys."

They both nodded, and Samwise led them away, the older brother leaning under the door as they stepped into the side room. I was beginning to realize, between creating these two and Samwise, that the moment you turn on a new AI, you weren't really meeting them for the first time. I could have predicted what both of them were going to say, verbatim, since I had programmed them from the ground up. It was after they started reading new information and learning on their own, like Samwise first did after I finished making him, that you really met them.

Leaving them to their own devices for now, I made my way over to my workstation, settling down for another day of rushed designing and building. I had three days left with this tech tree, and there was still so much I wanted to work on. I was just starting to gert to my next project when Samwise stepped out of the side room, the door sealing behind him,

"How are they doing?" I asked, spinning to face him. "Any issues?"

"They are currently surfing the web, learning about the world," He explained, his shoulder mimicking a shrug. "They seem to be in fine working order, Sir."

"That's good. You want to take a break or maybe do something on your own?" I asked. "You've been working nonstop since we moved here."

"That is incorrect. I have taken several breaks to communicate with my younger brothers and to recharge," He explained. "I have four hours of charge left before I must do so again."

"Right… well, let me know if you want some time to explore the town or work on your own project," I repeated, knowing that no AI would really enjoy a "break" in the same way a human would.

"I will do so, Sir. For now, I must check up on the MRVN units to ensure they are working correctly," He responded, his screen flashing with a thumbs up.

"Alright, Sam, good luck."

He nodded, before leaving out through the open garage door, disappearing out of sight. I couldn't help but smile, before turning back to my computer, the design software already opened. According to Jackie, we had an appointment with Dakota Smith later that night, which meant I needed to get started on their gift. Once again, the colonist tech of the IMC came through as I brainstormed ideas.

At first, I considered a water filtration system, one that would let a nomad group filter even the most tainted water sources into potable water. The Titanfall universe had dozens of units like that, and some of them would be very impressive for my old world. But in the cyberpunk universe they weren't really all that special. There were only so many ways to purify water, and once you nailed those down, advancements came pretty slowly.

Besides, from what I understood, impure water wasn't the major problem that nomads faced. It was finding water. Water was a commodity, which meant all its sources were already owned by corporations. So, giving them a nice filter wouldn't really help much beyond making their lives a bit easier.

I was gonna solve their water problem completely.

I quickly got to work, putting together a deceptively advanced design specifically made by the IMC to allow people to live on desert worlds. By the time I was done, I decided to have Samwise print out the parts for the machine while we were gone, so I could make one when we got back. Not having to worry about buying water would come in really handy, and the tech was advanced enough that I was interested in what other uses it could have.

When the design was completed, I put it into a shard for easy transport. I was just pulling it out of the computer when both of my newest AIs came out of the side room.

"Hey guys, perfect timing. I just finished with one project, and Jackie won't be here to pick us up for a few hours," I said with a smile. "Why don't I go snag Samwise, and we can sit down and talk for a bit."

"We would appreciate that, Sir," The more standard ALEO model said with a nod. "We have a few questions."

"Great, just give me a second, and I'll be right back," I said, patting them on the shoulders despite one of them being a good bit taller than me.

I left the garage and quickly found Samwise, who was directing the MRVN units, as they tore down one of the wrecked trailer houses. When I explained what was up, he happily gave them a few more orders before following after me, going back to the garage and back to his waiting siblings.
 
Chapter Seventeen
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When Sam and I returned, we found the two ALEO units sitting down inside the side room, waiting for us. Stepping into the room with the armored unit was an interesting feeling. I could only imagine that it must have been just the barest sliver of what the scavs and 6th Street gangers went through during our last two gigs.

The warden armor cut an intimidating figure, and even if it only added several inches in height, the effect it had seemed to make the ALEO unit tower over us. Still, I knew they were friendly, so I easily brushed off the intimidating feeling. When Samwise and I sat across from them, the room was quiet for a moment before I leaned in.

"Before we start, I want to make something clear to you two, and you as well, Sam," I started, making sure to look at each of them in their sensor units. "I built you three for an express purpose. Sam, you're my building assistant, helping me directly and coordinating the MRVN units. ALEO One, I built you for combat, but specifically for securing and protecting me and the people living in this town. You are our security and coordinator for the Specters I plan on making. And ALEO Two, you were made for direct combat. You'll be taking over my previous identity of a borg, acting as a frontline fighter, part bodyguard, and part tank for Jackie's solo team."

As I talked, I continued to look at all three of them, focusing on how they reacted to my words. I knew they were perfectly capable of locking up and coming off as simple robots, which they would have to do a lot to keep their identities secret, but here they reacted to my words in a fluid, almost human way. They nodded along with my words, shifting and moving in a way that belayed their understanding of what I was talking about.

"That being said, that is not all you have to be. While I need you to perform the actions I made you for, I'm not here to restrict your development," I assured them. "Which is why I am giving you a promise. Once you have been working with me for five years, including you, Samwise, I will fully relieve you of any task or job you wish to be done with. You will still need to earn your keep, as working is pretty much a fundamental part of existing in this world, but I won't lock you into the roles I made you for. You'll even be free to leave by that point… though that would lead to several complications we would need to solve."

"Why would we wish to leave?" ALEO One asked, cocking its head slightly. "We were constructed to perform a task and perform it well. Would this task not be our purpose in life?"

"That… that's a question you're going to have to figure out yourself," I admitted. "And I don't expect you to figure it out for a while. Right now, all three of you are very early in your development cycle. As you evolve and grow, you'll start considering this conversation more and start to understand, or at least interpret, what it means to you. For now, just keep it tucked away in your memories for later."

"I do not understand why the memory is important, but we will store it in a secure memory file," ALEO One agreed, his armored brother nodding in agreement.

"Good, thank you," I responded with a smile. "Now, do you have any questions?"

"You created me to fill the role of a heavy combat unit and to take over the "borg" identity, Alloy," ALEO Two asked immediately. "Is that to be my name?"

"No, you're more than welcome to pick whatever name you two would like," I assured them. "He might have mentioned it, but Samwise picked his name as well. You can choose to go by Alloy in public, or we can just say you're changing your name or going by your original. That's also up to you."

"Thank you, sir," He said with a nod. "In that case, following Samwise's guidance, I will go by Riggs."

"And I will go by Murtaugh," His smaller brother added. "I believe those names fit our roles well."

"Wait… you guys read up on Lethal Weapon?" I asked, looking confused. "They… Lethal Weapon is a thing here?"

"Why would it not be?" Samwise asked, a question mark projected on his chest. "I assume this has to do with your origin?"

"Yes… Huh, I wonder…" I trailed off before shaking my head and focusing on the two AI robots in front of me. "Either way, those names work well. Welcome to the team, Murtaugh and Riggs."

I stood up and reached out, shaking both of their hands with a smile. They were slow to accept, but they both got it after a second, carefully shaking my hands.

"I have a question as well," Murtaugh asked as I sat back down. "You put us in charge of things that, in certain circumstances, might put us at odds, considering the human propensity to put themselves in danger. What is the chain of command in such circumstances?"

I bit back a smile, having predicted a similar question from him since his programming was geared toward military strategy.

"Consider me your superior officer, but all three of you are of high enough ranks that voicing your opinions, even if they clash heavily with my own, is expected," I explained. "I may override them, but I don't want yes men or bots working for me."

We continued to chat about the world, the status of AI, and the threats we might be facing. As we talked, I got a better feel for their already slowly, just barely emerging personalities. Murtaugh seemed more rigid, more concerned about making sure everything was set and organized, while Riggs was more concerned about what threats we might face. I was sure their personalities would flourish and expand as they gained experience, but even this was interesting to observe.

When we had finally answered all their questions and discussed what the future might hold, something I was honestly hesitant to do since I had no idea what I would have access to after this week's break, we left the side room behind and went out searching for the only other human living at Rocky Ridge.

It was time to do some introductions.

Up until this point, I had been circumspect about directly introducing people to the robots I had been creating. Jackie had met Samwise, as had Kaytlyn, and they both just assumed that he was a production robot I made to help around the workshop. Murtaugh and Riggs, on the other hand, would be much more visible. They were basically going to be a constant presence around the town, actively performing tasks without my direction, so keeping them a secret was obviously a no-go. So, instead, we would come up with a cover story.

Both of them would pretend to be borgs.

As far as I could tell, it was the perfect cover for them. Not only did they both look like borgs, but it would cover up any weirdness with their developing AI. After all, borgs were known to get a bit quirky.

We left the garage and walked through the town, leaving Samwise in the workshop since he wanted to get a jump on some of the upgrades I wanted to make for him, Riggs, and Murtaugh. After walking around for a few minutes, we finally spotted Kaytlyn sitting at the lookout point on top of the liquor store. She spotted us at just the same time we spotted her, so I waved her down. It took her a few seconds to make her way down to us, even if she jumped the last half dozen feet.

"Holy hell… What happened to just having one borg on the team?" She asked, crossing the remaining distance, bobbing around Riggs and then Murtaugh as she looked them over. "Names Kaytlyn. Nice to meet both of you."

Something about her posture and how she moved told me that the tattooed solo was only pretending to be nonchalant and casual. There was an underlying tension running through her, perhaps nervousness about having two unknown borgs in town with us.

"It's nice to meet you as well. My name is Murtaugh, this is Alloy," Murtaugh explained, reaching out to shake Kaytlyn's hand.

"Call me Riggs," Riggs said as they shook hands. "Only fair since we will be working together."

"Murtaugh is more of a coordinator than a frontline combat specialist," I explained. "You saw the bot I made earlier? The Specter? I plan on having about ten of them, maybe more, on hand, with Murtaugh in charge of them. You'll be working together a lot as security."

"Damn… You keep on surprising me, Jackson. First that fucking nova sniper rifle, and now you got borg friends coming out to help?" She said, focusing on me with a smirk before looking at Murtaugh. "I'm guessing you and I should have a conversation since it seems we are going to be doing security together. And you, big guy… I wanna spar with you sometime soon, see what kind of mess you make when you fight."

She smiles again at Riggs, this time with a slight feral undertone, her grin a bit wider than you would expect from a friendly challenge. Combined with the way her eyes shifted colors to red, her pupils sharpened into slits… It was more than a bit unnerving.

"Alright, try not to get flatlined by the borg your first day meeting him," I said, shaking my head. "You two, your time is yours until later tonight when we go see Dakota Smith. Riggs, I'd like you to come with us, and Murtaugh, I'd appreciate it if you kept an eye on this place when we are gone."

"Acceptable," Riggs said with a nod, while Murtaugh nodded in agreement.

"Great. Jackie will be here in a few hours. Until then, I'll be in the workshop."

I beat a hasty retreat back to the garage, happy to let Murtaugh and Riggs have some time to explore and talk to Kaytlyn. There was a chance she would pick up on their… slightly wooden personalities, but again, considering most borgs were considered robots with a few fleshy bits, I'm sure she would chalk it up to that. They would grow more varied personalities over time, and if she wasn't read into our secrets by then, we could just chalk it up to them becoming more comfortable with her.

