DarkGemini24601
Well-Known Member
DarkGemini24601 and MarineAvenger: "Reconstruction, Part 1"
0916 Hours, July 12th, 2038
The Amazon Rainforest
Onboard the Avenger
Floor 1, Central Block
The Cybernetics Lab
The new facility dedicated to the study of alien biocybernetics, robotics, and how to counter both of those things was a clean white like the medical lab and adorned with the equipment of engineering or the proving grounds. The centerpiece was an analysis table lit from above, large enough for a humanoid to be laid out but having folded-up extensions for when larger subjects were brought in for study. In that vein, the entry door that Kai walked in through took up the whole wall. Looking around, the rest of the room appeared to be dedicated to space to walk around, tables to put individual parts on, and various computers to record data or control equipment like the mechanical arms hanging above the central table.
Lily was by one such computer, going over Jennifer’s preliminary analysis of the augmented human subject’s biology. She waved over at Kai when he noticed him. “Thanks for coming, Kazuko.”
“Yeah, well from the rather… bluntly worded letter I got telling me to come down as quickly as possible, I found it better to leave my ass unkicked and get down here as soon as possible.” The Head Doctor said, the thought he was being commanded so easily by someone other than Sukuna leaving a bad taste in his mouth.
An-Yi took note of his distaste and raised an eyebrow, but said nothing about it for now. “If you’re ready to begin I’ll have the Hoverguard brought in here.”
“Sure. Let’s do it.” He said, nodding to the engineer.
Shen sighed, and called the team in. The legless Advent soldier was still in their armor - characterized by the helmet of a flight suit that formerly had glass hiding the face, but now revealed a visage paler than your average ADVENT soldier with cybernetic eyes blankly aimed upwards in death. Its armor consisted of a sleek black jetpack and similarly colored armor with some yellow markings. A supplementary jet covered where its torso ended and legs should have begun. The recently-thawed flier was wheeled to the side of the table, and then carefully placed on it.
“So remind me again why exactly I am here and not someone more suitable like another engineer or maybe even Jennifer?” Kai asked the head of engineering, a bit unnerved by the ghastly dead face, even if it was an enemy, it still looked too human to not disgust him.
“Because while I’m able to figure out how their armor works by itself… which inspired me to work on some advanced tracer rounds to deal with flying units a little better… I need someone who understands biology to work out how those systems work in tandem with the organic components,” Lily answered, crossing her arms. “The words ‘alien biocybernetics’ - what we are going to study in here - should make that much apparent.” And you installed Atka’s cybernetics, so don’t act like this is out of your element...
“Yeah, just wanted to make sure.” Kai said, moving closer to the body. He grabbed a saw tool, then bent down, turning on the instrument as he began cutting into weak points in the armor, being careful to avoid the thicker portions where it would be hardest to break into. Satisfied with the cuts he made, he grabbed a magnet with a handle on it, slowly attaching it to the piece and he pulled, forcibly removing the metal coating, setting it aside. It seemed that the skin of the Advent soldier was bonded onto the armor, and tore off some of the cadaver’s skin that attached to the alloys.
Next, Kai picked up a scalpel and cut into the body underneath, opening the skin and looking inside, raising an eyebrow. “My, my… this is quite interesting…” The Head Doctor mumbled, stepping to the side. “Look at this. The whole spinal column has been altered. New receptors attached, wires leading down to the bottom jet pack. It is like they hacked it open and remade the nervous system to use it as some sort of main network. A conduit for the brain to give more complex commands quicker. I am sure if we cut open the head, we would find many implants hooked up there.”
Lily nodded. “Wonder if we can make it work for us… I’m sure you’ve heard of how clunky the wristpad to control the Gremlins is. It eats up a lot of time for more complex commands, which can be deadly in combat.”
“Yeah…” Kai looked over the modified spine and he stood up, going to the head of the soldier. He cut inside, opening up the skull to look inside, and he nodded. “I knew it. Looked at all of this. They must not have spent a lot of time trying to retrofit their designs, because these are… primitive. Almost torturous. Guess that’s the point though.”
He grabbed some scalpels and slowly began removing some of the chips in the brain. “I’m already getting ideas here. If we were to compact these, make sure it all fit into one system, got the proper receptors onto the Gremlins and what not, we wouldn’t need to completely remake a human spine. Just send signals from the PCS to the Gremlin. Almost like old style bluetooth devices. It will take trial and error until we get it exactly right, but it is certainly doable. Just gotta compress it down.” He stood up, handing the tray of implants to the engineer.
