KhateTry to get a better look at the bodies and blood. See if I can get a good guess as to how blood-filled creatures would end up as the current two products.
Khate closed in on the nearest of corpses laid out on the ground, bending down until the suit's muzzle almost touched the shriveled corpse. Normally, Khate did care too much to classify things in categories other than dead and not-dead, but this was cool. Her initial idea, about swarms of bloodsucking things, actually didn't seem that implausible. The needle wounds were triangular in profile, like some bizzare bug proboscis, and there were four much smaller wounds at the edges of the bruised circle, like something had latched on and bitten.
Evil death bugs seemed like an excellent guess, and it probably meant that Sadish would want a souvenir box then they got back to the Reunion.
Khate was just about to pull back from the body when the olfactory sensors in her suit caught something else, a familiar zesty tang that made bright red exclamation points pop up on her HUD and caused the mech's 'nostrils' to clamp shut and internal air-circulation to kick on. A paralytic, not enough to do any harm now, but enough left on the skin to waft into the region of the suit's senses.
The paralytic did two things. First, it helped explain why there weren't oodles of defensive wounds as the afflicted tried to claw things off of them. Second, it disappointed Khate. She did use paralytics to bring people in, they were really good at that, but if you were going to kill someone, paralyzing them first just seemed like a waste of a good cinematic opportunity.
AubreyCome on Aubrey, for goodness sake. She must be able to access the immediate circuits of the ship and its defences. Do so! Mindhack in just enough to start assessing where and what they are, and then their possibility of being disabled. Stop as soon as it feels too dangerous, but at least probe a little.
Aubrey edged her senses forward, pushing her implants to the limit without actually stepping forward through the bloodsoaked umbilical. The maid, or sexbot as scarlet had referred to it, had fairly low power levels. If it had weapon systems that would qualify as 'killer' they were either inactive or quite subtle. The maid was advanced, Aubrey could tell that by the amount of field nuance, but she didn't seem to be hiding any particularly horrible technological surprises. Though, for some reason, the maid's outfit also had a faint, but definite, current running through it.
Of course 'HE grenade' was a pretty horrible surprise, and one that Aubrey wouldn't be able to detect. Not that there were many places in the robot's outfit capable of hiding such an object.
Further towards the ship things started to get complicated. Very complicated. Electronic Warfare systems were designed to cut through this mess of conflicting and overlapping signals to deliver coordinated attacks, but Aubrey didn't have that kind of power. The best she could do at this distance was get the broad strokes of the ship, and even that was open to a good bit of interpretation. The first, most obvious item, was that the ship had a structural shield generator. It was currently in a passive state, generating a barely perceptible meta-field curtain, but it was definitely capable of sealing a hull breach and retaining an atmosphere. It also seemed to have been designed to function as auxiliary to the ship's airlock, capable of sealing the ship even while the door was kept open. That could potentially make for a very nasty surprise if they had to get out in a hurry.
Beyond that, what Aubrey could sense was one of two different kinds of internal sensor systems. Either the ship was using a nanite field detector, or it was using a capacitance cloud detector, but which was difficult to say. If it was a nanite field detector, then the atmosphere of the ship was suffused with thousands of nanites. Each one would only be capable of providing minimal information, but when networked together would be capable of detecting minute shifts in temperature, light, and airflow. If it is was a capacitance cloud detector, then the atmosphere of the ship was doped and subtly charged, enabling it to detect and isolate any change in the air volume (such as that displaced by a person) or atmospheric charge (as produced by scanners). Aubrey knew how to get around both, they just had very similar signatures. If she had five minutes, she could separate the two, but it seemed likely that she didn't have five minutes.
Deeper inside the ship, things became much, much more confusing. It was difficult to tell the difference between a coffee machine and a sentry turret , or between a powered armchair and a leap mine. That being said, Aubrey thought she could feel the faint pulsing waves of a targeting system or three looking for targets.
Scarlet"Did it have to be a killer sexbot?" Scarlet's tone was clearly unamused, and really more exasperated than actually fearful. Still. . . "Aubrey, what are you seeing?" She'd suggest that the message was a bluff, all or part of it, but Varkonius didn't seem the type to spend time setting up an elaborate deception implying he had potent automated defenses instead of, you know, actually setting up potent automated defenses. She eyed the room, looking for telltale signs of any sort of device designed to visit unpleasantness upon unwanted guests other than the sexbot, which was probably armed and armored. Really, it seemed like there was a good chance this was a bust, but Scarlet was as stubborn as her actual chronological age might suggest; she wasn't leaving until this was definitively irretrievable.
Scarlet joined Khate, crouching over the bodies. The needle wounds were bizarre, but, as she had noted before, probably not the cause of death. The holes she'd spotted earlier in the skulls of the Cane and one of the Claws looked like low caliber bullets. Both shots had entered at a bit of an odd angle, almost flat sideways to the side of the head, but lacked matching exit wounds. Which made a certain sense. Bullets on board ships could make a mess. Breaching the hull wasn't a big worry, but that wouldn't stop it from hitting screen, or a circuit bundle, or really anything that didn't actively need a hole in it. Underpowered or break-apart round would definitely work to their advantage.Scarlet's armor was more than tough enough to withstand a round that was designed to not penetrate both sides of the skull, and Khate's was even tougher.
Which brought Scarlet to the more worrying injury on the Crow. It was definitely energy based, and it lacked the fiery burn star of the typical LI pulse laser like Scarlet's. That meant sustained beam or VSI pulse laser, both of which had the worrying habit of drilling through armor with a great deal of precision. That begged the question of why there was both a defense system utilizing a standard slugthrower with underpowered bullets and a defense system using a sophisticated laser cutting device.
KesariMinor Action: Rethink my own words. Is this actually...reasonable?
Also stay comfy next to Sadish.
Considering everything else that was happening, what with shuttles going nuclear on the surface and seemingly normal trading vessels utilizing advanced spoofing software to conceal themselves, reasonable feel on a relative scale. With AL-Loy pleasantly distracted, it was very likely that she could get away with additional 'marketing diagnostics' as long as she didn't actively seem malicious. Pretty much everyone else had bigger fish to fry- even if the other mercies knew what Kari was doing, odds on they wouldn't report it, and if they didn't have the Star themselves, they'd likely just let the infraction slip.
Kesari settled in next to Sadish as she waited for Boris' response to the question. Not that she was even sure he'd realize the question had been addressed to him. While he enjoyed being called King, he was occasionally a little slow on the uptake that Kari occasionally called him captain. It wasn't a regular thing, and Kari wasn't exactly how much she meant it, but he didn't have the tendency to stump around and take charge like some aged ship captain of a bygone era.
A cyan light suddenly beeped on the console, a short line of text scrolling out beside it.
Tenth ship verified. Awaiting permission to send marketing package.
Kari looked at the message in confusion, reviewing the sensor info. There were nine ships. Seven docked at the station, one AL-Loy vessel, and the transport currently docking. The system didn't count the Reunion, unless it was glitching, and it didn't count shuttles as ships either.