I spent the next three hours, all I had time for before Jackie showed up, working on a surprisingly potent piece of tech from the Titanfall universe, the Holo Pilot. In the game, from what I understood, since I had never played the Titanfall 2 multiplayer, it was seen as a bit of a joke since it was easy to identify. To me, however, without the gamey nonsense, all I saw was a relatively long-range, high-fidelity holo projection. None of the blown-out, low-rez crap that Night City had projected up into the sky.

The implication of the tech was staggering. From tactical trickery to the entertainment industry, holoprojection like this could change the world. It also sat very close to the ability to make things "go invisible," like the cloak ability. In fact, I was pretty sure that the cloak ability was just a slightly improved version of the holoprojection tech but focused around the user so they could hide inside the projection.

I finished the design for the holoprojector, and I got a good idea of how the machine was constructed, but the knowledge I gained about how it worked was minimal. I would need to put it together to really understand it. I could tell there was some exotic stuff going on with light and exotic forms of energy, but beyond that, I was lost.

I was just putting the final touches on the design for the holo pilot when Jackie arrived. I heard his motorcycle entering the town, slowing down somewhere by the BD station. Suddenly, the fact that Jackie didn't know that Riggs was taking over my Alloy person spun around in my head enough to catch my attention. I cursed and started looking around for my keyfob. By the time I found it, however, Jackie had made his way to me, entering the garage with wide eyes.

"Qué pedo, wey? Pendejo!" He asked, peeking his head out of the garage, probably checking who was listening. "Why is your armor outside, moving around on its own and telling me I could find you in here?"

"Sorry, Jackie," I said, rubbing my forehead before continuing to explain. "I built a pair of combat robots, and one of them is inside the armor."

"You… No mames, of course you did," He said, rubbing his face. "What are you gonna do for protection now?"

"Well, first, I'm gonna get bone and muscle lace and finish it off with a skinweave," I explained. "Then I'll be whipping up something a bit sleeker and flexible."

"Why? I mean, you were pretty untouchable with that armor!"

"Because I've got an idea for something better, and I wasn't the biggest fan of being the team tank," I said, shaking my head. "Jumping on one grenade is enough for my lifetime, thank you."

"I… okay, that's fair," He admitted, taking a mental step back. "What you got as a replacement?"

"I got what should be a pretty potent stealth system in the works," I explained. "Beyond that…"

One of the most debated topics about the Titanfall games was where the Pilots ranked against other Super Soldiers throughout other games and comics and if they were even enhanced at all. The thing was, the lore was all mixed up. Some of the lore stated that pilots were not enhanced, that their capabilities stemmed from a frankly ridiculous-sounding training program with a 98% fatality rate. However, the lore also showed that pilots were able to physically go toe to toe with robots that were factually much stronger than normal humans. They also regularly performed feats that would ruin or kill an unaltered person. There were even conflicting mentions of actual augmentations and enhancements inside the game.

While I had no idea if the number of fatalities was the result of gamification, or if the real Titanfall universe was willing to kill 98% of their most skilled soldiers to turn a measly two percent into incredible soldiers, I did know that the lore was right, the pilots were not enhanced.

Sort of.

While the base pilot was not enhanced, pilots did have options for enhancements. From what I understood, which wasn't much since Tinker of Fiction supplied information about the tech, but information about the setting was scarce, it must have been a real "volunteer or you're fired" type of situation.

They also had a middle ground, an undersuit that functioned very similarly to how my warden armor did, meaning it used a layer of artificial muscle to enhance the user's movement and strength. Titanfalls artificial muscle was light years ahead of what XCOM had access to and significantly better than what Cyberpunk did as well. I wasn't entirely sure how the underlayer worked since it had no structure or frame to pull against, but I was eager to find out.

When I returned from our visit to Dakota, I wanted to finish putting together the Holo Pilot, which I was hoping would then open up the cloaking systems. Then, I wanted to crack the pilot underlayer before moving on through my list. Eventually, if everything went well, I would reach a few of the enhancements I saw on the tech tree. I didn't plan on installing any of them myself, at least any time soon, but having them on hand would be nice, especially as a potential incentive to future team members.

"I have a few things in mind. Might have a few things for you, too. I just need some time," I finished, slapping Jackie on the back and guiding him out of the garage, waving to Samwise as we left. "In the meantime, what do you think I should get first, the skinweave or the bone lace?"

"Skineweave, hands down, choom," He responded. "Then the bone lace and the muscle lace. Gotta protect yourself before you upgrade yourself."

"Fair enough, makes sense."

We made our way along the road and back to the BD shack, where Kaytlyn, Riggs, and Murtaugh were waiting. After a short conversation, I took Riggs back to the garage to arm up, letting him clip my mag rifle to his back, as well as my sword. I still had my pistol, and I would make new weapons soon, but for now, the weapons were his. They would be much more effective in his hands anyway.

When everyone was locked and loaded, Jackie and Riggs climbed into my truck while I climbed into the passenger seat of Kaytlyn's Type-66. I wanted to drive my truck, but Jackie refused, saying it would take forever to get there with me driving. Once Kaytlyn heard I was a slow driver, she immediately agreed with Jackie.

Riggs abstained from voting.

I buckled myself in as Kaytlyn started her car, the engine roaring to life. As it did, the covered windows blinked on, revealing the outside world. This was the first car I had been in with the CrystalDome system, and it was an interesting experience.

"You like the CrystalDome stuff?" I asked, gesturing to the windshield. "No delay or anything like that?"

"Not that I can detect," She responds with a shrug. "I had to get them put in when armoring everything up."

As we pulled away from the town, leaving Murtaugh and a single Specter behind, something I wasn't thrilled about, Kaytlyn almost immediately pulled out and around Jackie, leaning heavily on the gas pedal.

"What kind of upgrades does it have?"

"Well, the passenger and driver's seat are armored pretty heavily," She said, leaning forward to knock on the front paneling, the sound coming off it much denser than I would have expected. "Aftermarket engine, upgrades to her suspension. She's a hell of a money pit, but she's never disappointed, so I call it worth it."

"Hmmm… good to know I can offer car upgrades as payment, too," I responded with a perk. "I got a power core system I could install that will keep you from ever needing to replace a battery again."

"That… How does that work?"

"Exotic material that I created," I responded with a shrug. "Interested?"

"A bit, but I only change the battery every few years, so what's the point?"

"You would never have to worry about running your car without the engine going again." I pointed out. "Air conditioner, lights, speakers, anything you want. Hell, if I make it big enough, you could use your car to run a whole bunch of stuff."

"Ooh, that would be nice!" She said with a contemplative look. "I'll think about it."

We made our way across the badlands, diverting back towards Night City before turning onto another road to head back out, this time heading east. Again, I was reminded that, at least in the badlands, the game had shrunk everything down to a fraction of the distance. I was pretty sure it was true for the city as well, but it was either to a much lesser degree or the buildings hid the difference. Probably both.

When we finally closed in on our destination, Kaytlyn slowed down considerably, waiting for Jackie to catch up. When he finally did, we pulled into the front parking lot and junkyard. Once we were parked, we climbed out of the car, as did Jackie and Riggs. Both of them walked around and nodded, and after a moment, I took the lead, heading towards the garage itself.

I didn't remember much about this place or its owner from the games. I did a few gigs for her, but beyond that, I don't think I ever actually went to her base. So when a bunch of seeming civilians suddenly started acting more like security as we approached, I was caught off guard.

"We spooked them," Kaytlyn explained. "They pretend to be nobodies, but since we rolled up in a big group…"

"We look like a threat," I finished, nodding in understanding. I took a step forward, setting myself apart from the group and focusing on the closest person. "We made an appointment with Dakota Smith. I'm Jackson. This is Jackie, Kaytlyn, and Riggs."

For a moment, they just stared back at me before one of them gestured to the youngest-looking member of the group. The younger man nodded and quickly ran into the building. As they left, I looked back at Riggs.

"Would you mind waiting out here?" I asked apologetically. "I should have realized rolling up with this many people would make them nervous, but…"

"I will wait out here," He agreed with a nod, turning to sit on the hood of a rusted-out car, the hood bending down under his weight.

"Thanks, buddy. We'll be out soon,"

We waited a moment longer before the young man came back, guiding us into the garage, around the exterior of the room, and back through a sealed door. Dakota Smith was waiting for us, sitting in a wheeled computer chair in one corner of the dimly lit room.

"Greetings. Quite the group you showed up with, Jackson," She said as we entered, studying us one by one. "An ex-Valentino, a familiar face, and a borg using tech I've never seen before."

"We are a bit of a mixed bag," I admitted wth a shrug. "But in a place like this, you can't afford to be picky with the people you trust. Choosey, yes, but not picky."

She squinted at me for a moment before nodding her head in understanding. It was true, after all. In a place like Cyberpunk, finding someone you could trust was like finding a diamond in a pig pen, and you couldn't afford to shut them out because they weren't squeaky clean, or had 90% of their body replaced by cold metal and cybernetics.

"True enough, I suppose." She admitted before gesturing for us to sit. Jackie and Kaytlyn sat on the couch along the wall while I dropped into a second swivel chair.

"What is your purpose in Rocky Ridge?" She asked, cutting right to the chase.

"I don't have some grand purpose beyond avoiding prying eyes," I explained. "I'm an inventor, and I like to build stuff, but I also enjoy my privacy and independence. I have no desire to work for a corporation, but people like me… they aren't really given a choice."

"You had Padre watching over you in Night City, here you're more open," She pointed out. "Why leave his protection?"

"Well, for one, he promised to continue looking after me, keeping his ear to the ground," I corrected. "And it's the same answer as before. I like my independence, and I have no interest in joining, even unofficially, a gang or group like that."

For a long moment, she was silent, looking between me and my companions, before once again locking on to me.

"I'm not sure I like you being out here. Nothing has changed so far, but I fear you will destabilize the balance between the gangs, the nomads families, and the Corporations."

"Well… nothing stays balanced forever," I said with a shrug. "Change is a good thing. For example…"

I pulled out a shard, which contained the plans for my gift. I held it out for her to see before returning it to my pocket.

"That shard contains something I call a water vapor electrocondenser. Using powerful electromagnetic fields and an internal condensing system, one of these devices can pull water out of the air in all but the harshest of conditions," I explained. "No more paying corporations water fees, or racing between cities before your water runs out. Even in the harshest deserts in North America, just one of these devices could keep two people comfortably hydrated. Here, near the coast, that number quadruples. Not only is the design portable, but easily scalable, meaning making a device that supplies water for dozens of people is absolutely possible."

The older woman looked at me, her eyes wide as she worked her way through what I just said. There were several different versions of water vaporators on the market, but they were nothing compared to what my machine could do, by several factors.

"And what's the cost of this gift?" She finally asked, though there was an obvious undertone of disbelief.

"The same sort of deal I have with Padre. A chunk of eddies and the promise that you're in my corner, keeping an eye out for anything that might be coming my way."

"We would need to verify that your design works," She pointed out.

"That's fine," I responded with a shrug, reaching into my pocket for the shard again.

I was reaching out to hand it to the fixer when I saw Kaytlyn wince. I knew what she was reacting to, but I had faith in my work. I was handing her the plans to a device that was a good thirty or fifty years ahead of what anyone had access to. It was simple, easy to produce, and worked incredibly well. Once she had proof that everything I said was true, she would pay me. She couldn't afford to lose access to what I might make in the future.

Even if she did try and stiff me, I would just release the plans on the internet, with a specific note that she had tried to cheat me. Fixers lived and died by their reputation, and learning that she had tried to claim such an advanced piece of tech for her own without paying the seller? Well, it wouldn't go over very well.

Dakota reached out and took the shard, looking at it for a moment before whistling, looking out the sealed door. Only a few seconds later, a mechanic stepped in, though one with a suspiciously gun-shaped bulge under his overalls. She handed him the shard and whispered a few words before he nodded and walked off.

"Assuming that your invention works the way you claim it will, what exactly am I supposed to take away from this?" She asked, focusing back on me. "You've made it very clear you're not a joiner. So I'm just supposed to accept the danger you bring to the area, since you provided some trinket?"

"What you're supposed to take away is that I'm an asset worth investing in," I said, partially repeating myself. "I'm not looking for you to move heaven and earth. Just keep me in the loop about anything that might threaten me and mine. I've got some big plans for Rocky Ridge, and they may even include things that might benefit passing nomad families."

She stared at me for a long moment, eyes locked on to mine like she was reading a transcript of my history, trying to figure out if I was a good horse to bet on. I don't know what she saw, but after a moment passed, she snorted, shaking her head and standing from her seat, prompting me to do the same.

"Alright, if your creation works like you say it does, you've got my support," She said. "And your payment. Padre was right, you're fresh like a kid, but you've got a way of making people pay attention. Guess we will find out together if that's a good thing."

She reached out, and we shook on the deal, her grip firm despite her age. Before we released our shake, I spoke up again.

"Oh, and once I'm finished moving in, we take jobs as well. In case you got something that needs handling."

"Of course you do."
 
Chapter Eighteen
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By the time we left Dakota Smith's garage, the sun was starting to set over the horizon, and I found myself nodding off in the passenger seat of Kaytlyn's Type-66. I had been working nearly nonstop for days now, and the break to check in with Dakota had let it all catch up to me. I was exhausted.
"Hey, Jay, you alright over there?" Kaytlyn asked, reaching over to nudge my shoulder.

"Yeah… just the last few days catching up to me," I said. "Been working hard to expand into the new space, and I'm capped."

"Gonk, you're gonna make yourself sick," She said, rolling her eyes. "Dummy."

"Yeah, I know. I just need a few more days. After that, I can finally slow down for a while," I said, ignoring the look Kaytlyn gave me. "Need to build a few more things and set up some more tech before I can switch over to production for a week."

"Damn, that's impressive for a garage setup, Jay."

I shrugged and leaned back, enjoying the comfortable seat. When we pulled back into Rocky Ridge, I said goodbye to Jackie, thanked Kaytlyn for the ride, and headed back to the garage. Samwise had long since completed the parts for the holo pilot gear and had also taken the initiative to print the parts for a water vapor electrocondenser.

Rather than starting on the holo pilot, since it would have taken me around maybe three hours to put together, I spent a single hour putting the condenser together, getting a decent-sized download of information, including a few upgrades, in the process. When I instructed Samwise to make as many of the condensers as he could while I was sleeping. With enough of them, we wouldn't have to worry about water for a long time. After that, I immediately walked back to my trailer and nearly collapsed into my bed.

The following morning started a little late, but I woke up feeling so much better. I didn't realize how hard the fatigue and work had been grinding down on me.

"Man… I cannot wait until I get some sort of super soldier serum," I said as I sat heavily down in my workshop chair. "I'm sick of being tired and fragile."

"Do you think it is likely you will find one soon?" Samwise asked from beside me, setting up what I would need to assemble the holo pilot system.

"I don't know, to be honest," I admitted with a frown. "Super soldiers are a semi-common trope, but… a lot of stories gloss over it. I don't want to jinx anything, so I'm not gonna say what I'm hoping for, but… well, I guess time will tell."

Samwise and I chatted a bit, but soon, I was too engrossed in my work to multitask. The holo pilot system was advanced or exotic enough that even as I was doing the initial design process, how it worked eluded me. Thankfully, as I started to put it together, I started to comprehend what I was doing and how everything fit together.

The holo projection system was built around a backpack support kit, with an arm that came over the shoulder and acted as the projector, though that was not what it really was. Instead, it was armed with dozens of little, precisely controlled laser projectors. However, these projectors were special in that they altered the charge of the light as it left the arm. The projectors were calibrated to send their charged beams of light on a collision course for a separate beam, also sent out by the arm. These beams would collide at a precisely calculated point, and the photons in one stream would interact with the other. For the brief nanosecond that these normally invisible lasers interacted with each other, they released a controllable amount of light.

The invisible lasers also explained the trail of flickering lights behind the projected image. As dust passed through the beams, it would light up from the laser hitting it, causing a blinking trail behind the projection.

Importantly, though, the amount of light was not the only thing that could be controlled. By adjusting the several aspects of the laser, you can control the wavelength of visible light produced by the collision. This meant that making a recognizable image is as simple as mixing colors to produce the whole color wheel.

From there, the "projector" functions like a 3D CRT monitor. It drew out the projection line by line, way too fast for our eyes to see anything but the finished product, the projected image. This immediately told me a few things. For one, I could scale this up or down, but there was a limit. If I made the image to large, the arm wouldn't be fast enough to complete the image before the eye could see a blank spot. I was sure I could solve the problem with a little ingenuity, but I could figure that out later.

As I finished the projector arm and pack, I could see that this tech was definitely what the cloak ability used to function. I could also see that it would be very vulnerable to anyone using any tech that lets them perceive time more slowly, either with a Sandevistan or a Kerenzikov. It could also be beaten by any eyewear scanning over a certain frame per second or, perhaps most disappointingly, by taking a picture. The "FPS" of the holo system was extremely high; it had to beat Titans, after all, but that was no match for a still-frame image.

The bottom line was that the tech would be useful, but it wasn't going to fool everyone or everything. In fact, I would say that relying on it completely would be a mistake.

I finished putting the system together, and I immediately started working on the cloaking tech. As I predicted, the holoprojection technology played a large part with the cloaking tech. In fact, it was nearly identical, save for a few different parts meant to angle the projection down at the person wearing the device. I finished designing it within an hour, using the holo pilot system as a base, and let Samwise handle printing the parts. I was hoping that between the holo pilot and the cloak ability, I would have as good a grip as I could get on the tech. With any luck, it would illuminate a significant "area" around the holo tech in the branch.

While Samwise worked on printing and preparing the cloak build, I moved on to my next project, the underlayer that pilots wore under their armor. The project was broken down into two major parts. The first was the artificial muscles, and the second was the nervous system reader that allowed the person to control the suit. Where the warden armor read your motion, interpreting shifts in your limbs before moving to copy it, the pilot underlayer read your nervous system directly. The former involved a noticeable delay, making the armor feel clunky and slow, whereas the latter allowed for nearly complete synchronization between the wearer and the underlayer.

Now, previously, I struggled with figuring out just how the underlayer worked without a rigid structure for the artificial muscles to work with, like how our muscles used our skeleton. As I started putting the design down, however, I began to understand how it functioned better.

Essentially, the strands of artificial muscle had three states. The first was its default state, in which the strand was flexible. If you put a current through the strand in one direction, it would twist around itself clockwise, which would cause the strand to shrink and pull at whatever it was attached to. With just a single strand, the effect was tiny, but combined with thousands of other strands, the effect was impressive.

But where the real genius was, was what happened when a current was applied in the other direction. By changing the flow of electrons through the artificial muscle, the strands become rigid, locking in place. With hundreds of thousands of strands all woven together, one "muscle group" would act as the "skeleton" for another, and vice versa. With some potent programming and the nervous system reader, it was an incredibly intuitive and powerful combination. The whole system would stiffen and release at precise points, enhancing and supporting the user's movement.

The ability to tense and release the artificial muscles was also what let pilots survive massive falls and not shatter their hands when punching metal robots. It wasn't bulletproof, and strands of the artificial muscle did get damaged, which meant some muscle groups had to be replaced frequently. That explained why only pilots got the underlayer since supplying replacement parts for a whole army would be insane.

Of course, the system was not perfect. While wearing the underlayer, I would be significantly stronger, but I wouldn't be bench-pressing cars anytime soon. The system was restricted to how squishy the person wearing it was, which was why pilots were so heavily encouraged to enhance themselves.

Of course, once I got Skinweave and some bone and muscle lace, I would be able to crank the suit up to eleven. I still wouldn't be bench-press cars, but I would definitely be stronger than Jackie.

Until I made him one, of course.

I quickly copied down the blueprints while the molly-makers were pumping out the final parts for the cloaking device. When I was done with the blueprints, I stepped away to work on the cloak, once again letting Samwise handle the printing.

Once I was done with the cloak, and had mentally sorted through the knowledge it had given me about the holo projection system. I started assembling the pilot underlayer. It was slow going since I had to weave and attach a frankly ridiculous amount of stretching filaments, artificial muscles, and other bits before finally attaching the central nervous system scanner and the battery pack. It was a long process, taking until three pm to complete.

When I was done, the temptation to try it on was too much to resist, so with Sam's help, I slid into the underlayer, which fit me snuggly. I built it to my exact specifications, but there was an alternate suit, which I conveniently got the knowledge and design for when I finished my sized version, that was adjustable. It was far from one size fits all, but it would still come in handy.

When I was inside the suit, I was just about to step outside when a smile curled up on my lips. I walked over to where the clocked pack was hanging up on the wall. With Samwise's help, I managed to fit the system on, strapping it over the underlayer.

By then, he had also finished his adjustments to the system, replacing the power source with a series of Elerium nodes. Not only was the improved system lighter, but it also had infinite charge. One Elerium node would build up energy while the other ran the system, and they would switch off as necessary.

I activated the system and laughed when I disappeared. I looked down at my hands, spotting a slight shift in the image being projected around me. Certain no one would see me, I finally went outside the garage to test out the underlayer and the cloak tech. I started by running along the street, the suit supporting and assisting me the entire time. At a slow run, it was basically doing all the work, meaning I could sprint for a ridiculously long time. When I was pushing myself for speed, the artificial muscle weave surrounding my limbs worked with my own muscles, pushing me to a speed well beyond what I would normally be capable of.

Eventually, after twenty minutes of running and jumping around the town while nearly invisible, I got caught. I came around the corner of a trailer, heading back to the garage, when something slammed into, driving me to the ground. Murtaugh had tackled me, while Riggs and Kaytlyne rushed over to cover him, their weapons trained on me. Thankfully, the impact knocked the cloak out of alignment enough for the field to fail, revealing who was running around the town. Unfortunately, Murtaugh was quite a heavy robot, and the impact drove the air from my lungs.

"Jay?! What the fuck!" Kaytlyn said, pulling her pistol back and angrily shoving it back into its holster. "When the fuck did you get optical camo?"

As Murtaugh scrambled off of me, I sat up slowly, holding my hand up as I regained the ability to breathe again, struggling for a long moment before recovering.

"Didn't, I made it," I responded, letting Riggs help me to my feet. "Was just giving it a test run."

They escorted me back to the garage, both Murtaugh and Riggs apologizing, but I waved them off.

"It's my fault, guys. I should have said something. In fact… I need to make something for us to communicate with so that this doesn't happen again."

When I sat back down in the garage side room, nursing a drink and wincing at the bruises around my torso while Samwise carried the camo device to hang up in the garage. Kaytlyn sat down beside me, still clearly annoyed.

"So you made some camo, huh?" She asked, poking at my suit. "Doesn't look like any I've used before."

"That's because it probably works differently from anything that you've used or seen before," I explained. "And the suit isn't the camo, the pack was. This is an armor underlayer."

She waited for me to explain more, but when I didn't elaborate, she pouted, standing up from the couch.

"Fine, fine. I get it. Not sure you trust me yet," She said, raising her hands in surrender. "I'll go check the tower or something."

As she left, I couldn't help but feel that she genuinely disliked the fact that I didn't trust her. I didn't call her back, though, the door sliding shut behind her as she left.

"Sir, again, I am very sorry," Murtaugh apologized. "If you wish to decommission me-"

"Woah! No, absolutely not! First off, you were just doing your job, Murtaugh. You are not in trouble. I'm glad you guys were on the ball," I said, patting his shoulder. "Even if you had fucked up, decommissioning you is akin to killing you, and I would never do that, especially not as a punishment."

"What if we requested it?" Riggs asked out of nowhere, shocking the hell out of me. "You said you wanted us to be free. Would you decommission us if we asked you to?'

"I… Riggs, do you want to be decommissioned?"

"No, I am just curious," He admitted. "Which comes first, what we want or what you want?"

"That's the kind of question with no real answers until you're faced with it for real, Riggs," I responded with a shiver. "I would have to think about that a lot, and I kind of don't want to unless it's something I actually have to do. If you guys are suffering for some reason, you should tell me, and together, we might be able to find a fix."

"That doesn't answer the question."

"Welcome to being alive, Riggs. Not all questions have answers, and even if they do, sometimes you don't get them anyway."

When the two AI-driven robots were finally satisfied that I was okay, they left the garage to go back to work patrolling the town. I did a quick stretch, wincing at the bruises on my stomach and chest from Murtaugh's tackle. I spent some time inspecting the underlayer, making sure that it hadn't been damaged. It was pretty resilient, so I wasn't surprised to find that it was intact, if a little scuffed.

"Alright, Samwise. What's next?" I asked, stepping out of the side room and into the workshop.

"I believe the next item on your list was some of the cyberware and other enhancements," He stated.

"Right… what kind of options does Titanfall have…"

I closed my eyes and dove back into my mind, exploring the Titanfall tech tree. I could see the spots lit up by what I had managed to make, as well as what I had access to with all of the knowledge I had gained so far. There was a lot that I had unlocked, both from bonus information I received when I finished projects and from my increased total knowledge, allowing me to fully understand certain parts and concepts.

Unsurprisingly, considering the scale of the Titanfall universe, all of that was just a drop of water in the ocean. There was a whole branch of spaceship tech that I could barely see into, and several other fields that were even less revealed. I shook my hand, forcing myself to ignore most of it. The sad fact of it was that I needed to pick and choose. I had two full days left, as well as whatever time was left today. I needed to focus on what I could do with that time.

I mentally searched the cybernetics branch, following the start of the path and going up as far as I could. The work with the artificial muscle for the underlay gave me a good head start, but as I examined each piece of tech, I slowly began to frown.

The Titanfall universe had plenty of enhancements, replacements, and modifications, but as far as I could see, almost all of it was either around the same level of potency or below what was available in Cyberpunk. Sure, their artificial muscles were much more advanced than what this world had access to, but somehow, this universe had gotten so good at miniaturizing smaller mechanical parts that they didn't need artificial muscles in most cases.

I spent fifteen minutes examining everything before finally concluding that it just wasn't worth the time. This would be especially true when I started making enough money to buy whatever cyberware I wanted.

While I was shocked at my conclusion at first, the more I thought about it, the more it made sense. If I had been stranded somewhere else, then getting Cyberpunk as a tech tree would have been all about the Cyberware. Titanfall was all about AI and robots, and Cyberpunk was all about cybernetics. Sure, Titanfall included a lot of superior tech because of its more advanced setting, but it made a certain kind of sense that its cybernetics and body modding wouldn't be able to match a setting who's entire purpose was high-tech body enhancements.

"Alright, change of plans," I said, leaning back from my workshop desk. "I'm skipping enhancements and cybernetics. There's nothing they have that isn't already here."

"Very well, what is next on your list?" Sawmise asked, not skipping a beat.

I frowned and pulled up the list on my computer, crossing off what I had managed so far. Just like when I had looked at my list of projects from XCOM, it didn't look like much when scrunched together on the list. Thankfully, I only had to look around to see just how much progress I had made.

"Alright. It looks like medical equipment is next," I said, nodding to myself as I double-checked the list before getting to work.

The rest of the day was spent designing and building various pieces of medical equipment. While the cybernetics portion of the medical industry was pretty advanced in this reality and was obviously leaps and bounds beyond what we had back home, it was nothing compared to what Titanfall had access to. This world tended to prescribe cyberware as the cure for a lot, whereas Titanfall actually attempted to cure or fix things before cutting them out and replacing them.

I focused primarily on the sort of steps you would see in colonies, advanced equipment in small, portable forms that were built to last and be easily replaceable. Most of these were specifically designed to be made by molly-makers, meaning the printing process was quick and easy. By the time I went to sleep, I had the bare bones for an entire infirmary printed out. The following morning, I continued the process as I padded out the rest.

The final, and perhaps largest piece of medical equipment, was something called an Auto-Pharma. It was a fridge-sized device capable of making several thousand medications on demand. Everything from allergy medication to anti-coagulants. Even better, it was all drugs from Titanfall, meaning it was way past anything I had seen or was available here. Even better, new information could be fed into the device to enable new production recipes. I would need to buy a lot of chemicals for all of the recipes to work, but having a working Auto-Pharma was the final piece of a medbay design that would make any colony doctor happy.

Now, I just needed a colony doctor.

Since I didn't trust anyone but Vik as a doctor around here, I would just have to make one. There were several medical bots I had access to since I had already dove so deep into that branch. I decided to build one of the more robust models, a basic frame with especially precise arms and very stable legs. It took me three hours to get the design out since it shared segments similar to those of the ALEO units.

While the design segment was unusually short, the programming took a long time since I was basically programming a doctor. It had to have an incredible capacity to learn and apply that learning to save lives and heal people. This was good because the standalone AI programming did not have any medical knowledge, meaning we would have to feed it medical textbooks by the dozen. I would be concerned about that, except that was the standard operating procedure for medical AI in the Titanfall universe.

When I finished programming everything, there were only a few more hours in the day, but despite being tired, I buckled down for a long night. Rather than take time off to prepare, I knew what was coming this time, which was why I made the decision to work through the final night. With the help of copious amounts of coffee and Samwise watching over my shoulder, there was very little danger in missing one night of sleep, especially if I kept busy. I spent an hour and a half assembling the medical robot, activating it just enough to get the credit before putting it to the side.

At some point, Riggs came inside to charge while I was working on designing a more comprehensive set of tools, filling my garage with advanced building gadgets that would make my life easier in the future. It occurred to me as I was working on them that the more advanced tools probably should have gone up higher on the list, but I suppose hindsight is 20/20. By the time four AM rolled around, Riggs had left, and Murtough was the one charging.

When I was done upgrading my tools, I got to work on the next project, taking a crack at one of the cooler things from the game, the Mk.6 Smart Pistol. Well, I got to work on the part that actually mattered, the bullet. The pistol itself was barely noteworthy. After all, my home world was already developing target interpretation programs when I left, never mind what I had access to here.

Hell, the smart weapons available on the market here were already pretty impressive. But the bullet the MK.6 fired was particularly adept at following the information the weapon was sending it, and while they were expensive to make, giving everyone a backup pistol full of instant kill bullets? That was well worth the cost. Or it would be once I had built up enough to make that many.

The bullets did have a downside. They were a very sensitive gyrojet design, meaning they weren't actually bullets, they were rockets. This meant they were nearly useless at close range, since they needed time to build up speed. They also didn't actually have that much penetration power, even with plenty of time to build up. The only reason they were as hilariously lethal was the bullet and tracking software was good enough to land headshots every time. Otherwise, any decent amount of armor would stop them pretty dead.

Once I had finished a single bullet, I worked out the compound for electric smoke, putting together one of the grenades. It was an interesting bit of tech, especially since it wasn't smoke at all, but an incredibly fine powder.

The grenade functioned by releasing its powder payload, before activating it with a burst of harmless low-level infrared radiation. The powder breaks down aggressively, releasing bursts of electricity that jump between the cloud particles and to anyone stupid enough to try and charge through it. It was the ultimate in-location denial, as not only can you not see through it, but you couldn't run through it either. You could also use it to take down a whole building of people, though the more enclosed the powder is, the quicker the charge dissipated.

The sun was coming up when I finished the electric smoke grenade, the completed project revealing a whole branch of thrown weapons like grenades, satchel charges, and a little diamond in the rough I almost missed, the gravity star. I wrote down the formula for explosives they used in the satchel charge before I quickly focused on the crazy throwing star weapon.

The gravity star was a device you threw like a throwing star, containing a central chamber at the center. Once thrown, the device was activated and, on impact, would detonate into a small ball of energy. This ball of energy generated a field that pulled in everything around it, including projectiles, before eventually explosively tearing itself apart.

As I started to design the weapon, I couldn't help but feel nostalgic about working on the XCOM tech tree, because, just like XCOM, the IMC had absolutely no idea how what they discovered worked. It was just like how XCOM had no idea how Elerium worked, they just knew it did. The key to the baffling grenade was a small blue crystal harvested from asteroids and other space debris inside certain high-energy nebula. When exposed to certain types of radiation, the kind very much not good for people, while undergoing a high voltage charge, the crystal vaporizes, then condenses, before making gravity its bitch. The reaction then destabilized and violently detonated.

And IMC had no idea how it did that. So what did they do? They stuffed it into a grenade and threw it at people. It was like building Vahlens tech all over again.

On the one hand, I almost didn't want to make the grenade, since who knew what that process was doing to the space-time continuum or whatever. On the other hand, while I was too scared to start throwing gravity stars around here, I had no idea what sort of benefit I would be missing out on later. Who knows, maybe when I finally get to Mass Effect and start learning things about mass effect fields, I could learn that the crystal, creatively called gravity crystals, were actually a protoform of element zero and were somehow perfect for solving some sort of grand issue.

So, I designed and printed out a gravity crystal generator, just like an Elerium generator, since the crystal didn't exist in this universe. This process needed a dozen different chemicals and sapphires as a seed crystal. I ended up sending Kaytlyn back into the city to pick out whatever I needed, starting up the generator as soon as she returned.

I continued to work hard, developing and building half a dozen more gadgets and doodads, pumping out as many as I could to really advance what I was capable of making, and pulling more things into my general knowledge of building stuff. When time finally started to dwindle down, my final act with the Titanfall tech tree was to open up the gravity crystal generator, pull out a crystal the size of my thumb, and slot it into a throwing star before sealing it back up.

I then nearly collapsed back into my chair, feeling the information wash over me while also feeling my time running down quickly. I let out a sigh when the Titanfall tree finally fell away. It was almost a relief when it was gone, as I was finally able to rest my mind. Samwise helped me to my trailer, where I crashed into my bed and slept like the dead.
 
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Chapter Nineteen
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I was not surprised when I woke up the next day and it was already nearly two PM. Nor was I surprised to still feel tired as I rolled to the edge of my bed, eyes closed as I mentally reviewed the last few days. It was clear that I had pushed myself way too hard, way beyond what was healthy. Unfortunately, I couldn't even say that I wouldn't do it again, that I had learned from my mistake, because in all honesty, I knew I would do it again.

Titanfall had been a major boon, basically exactly what I needed to take my production capabilities and general knowledge to the next level. I was in a much better position to handle whatever came next at a much more reasonable pace, but the next time something big came along, I knew I would do whatever was necessary to make the most out of that tech tree.

The worst thing was, even with all the struggling and all the hard work, it hadn't been enough.

When I was putting together the list of things that I wanted to build before my time with Titanfall was up, I had forced myself to be as pragmatic as possible. The FTL systems had been one such point, as had several other bits of tech.

Like the advanced AI core that the Frontier Militia designed, along with the AIs that utilized it. The core that BT was built on.

I had put them both far down the list because, realistically, I didn't need them. The AI and the cores I had access to were plenty advanced to fit almost all of my needs, and with some added storage and software, there weren't many situations or needs that I couldn't adapt them to. So I put the upgrades further down the list, knowing very well I wouldn't be able to reach it. But I tried anyway because I wanted the future AI that I created to be the best I could make.

And it wasn't like the AI designs I had now were insufficient. They would grow and develop, eventually gaining much more independent thought. They would develop emotions, likes and dislikes, goals, desires, and more. But they would always be robotic. Their emotions would be muted, their desires reasonable, and their goals based on logic. They would never be dreamers, reaching out past what was reasonable to achieve greatness. They would be smart, efficient, and even the best in their field. But they would never really be able to push past being an AI.

It wasn't like I would be able to upgrade the ones I had already created, but I had sacrificed that idea for future AI because it wasn't necessary, and I needed to be utilitarian.

I let out a long breath, shaking my head. Intellectually, I knew eventually, I would get access to more advanced AI. There were just too many that existed in media for me to not eventually roll one.

But I still wanted a BT goddammit!

After a few minutes of sitting on the edge of the bed, trying to desperately put together my considerable knowledge of AI development and creation to use by cracking the Frontier Militia advancement with the smallest of scraps I knew about it, I gave up. I stood and stretched, about to reach for my keyfob, when someone knocked heavily on my door.

"Jay, you up?" Jackie called. "Got some lunch."

"Yeah, Jackie, doors open."

A second later, the door opened up, and Jackie climbed in, his large size making the trailer look especially small. He was carrying a trio of beers and a bag that looked greasy.

"Well, at least you're out of bed. C'mon and eat something," He said, sitting down at the small table in the "kitchen" area of the trailer. "It's from that burger place you mentioned to me."

I made my way to the table and dropped down heavily into the seat opposite Jackie, accepting a beer from him after he popped the top. I took a long swig of the beer, ignoring the chemical aftertaste. Jackie tore open the takeout bag and began dividing up the food, handing me a big burger and a large fries. He had two burgers and an even larger fries for himself.

"Does your muscle weave let you eat like that?" I asked, watching him scarf down some fries.

"No, but general bioware always burns calories," He explained. "Until you start making your way to be a borg, then it's less calories. Something to do with your body trying to figure out what's going on or something. Vik explains it better."

"Speaking of Vik, any news about what I was looking for?"

"He managed to find you a pretty decent Skinweave kit," He answered with a frown. "He said he would call you."

I looked at him blankly for a moment before looking for my keyfob, scrolling through the screen to see that I had, in fact, missed a call from Vik, yesterday around noon. I let out a sigh and nodded.

"Yeah… I missed it," I explained. "I'll call him in a bit to set up an appointment."

For a minute, we ate in silence, Jackie making much quicker headway than I did. I finished my beer, but rather than accept another from Jackie, I poured a glass of water, freshly pulled from the air, for myself.

"You set up one of those water things?" Jackie asked, looking at the tank that I had set up to hold drinking water.

"Yeah, we can even take showers, completely free," I said, getting an impressed look. "I'm worried someone might try and flush us out by cutting the lines. I can make power, even if we didn't have enough solar panels around here to run the whole town. Now we are good for water, too."

"Still need food, though," He pointed out.

"Yeah, fingers crossed that changes soon," I said, Jackie groaning at my tone.

"Jay, listen, you gotta slow the fuck down," He said, shaking his head. "You look rough, and Kaytlyn said you worked through the night a day ago."

I let out a sigh and nodded, unable to deny that I had pushed myself too far. I was still exhausted, and not the good "I just completed something impressive" kind. It was a deep tiredness that practically screamed to slow down. Thankfully, I had a week to do just that.

"I know, I know… It's just…" I trailed off for a moment before shaking my head. "We've gone over the fact that I'm… unique, right?"

"Yeah, you talked circles around it," Jackie said. "Plus, not exactly hard to see, Genio."

"Yeah, I know, that's a problem in and of itself," I said, shaking my head. "Do you wanna know how it works?"

"Works? You say that like… you know what, unless you feel like you need to share, it's okay, Choom," He said, shaking his head. "I got your back no matter what's going on, and it would probably just go over my head anyway."

I stared at him for a handful of seconds before snorting and shaking my head. I had been worried about how he would react, but I clearly shouldn't have been.

"Fair enough, Jackie," I responded, still chuckling. "Well, either way, I got another week of downtime, so we can go on some missions, and I can take it slow. I just need to remake some armor and redesign my underlayer. Need to make you one too."

"I already got my under armor, choom," He pointed out. "And the armor you made me, I don't need anymore."

"This isn't armor, it's an underlayer. You wear it under your armor, and it enhances your movements and makes you stronger," I explained. "I have to work out how to wear the under armor under that… or maybe over it? I'll figure something out."`

"How much stronger? Jackie asked with wide eyes. "Like how your old armor worked?"

"Better, especially for people who are more durable than normal, say someone with Skinweave and bone lace?" I responded, chuckling at Jackie's excitement. "I'm looking forward to being able to use it fully, too. Just give me some time to improve the first design and figure out a way to keep your old armor."

We chatted about some of the other stuff I made while I was working myself to the bone, before someone eventually knocked on my trailer door again. I opened it to find Riggs standing outside.

"Dakota Smith is here," He said simply, as he usually does. "She wants to talk to you, Sir."

"Really?" I asked, surprised that she would come out this far without prompting. "Alright, give me a minute to clean up a bit, then I'll be out there. Jackie…?"

"Yeah, I'll go out and chat, work the charm," He said with a smirk. "You need five minutes?"

"Should do fine."

He nodded and left the trailer, leaving me alone to quickly rinse the last two days of work off and change into something clean. When I was done, I pulled a T-shirt over my AA under armor, stepped out of my trailer, and made my way to the center of town.

As I approached, I could see three cars parked along the road, with Dakota Smith sitting on the hood of one of them. A woman was standing by one with her arms crossed, and a man slightly older than me by the other. Dakota was talking to Jackie and Kaytlyn, while Riggs and Murtaugh stood back. I could see that Samwise had been busy while I was sleeping because two new specters were standing at ease by Murtaugh, bringing our total to three. They were holding normal weapons, copperheads, I think, ready to engage but still holding back.

I could also see Dakota eyeing them warily as I approached, even as she talked to my friends.

"Sorry for keeping you waiting," I said as I finally arrived, combing back my still-damp hair. "I wasn't really presentable."

"I think I can forgive you," She responded, pushing off the hood of her car.

As I got closer, thinking I was going to shake her hand, she gestured to one of her people. He reached into his truck and pulled out a container of some kind, as well as a pair of cups. He walked around and wordlessly handed Dakota and I one cup each before opening the container's cap. Slowly, carefully, he poured us each a glass of crystal clear, ice-cold water.

Starting to understand what was going on, I held out my full cup, and she tapped hers against it. She gave me a nod, and together, we drank the perfectly pure, crisp, cool water. After we each finished the glass, she fixed me with a serious look.

"A day ago, that glass of water would have been worth a not inconsiderable amount," She explained. "Perfectly clean, low rad, pure water is a premium, and you handed us the key to making as much as we could ever need."

"In all honesty, I was happy to," I said, meaning every word. "Water is something that should be a right, not a luxury. The idea of companies withholding it… Doesn't sit with me right."

"It's one thing to believe that, but to hand someone the keys to their chains…" She paused, her eyes glowing. A moment later, my keyfob vibrated, and a quick check showed she had paid in full. "You've done an incredible service to all nomads everywhere. I've already dispersed the plans for this over the Net, and personally sent it to dozens of friendy nomad groups. No mention of your name, of course."

I looked back at the older woman in surprise. I had expected her to share it with friendly nomad groups, but over the Net? that was big and pretty altruistic.

"I'm hoping the fact that it was released anonymously over the net covers nomads from any backlash," She explained as if sensing my surprise.

"I see, that's a smart play. And I'm glad you decided to share it with everyone," I said with a smile.

"Yes, well... On top of the agreed upon payment, I'm also offering you the services of these two," She said, gesturing to the man who had poured our water, who waved, as well as the woman still standing by her car, who nodded, her arms still crossed. "At family rates. They are two of my best scroungers. You need something, especially if you need something quietly, these two can get it for you."

"Are we talking deliveries or specialty items?" I asked.

"Both, though Robin does better work with specialty items," the fixer explained, gesturing to the woman. "They've both been working with me for years, and they know that turning on you would be like turning on the family."

"Well… that's good. I'm starting to run low on specific resources," I admitted, thinking about just how much stuff I had burned through the last few days. "What is the family rate?"

"Depends on what we are finding," Robin, said, speaking up to explain. "But it will be reasonable. We also trade favors and equipment."

"Oh, that's good news. I think we will get along just fine," I said with a smile. "I could put together a list right now, if that's alright."

The man, Chuck, gave Dakota a look, the older woman nodding. She reached out and shook my hand before making her way to her driver's side door.

"I'll be in touch, Jackson," She assured me as she opened her door. "Keep your eyes open for Wraiths. I'll keep an ear out for them, but best keep watch yourself as well."

"We will," I said simply, adding a nod as she slid into her vehicle.

Her car rumbled as we stepped away, the fixer swinging her car around and leaving the town behind, Robin hopping in her car and following after her. I gestured to Chuck to follow me, making my way to the garage. I spent ten minutes coming up with a list of stuff, including as many medical study materials as he could get his hands on. That got an eyebrow raise from the man, but he didn't ask any questions. When I was finished with the list, I asked about payment.

"Dakota mentioned you make some decent armor," He said, his eyes glowing as he looked over the list I had given him. "Is that something I could get?"

"It would earn you a pretty good discount," I responded. "Let's say… five thousand eddies off?"

"What would it cost then?"

"For a friend? I'd say two thousand," I answered. "I could charge more, have charged more, really, but you guys will be running around for me, so I want you protected."

"Yeah, alright, that works for me," He said, reaching out to shake my hand. "I can have most of this stuff to you by tomorrow morning, but the medical shards might be a while. Gonna have to source them first, scope out a few shops."

"That's fine. I would prefer the supplies be here first and the info here later," I explained.

He agreed, and after transferring a chunk of eddies for him to work with, he left, hopping into his truck, and drove off. I sagged back into my workshop chair, idly spinning it around before leaning on the counter.

"Sir, are you well?" Samwise asked, no longer pretending to be a mindless robot.

"Yeah, Sam, just feeling tired," I responded. "Nice work on the specters, by the way. How many do you plan on building?"

I turned to look at my AI assistant, who was standing by our drone workstation. There were a variety of specter parts laid out on two separate wheeled tables, ready to install on the half-finished drone hanging on the station.

"This is the final one for today. I did not wish to interrupt any plans you had," He explained, turning to focus on his task.

"Alright, keep working on them when you have downtime," I responded. "Ideally, I would like five of them up and running with two in parts waiting in case they need repairs."

"Very well, I will complete the task as time permits," He responded. "Do you have a project in mind for today?"

"I was going to create a design for a mag submachine gun for Kaytlyn in a bit," I explained. "After that, I wanted to take a crack at working up some perimeter sensors… Then I think I'll take it easy for the rest of the day. I can work on some larger projects tomorrow."

"Very well. I will continue working on the specter drone."

I nodded and climbed off of my chair, before making my way out of the garage, I spotted Jackie, Kaytlyn, Murtaugh, and Riggs. They were all standing around and talking in front of the BD shack. Behind them, most of the MRVN units were working on fixing up and clearing out the run-down building. I had plans to turn most of it into a warehouse of sorts to store some of my equipment, turning the side room into a temporary doctor's office for the medical AI I made.

"Hey guys," I greeted, almost taking a step back as Kaytlyn whipped around and focused on me

"Jay, why didn't you tell me?" Kaytlyn asked as she spotted me, her attitude shifting from calm to annoyed in a split second. "I mean, didn't your parents ever teach you how to share?"

"Tell you what?" I asked with a frown, looking between Jackie and my AI friends. "I don't know what you're talking about."

"I watched Murtaugh jump up the side of the watchtower with them… What are they called, jump jets?" She said, fading a bit as she tried to remember the name, before starting right back up again. "Then, when I asked him what they were, he ran all around town, jumping up and over buildings and along walls like it was as easy as walking! How could you keep that from me?"

I rolled my eyes at her antics, shaking my head and sitting down against the side of a concrete divider.

"They are called jump kits, and they are extremely difficult to master," I explained, snorting at Kaytlyn's pout. "Riggs and Murtaugh both have them, but they have the hardware to back them up. It would take years for someone to master them, and you'd most likely break your neck in the process."

"Don't care, still want one," She fired back immediately. "I promise not to haunt you from the grave if it kills me, but I need to have one of those."

"Let me do some work on them first, I think I can make them easier to use, but I'm not sure," I explained, holding my hand up to stop her response. "Give me a few days, at least. I have your sub machine gun to make, some armor for myself, I need to update the underlayer, make some for Jackie…"

"Okay, okay, I get it. You're very busy, fine," She responded, holding up her hands in surrender. "I won't bug you for one. At least for a day or so."

"Oh joy, what mercy," I replied with a blank tone.

What I didn't say was that I also desperately wanted to wear one. However, I wasn't stupid enough to think that I would somehow, miraculously, be capable of using a set since they took a ridiculous amount of training to pull off.

Instead, I planned on adding a few more gyroscopes, some advanced scanning sensors, and an angular processor to add a level of autopilot to the system. This would drastically reduce the flexibility of the system, removing a lot of the advanced maneuvers that Pilots used. You didn't see much of them in the game, but let's just say there was a reason the program was so difficult to get into and survive. My version of the jump kit would make a lot of those maneuvers impossible, but in turn, the system would be much more intuitive to use.

I'm sure that eventually, I would find a way to make the system easier while remaining flexible. Either that or I would enhance myself enough that I would be able to master the whole system easily. Until then, I would have to settle for my own basic version.

As soon as I got around to building it.

The five of us chatted a bit more, but eventually, Jackie needed to head back to help around his mom's bar. It was honestly good timing since I needed to at least have a submachine gun design finished before the day was over.

I headed back to the workshop, walking past Samwise as he put the finishing touches on the same specter he had been working on, including adding a number to it for easy identification. I sat down and got to work on designs, starting with the submachine gun. Once I actually got started, it thankfully didn't actually take that long. I had so much experience with mag weapons at this point I could design them in my sleep, and I already had two functioning models to work off of.

After two hours, I had a pretty complete design, including the ammo and magazines. The system was designed for sustained, relatively lower-damage fire, meaning I wanted a smaller round and a nice long magazine. I ended up using a bullpup design in order to pack as much as I could in a smaller frame, and the result was a tight submachine gun with a large magazine and a surprising amount of punch per round. It was also nice and light since it was mostly made of an advanced polymer, one I got from the Titanfall universe that I could make from the leftover plastic bricks from the mass recycler.

I took a break once I was finished with the design, helping Samwise and an MRVN unit switch over the molly-makers to gun production. The fact that our specters were stuck using copperheads, for which we had limited ammo, was unacceptable. In order to fix that, Samwise was going to spend the rest of the day and the night printing weapons. They required almost zero materials besides what we were gathering on our own, the exception being the Alien Alloy, which required a handful of chemicals we weren't gathering.

When the machines were running, I called in Murtaugh. I had planned on working on the perimeter sensors, but I realized that I still had a pile of upgrade parts for all three of my currently active AIs, ready and waiting to be installed. I could have just let Samwise take care of it whenever he got around to it, but it sounded like a nice, easy task for me to work on while recovering.

The first upgrade required that the advanced strategy and combat AI be turned off, even its emergency power so that I could replace his current power systems with three Elerium nodes. Not only would this remove their need to recharge, but it would give them plenty of extra energy, should it be needed. It also cleared up a not insignificant amount of space where his batteries had been. I was tempted to fill them with extra processing power immediately, but I decided to leave it free for now.

Once I was finished installing his power upgrades, I turned Murtaugh back on. The rest of the work could be done with most of his system active, especially since he could selectively depower portions of his body to make it safe to work on.

"Thank you, sir, I can feel the extra power available to me," He said. "I can also feel the reduction of weight. Do you have plans for the space you created?"

"At the moment, no," I admitted. "But feel free to speak up if you figure something out that you want."

"I will consider my options, Sir."

I nodded and prompted the AI robot to sit on a crate so that I could start applying more upgrades. The first was a series of Alien Alloy plating, replacing or layering several bits of armor. His entire face was replaced to better protect his AI core, as well as several plates protecting his power system and his extra processors. The final upgrade for Murtaugh was an integrated holster on his hip, which would keep one of my pistols charged and ready.

I'm sure over time, I would come up with a more interesting addition and upgrades, but for now, I was happy with those.

I spent an hour installing the same modifications to Riggs, first removing the modified warden armor. Now Riggs had another layer of defense, making his role as the front-line tank even safer. The plating we installed was even thicker than Murtaugh's since the warden armor could easily compensate for the extra weight.

By the time I finished with Rigg's, I was starting to feel tired again. Despite the fact that I had slept past noon and it was relatively early, my body was clearly still not fully recovered from my insane workload at the end of the Titanfall tech tree. I ended up apologizing to Samwise, promising to apply his upgrades in the morning. I then called it an early night, heading off to my trailer and crawling into my bed before the sun even fully set over the horizon. The last thing I did before falling asleep was call Vik to set up an appointment for the following day.

I woke up the next morning feeling significantly better, my strength and stamina having fully returned. I also woke up on the earlier side, having finally caught up on my sleep debt. After showering and eating a quick bowl of nondescript, barely qualifying food, I headed out of my trailer. I waved to Murtaugh, who was walking around the town, two specters following behind him. I was happy to see that all three of them were fully armed with my weapons. The specters each had a mag pistol and a mag rifle, while Murtaugh himself had a pistol on his hip, a sniper rifle anchored to his back with magnets, and a submachine gun in his hand. He stopped when he spotted me, letting me catch up.

"Hey, how's it going?" I asked. "Looks like everyone is finally armed with proper weapons."

"It is a vast improvement, sir," Murtaugh said, sounding genuinely happy. "I hope you do not mind, but we tested out the new weapon a few hours ago. It performs more than adequately, even without a proper modern sight."

For a moment, I stared back at the AI, my brain stuck for a full pause before I finally broke down into a string of curses.

"I fucking forgot to work on weapon attachments!" I said, shaking my fist to the sky. "Goddammit! That's two tech trees in a row!"

"Apologies, Sir," Murtaugh said, sounding repentant. "I will endeavor to remind you for your next tech tree."

"It's not your fault. You weren't even around when it happened the first time," I assured him, shaking my head. "Not even Samwise was. I'll tell him to remind me since he will have a better idea when I hit a tree that would have them. Until then, I'll have Chuck bring a few basic ones around for me to copy."

"Very well, Sir," He responded.

"Thanks, Murtaugh," I said, giving him a haphazard salute. "I'll probably be working on a sensor net for around the town later today, so expect a call for your input later."

"Will do, sir."

And with that, the AI robot returned my sarcastic salute with a ridged, perfectly executed one, which the two specters behind him replicated seamlessly. I watched as they walked away before turning around and heading to the workshop, cursing my poor memory under my breath the whole way.
 
Chapter Twenty
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The first thing I did after reaching the garage was sit down with Samwise and install his upgrades. Unlike Riggs and Murtaugh, Sam knew exactly what he wanted to use the newly freed space removing his batteries created. We installed a series of sensor modules and scanners, all of which he made during his free time, in the empty cavity before affixing two small manipulator arms to his stomach. These would function as scanners and fine movement manipulators, and could tuck up and away from sight to both protect them and keep them from attracting extra attention.

Upgrading Samwise's panels was a much more challenging task for him than his two younger siblings since he wasn't clad in armor plates designed to be repaired and replaced. Once I finally finished, however, I gave him a pat on the shoulder.

"You did a good job with those designs, Samwise. Feel free to design and use the molly-makers to build other stuff, as long as it's not too big or gets in the way of the production schedule."

"Speaking of the production schedule, Sir. What is the plan for today?" He asked, standing up from the crate he had been sitting on. "I believe you mentioned a security grid?"

"Yeah, that needs to get done today. Or at least started. I want to give Kaytlyn and Murtaugh every tool they can get to keep this place secure," I explained. "I also have an appointment with Vik for my Skinweave."

"Very well," He acknowledged. "And you plan on using the minion detector design?"

"I do," I nodded in agreement. "I believe if we modify the design a bit, decentralize the sensors, increase the processing power and the program's detection fidelity, we could turn it from one single scanner into a web of scanners."

"Even without having the full download from originally crafting the device?" Samwise asked, surprise just flickering into his artificial voice.

"Yeah, I worked with so much Titanfall tech, I think I can work around what I didn't get," I explained. "Might take a bit of finagling, but yeah, it should work. Even better, if we spread the net far enough, I'm pretty sure it will counter the issue with fast targets being undetectable."

We made our way to the workshop computer and began pulling apart the design for the early model minion detector. The goal was to separate the sensors from the device, making them easier to make and slightly more resilient, while also making the heart of the device a standalone system.

This was different from most projects I had taken on, since there were plenty of bits and pieces that I didn't know. It was obviously different from rebuilding things from the Tinker of Fiction repository. On top of that, it was very different from my previous redesigns, where I was rehashing and improving what I could while keeping the spirit of the item intact. For this, Samwise and I were working together to try and crack something we didn't already know the solution to. So, basically, it was like the design process for normal people.

We pitched ideas back and forth, trying to crack several issues we ran into while trying to realize our concept. The process was fun and interesting, and I made a mental note to stop being satisfied with just what I knew. If I started pushing myself to develop new things, who knew what I might come up with.

After about two hours, we took a break since Chuck had arrived with his delivery. Between Samwise, Chuck, and two MRVN units, we had everything unloaded in thirty minutes. I immediately handed Chuck a set of AA under armor, which he accepted eagerly after paying the remaining fee. After that, he left to retrieve a sample of scopes and sights for us to copy and to continue working on the medical texts I asked for.

After Chuck had left, I had a quick snack and a coffee, before we got back to work on the sensor issue. About three hours after that, we finally had a solution. We ended up borrowing some sensors from the medical equipment I made and expanding on them, essentially sacrificing their ridiculous medical sensitivity and precision for range and stability. Since I knew those designs backward and forward, as well as exactly how they worked, mixing them up was relatively easy.

As for the central heart of the system, we basically just dumped processing power on it until it worked. I also used my frankly impressive programming skills to whip up a more robust analysis program to run the whole system.

When the design process was done, we quickly got the large molly-maker printing out the central processor, which looked like a server rack, with places to connect computer bits like keyboards, mice, and a screen. The sensors themselves would use the smaller molly-maker, which Samwise upgraded to work much more efficiently and effectively. At this point, it was basically on par with the larger, more advanced device, just smaller.

"Sam, these upgrades are fantastic," I said, peering into the mini-fridge-sized matter printer. "When did you have time to do these?"

"Once the larger maker was completed, and it had finished its project one night," He explained. "It was not difficult to transfer some of the developments from the larger maker to the original model."

"Still, well done," I said, patting his shoulder.

For a moment, I watched the machine work, slowly nodding as I put together a plan. If the original, smaller molly-maker now had just as much detail as the larger one, we could use it to make smaller stuff while the bigger one worked on something else.

"Okay, this is perfect. We can use the smaller one for the day, and the larger one, once it finishes this, can build an entirely new machine," I explained with a grin. "This one is going to be even bigger so it can handle larger projects, so we can make things like wall panels without having to make a thousand welds."

"Where will we put it?" Samwise asked. "I was under the impression you wished to keep the second garage bay clear for larger projects."

"I do. We can clear out half of the side room and put it in there," I said. "Then, once it's done, its first task will be to create the parts for an addition to the garage, a whole back area we can use to keep several more molly-makers of various sizes."

"Forgive me if I am mistaken, but is that not overkill?" Samwise asked. "While I understand the wisdom of the larger molly maker, do we need more smaller ones?"

"Every reduction in creation time gives me more time to build and design," I pointed out, shaking my head. "I want to be able to print things as fast as I can design them. But it's more than that. Having a constant production capability will mean we can blow past any limitations we have right now."

"Are you not worried about the attention?"

"I am, but for now, as long as we keep this under wraps, we should be okay," I explained. "We are already pushing it, I know, but I need to advance this further before I can really start to protect ourselves."

"Are you not afraid that they will simply overwhelm us?" Samwise asked. "Even the smallest company that may be watching us would have nearly limitless resources, as far as we would be concerned."

"...Yes, I am. Luckily, we are protected by Nighty City, even if we aren't in it anymore," I explained. "Don't get me wrong, any one of those companies might stop by and try and sniff around or even abduct me. However, they can't just show up with an army. The world is pretty tense right now after the last corporate war, and suddenly showing up with an army would upset that balance severely."

"What about the Kujira?" Samwise asked.

"Did it show up?" I asked, whipping around to look at him, eyes wide.

"No, it remains moored at its harbor in Japan," He assured me. "But did it not come to Night City? During the... alternate timeline?"

"Yes, as an escort for Saburo Arasaka and his daughter," I explained, shaking my head. "And from what I know, that still almost started a war."

I seem to remember that being a hidden plot point behind the main story, that Arasaka and Militech were gearing up for another war, both of them just poking each other, slowly building up for it.

"Either way," I continued. "The goal is to build up and grow in a way that is fast enough to make it, but stealthily enough to not draw attention too fast. Until we get too big to ignore, we can rely on the "independence" of Night City to protect us from massive threats like total invasion."

"But we might still have to deal with small incursions," Murtaugh said from beside the garage bay door, startling me slightly. "We may not have the capability to survive even that at the moment, sir."

"I know, I know. That's why I want the security web up by the end of today," I explained. "After the larger molly-maker is online, we can use that to make the additions and then to make the other makers. While that's going on, this one is going to be making another dozen specters and weapons for them."

"That… is risky," The younger bot said, eventually nodding. "But with Kaytlyn, Riggs, myself, and the current specters, we should be able to hold off lighter incursions."

"We are in your hands," I said before gesturing to my computer. "Come check out the sensor web we created. We need to come up with a placement pattern."

We spent about ten minutes coming up with the best spread of sensors, eventually deciding on a wide spread that would take several days of nonstop printing to complete. We would first start with a ring around the town as a single layer of early defense, before spreading out even further. Then, once we were satisfied with the range, we would work our way inward from the initial ring so that we could keep track of anyone inside the town.

With the printers going and Samwise on watch, it was time for me to get ready for my trip into the city. I went back to my trailer, took a quick refreshing shower, and changed clothes before making sure the pistol on my hip was locked and loaded. I was about to hop into the truck when a hand snaked out from behind and caught the door, holding it shut firmly.

"And where are you going, hmm?" Kaytlyn asked, giving me a disappointed look. "You're paying me to be your bodyguard, and you were gonna go into the city without me?"

"I-.... Alright, fair," I admitted, nodding to the passenger seat of my truck. "Get in then."

"There is no way we are taking this plastic box on wheels," She said, shaking her head. "Not when we have a faster, safer, more comfortable option."

She turned and gestured to her vehicle, which was across the street in the parking lot, which at this point had been cleaned of trash but not cleared of the car wrecks. Those had been pushed into the corner by the MRVNs and Riggs for later processing. When I saw what she was gesturing at, I let out another sigh, realizing she was right. Compared to her Type-66, the Thorton may as well have been made of paper mache.

"I'm gonna go ahead and guess you're not gonna let me drive, then?" I asked, watching as Kaytlyn snorted and walked away, heading for her car. "...Yeah, that's about what I thought."

By the time I had sat in the passenger seat of Kaytlyn's heavily modified vehicle, it was already roaring and rearing to go. She started moving the second my door closed, forcing me to rush to get my seatbelt in. Unlike Jackie, she didn't make fun of me for putting it on, probably because she was wearing hers as well. We pulled along the main road of the town, stopping in front of the BD shack, where Riggs was sitting, keeping watch.

"Riggs, I have an appointment in the city with Vik," I explained. "Looking to get a new upgrade. Should be back in a few hours. Murtaugh is going to be working on the sensor rig, but that will take the next couple of days to set up completely."

"Yes, Sir," He responded with a nod. "Good luck."

I gave him a sarcastic salute, the car window rising back up as we pulled forward. Unlike his brother, Riggs did not see the need to give me a salute in return as we left.

"Interesting pair, those two," Kaytlyn said. "Their cyberware is impressive, but they are remarkably calm for borgs. Usually, they are… eccentric, if not outright psychotic. Where did you find them?"

"They were down on their luck, short on cash, and in dire need of some upgrades and repair work," I explained, giving her the previously agreed-upon lie. "I offered my services for real cheap, and by the time they were working perfectly and I had installed some upgrades, they considered me their primary ripper doc. They hang around because they are friends, they need me alive to keep working on them, and because they figure people are gonna be coming for me eventually, so what better place to wait for some action?"

"Their ripper doc, really?" She asked, looking skeptical as she pulled out and around a slower-moving car. "Do you know anything about being a doctor?"

"No, but the squishy bits aren't what they needed work on," I explained. "I would send them to Vik if that was the case. They needed, need a mechanic and engineer."

"I… guess I never thought of that… Borgs would need more mechanically included docs…." She responded. "So, how did you find them in the first place?"

"I wished really, really hard on a shooting star," I responded, leaning back in the comfortable seat and closing my eyes.

She scoffed but dropped it, focusing on the road and the drive. Eventually, we blew past the run-down but still running Sunset Motel, before finally entering Night City. We drove through Santo Domingo, then through Vista Del Ray, Corporate Plaza, and finally to Little China, where we parked and walked to Vik's office.

Misty was happy to see us both, smiling as we entered her store. Jackie must have filled her in about Kaytlyn working with us, because she already knew the basics

"Hey guys, welcome back," She said with a smile.

"Hey Misty babe, how's the shop?" Kaytlyn asked, returning her friend's smile and making her way to the counter.

"It's good, I just finished shipping out an order for some Buddhist texts," She responded. "How goes the new gig?"

"Well, it's certainly interesting," Kaytlyne said, nodding over to me. "Smartie boy over here certainly knows how to keep things exciting."

They both looked at me, and I just shrugged.

"Normal is boring. I prefer being interesting," I responded. "Would you rather working for me be boring and uninteresting?"

"No, god no," Kaytlyn said with a shiver. "If I wanted to be boring, I would have settled down like my mom wanted."

"You're like Jackie in that way," Misty said, shaking her head, though there was a small smile as she thought about her boyfriend. "Not settled for anything but moving forward."

"I'm looking forward to finally seeing Jackie's moves," Kaytlyn admitted. "He always acts so tough, but now I get to see if he can back it up."

"I think you both are in for a surprise," I said, shaking my head. "Riggs is going to blow you guys away. The man is a machine."

"I should hope so, with how advanced his cyberware looks," Kaytlyn responded. "He and Murtaugh both look like they could lay down some hurt."

"Well, I don't think you'll have to wait long. Jackie has been talking to his usual sources, trying to find work," Misty admitted. "Won't be long before he finds something."

"Guess that means I should hurry up with my armor," I said, rubbing my forehead.

"You know, you don't have to go," Kaytlyn pointed out. "You're the group's techie, no shame in staying back and supporting us from the base."

"No, once I get my armor set, I'll be able to join you guys in relative safety," I assured her. "That's why I'm getting skin weave done. Plus, I'm not letting Jackie chase his crazy dream alone, especially not without someone who can talk him down from going too far."

Misty looked especially appreciative of my statement, and Kaytlyn nodded in understanding. We talked for a few more minutes before Kaytlyn, and I said our goodbyes. Then, we walked around the back exit and down into Vik's clinic. The man himself was sitting by his little red corner as usual, and as we stepped through the metal shutter grate, he turned and smiled.

"Hey guys, good to see you," He greeted, standing up to shake our hands. "Kaytlyn, you can have a seat while I talk to Jackson. Assuming he doesn't mind you hearing this enough."

"I don't mind. It's not like this is going to be invasive, right?"

"No, nothing like that," He assured me with a grin before focusing back on Kaytyn. "When I'm done with him, I want to check on your arm, too."

"What's wrong with your arm?" I asked, looking over at my bodyguard.

"Just a hitch from my last mission," She assured me, plopping down on an empty chair, while Vik directed me to the patient chair. "It's been fine since he took a look at it."

"I just want to make sure it's all working properly," Vik responded. "And since you didn't come in for the checkup I wanted you to, I get to ambush you now."

I chuckled at Kaytlyn's pout before Vik sat back down on his chair and rolled over to me, leaning against one of the monitoring machines, which was currently off.

"Alright, so. I managed to snag a pretty decent Skinweave. It's an old military system, something like ten years old at this point, so it's not the best," He admitted with an apologetic shrug. "But it's about the best you can expect for someone like me to find. Jackie has a similar version, but a bit more modern."

"Do you think it's good enough for what I'm looking for?" I asked, trusting his honest opinion.

"Yeah, absolutely. The application is simple, and it's more or less undetectable by touch. And yes, that's why Jackie wanted this version," He assured me with a chuckle. "The biggest thing is that it's self-healing for minor wounds, which means you only need to come in for extreme trauma, like a gunshot or a cut more than two inches long."

"Right, then let's go for it," I said with a nod before holding up a finger when Vik started to turn. "Just one question. How difficult is it to remove?"

"It's not difficult, but it is time-consuming," Vik admitted. "You would have to come in every day for two or three days. I would apply a skin cream with localized nanites that would deconstruct the nanoweave through your skin. As you can imagine, that doesn't exactly feel nice, so you would need to be under for about an hour and a half each time."

"What about bone and muscle lace?"

"Those only take two days, and it's just a few injections, so technically, you don't even have to be here." He responded. "Which is good because once the process starts, you're not going to want to go anywhere."

"That bad, huh?" I asked with a wince.

"The muscle lace removal feels like the worst muscle ache you've ever had, doubled, or even tripled depending on the intensity of the lace, all over your body," He explained, shaking his head. "Plus some pretty serious muscle fatigue. Thankfully, that partially responds to painkillers, so you can at least mute it a bit. Bone lace removal feels like a deep, serious bone bruise over every bone in your body. Technically, it's possible to tough it out, and there isn't much in the way of structural loss, but most people prefer to come in so I can use their cyberware to knock them out and keep them out. You don't have that cyberware, though…"

"Damn… well, I want the Skinweave for sure, so you may as well apply that," I said, shaking my head. "What kind of choices will you get for bone and muscle lace? What do you think you could get your hands on?"

"Oh, this Skinweave is part of a set of three, so I already have the lace," He explained as he rolled away, coming back with a small black briefcase-looking crate. "You can come in and get the next one done in three days."

He laid the briefcase crate on a small table next to the chair, cracking it open to reveal several yellow, palm-sized injectors. They had a finger grip along one side to make them easier to hold, with an injector button right under where Vik put his thumb. As he gripped the first one firmly, he pulled off the cap, revealing four shallow needles.

"Alright, are you ready?" Vik asked, waiting for me to acknowledge him before pushing the injector against my arm and hitting the activation button.

The device hissed, and I could feel the four needs punch through the skin on my arm, with a cool sensation emanating from the injection sight and flowing outward. The device beeped, seeming to signal it was done, as the ripper doc pulled it free of my arm. He then returned the injector from the box, picked up the second, and uncapped it as well.

Several injections later, all on various body parts, and the cool sensation was beginning to fade, replaced by a minor itching sensation.

"Alright. So you're going to be a bit itchy for the next fourteen to fifteen hours. After that, it should fade as the first step completes," He explained. "Then you have a week before it's finally set completely, but it's pretty much safe immediately. Just go about your normal day and let the nanobot do their work."

"And in a few days, I can come in for the bone lace?"

"That's right," He confirmed with a nod. "I'm mostly free in three days, so come by then, sometime past noon, I'll give you a call if something comes up. Just so you know, the bone lace injections are… well, they are a lot more serious, so expect to be here for two hours. And expect some pain as you recover."

"Of course," I said, sitting up off the chair and sliding to my feet. "Well, thanks, Vik."

"No problem, it's my job after all."

I quickly paid the man for his work, as well as a small tip for finding such good bioware, before trading places with Kaytlyn so she could get her checkup. That only took a few minutes, with Vik using his stethoscope to listen to Kaytlyns joint. When he was satisfied everything was working well, he sent us off, and both of us left the ripper doc behind. I went to cut through Misty's, but the shop was closed.

"Must be on break," Kaytly suggested with a shrug before leading me out the side exit.

By the time we got to the car, I was struggling not to grind my back against any jagged edge I could find. I slid into the passenger seat of Kaytlyn's car with a curse.

"Jesus, he wasn't joking about the itching part," I said, clenching and releasing my hands to try and keep myself from scratching at the injection sites. "And I'm supposed to deal with this for the rest of the day?"

"And night, no way you sleep through it," Kaytlyn pointed out cheekily, before having some mercy on me. "Don't worry. It will get easier to deal with in a few hours. In the meantime, I know exactly how to help."

I tried to get her to explain what she meant, but she refused to elaborate, smirking smugly the entire way back to Rock Ridge. When we finally pulled in, I spotted Jackie doing something in front of the garage workshop, as well as Misty, who waved as we passed by. We parked across the street, and as we climbed out of the car, I realized what he was doing.

He had gathered a bunch of rocks and carried them to the parking space in front of the closed garage bay, arranged them in a circle. Misty was beside him, dragging a cooler with her. Beside them was a pile of branches from one of the husky, scraggly cactus plants that filled the badlands. They resembled a shaggy, stocky tree more than anything, so chances are it would burn fine.

"A fire pit, huh?" I asked, walking across the street and slapping the larger man on the shoulder. "Looks like fun. You need any help?"

"Yeah, choom. Go see if Riggs and Murtaugh need help dragging the chairs out here," He said.

I nodded and walked into the garage, but of course, they didn't need my help. Either one of them was perfectly capable of carrying the couch by themselves. The sofa, which needed to be removed anyway since we were putting the large molly-maker in the side room, would be fine outside if we covered it with something or stuck it under the roof of CHOOH2 pumps.

One couch wasn't enough for everyone, though, so I scavenged around for a few more chairs, gathering enough for everyone. Once everything was set up, Jackie started the fire, and I sat down in one of the chairs. Soon, everyone was sitting down, with Jackie and Misty on the couch. I barely had time to even get comfortable before Kaytlyn slapped a bottle of liquor into my hands. I took a look at it, before looking back up to find they each had their own. I idly scratched at my arm as I snorted.

"Really? A little optimistic to get one for each of us, don't you think?" I asked, turning the bottle over in my hands. "I can't drink all this, I'll be a mess."

"If you want to get any sleep at all, you'll start drinking," Kaytlyn said with a smirk, dropping down into a chair of her own. "That's the fix I was talking about? Your holding it."

"...Seriously?" I asked, looking at Jackie, who nodded in confirmation. "Why wouldn't Vik tell me that? If booze works… why not just give me some meds?"

"You think Vik would suggest getting drunk?" Jackie asked with a snort, popping his own bottle before handing it to Misty. She poured some into a cup, which she then mixed with some soda. "And he ain't gonna just give you some heavy stuff, not when you can just wait it out. That would be a waste. He helps a lot of people with drugs they really need. He can't just toss it at every scratchy Skinweave."

"I… alright, fair enough," I said, popping the top of my bottle and taking a long swig. When I stop coughing, I let out a grunt.

"Geez, Genio," Jackie said, laughing at my reaction. "I sometimes forget you grew up completely sheltered."

"I drank before that, thank you very much," I assured him, trying to ignore the crappy aftertaste. "Just nothing quite like this. Did you fill this with CHOOH2 from the pumps?"

That got a laugh out of everyone, mostly at me, but that was fine cause I was laughing as well. We talked for a while, Riggs and Murtaugh jumping in occasionally but mostly staying quiet. Samwise joined us as well, under the guise of handling the wood and tending to the fire, though he still couldn't talk to anyone. Eventually, we used metal skewers to cook fake hotdogs over the fire, drowning them in hot sauce and mustard.

By the end of the night, after finishing the bottle, I had to admit that I didn't feel itchy anymore. Then again, I didn't feel much of anything at that point.
 
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