Lily was looking away for the moment, more unnerved by the dissection of what was once a human than even Kai had been. “G-good plan... “ she agreed, shakily taking the tray. “We should… be able to accomplish that, I just need to… make some recalibrations to the Gremlins and the Specialist PCS to allow the connection to work properly.”
Is she… scared? Kai asked the woman inside his head, having hidden himself behind a meditative shield he had made for himself so he was able to work with Lily a bit better at the cost of his emotional state.
Unnerved more like. Maybe she needs a big, strong man to comfort her. Sukuna suggested, and embarrassment rolled over the void he made like a bubble rolling up the side of a fishbowl and he let out a slow breath.
“That isn’t funny…” Kai mumbled to himself.
Despite her apprehension, Lily raised an eyebrow, placing the implants in the hands of one of the people that had brought the corpse in. “Take this to engineering.” She glanced over at Kai. “What isn’t funny?”
Kai straightened and his void completely shattered, the man’s hand shaking a bit. “W-What? Did I mumble something? Sorry just uh… um… morbid joke I heard from… from a doctor uh… before.”
“What’s morbid is your lack of attention,” Lily muttered. “In regards to cybernetics, there’s one other thing we could stand to develop from the Hoverguard and the experimental parts we have left…”
“You mean the soldier who recently lost her arm on the mission?” Kai guessed, having been there to properly seal up the woman’s arm. It took a long while to remove all the cauterized skin and make sure everything was clean, but he and his team had done it. The fact he was becoming a better surgeon was not exactly a happy thought.
“Yeah, Private Stacie Belle. If we could finally develop proper cybernetics, then she could be able to fight again. Otherwise… we may be down a Sharpshooter.”
Kai nodded his head, and he offered Lily something of a smile. “We can’t fail then. Let’s get this project underway. And I know just how to assist you.” He went over to the table and picked up a datapad, tapping through it until he finally handed it to An-Yi. “The notes we have of the cybernetics from two years ago, as well as surgical notes. With these we may reduce the amount of thinking we need to do.”
“Yeah, but…” Lily frowned. “From what we could tell from the Hoverguard, it didn’t involve the whole ‘cellular replication’ progress you had to do to make Atka’s cybernetics psi-capable. Regular cybernetics seem complex in their own ways.”
“Ah. For that, we could just take notes from how a normal arm works. Make the proper pathways and such for the nervous system. We have a base socket to fit it into. All that really needs to be redesigned are the limbs. Things like eyes and the like would be harder, but that is stuff that we don’t technically need right now, so we have time to develop something proper.” The doctor said, crossing his arms with a satisfied look.
Lily smiled. “Fair enough. We just need to calibrate the electronic pathways to make sure they respond correctly to input from a live subject, and make sure the mechanical parts integrate properly with the organic ones. For the latter, I’ve gotten traces of some sort of nanite solution akin to what we use in our medkits but a lot more advanced from that MEC Trooper we… found out wasn’t entirely mechanical.” The thought of the brain encased in metal still sent shivers down An-Yi’s spine. At least we’ll be using the integration solution for a better cause…
Kai chuckled nervously. “You okay? You seem more uncomfortable than even I am about our enemies. If you want, I can make sure any unsavory business may be handled by someone else should they come up.” Leaning against the table he shrugged, “Though I doubt something unpleasant may come up regardless. Am I coddling you?” He asked quickly, Kai starting to sweat unusually profusely despite trying to keep cool.
“A little… yes…” Lily grumbled. “I’m not going to cease doing my job because something unsettles my stomach, but that doesn’t mean I don’t have a right to feel disturbed by what the aliens do in the first place. Does the thought of someone with no legs and a bunch of crap wired into their nervous system not bother you?” she questioned.
0916 Hours, July 12th, 2038
The Amazon Rainforest
Onboard the Avenger
Floor 1, Central Block
The Cybernetics Lab
The new facility dedicated to the study of alien biocybernetics, robotics, and how to counter both of those things was a clean white like the medical lab and adorned with the equipment of engineering or the proving grounds. The centerpiece was an analysis table lit from above, large enough for a humanoid to be laid out but having folded-up extensions for when larger subjects were brought in for study. In that vein, the entry door that Kai walked in through took up the whole wall. Looking around, the rest of the room appeared to be dedicated to space to walk around, tables to put individual parts on, and various computers to record data or control equipment like the mechanical arms hanging above the central table.
Lily was by one such computer, going over Jennifer’s preliminary analysis of the augmented human subject’s biology. She waved over at Kai when he noticed him. “Thanks for coming, Kazuko.”
“Yeah, well from the rather… bluntly worded letter I got telling me to come down as quickly as possible, I found it better to leave my ass unkicked and get down here as soon as possible.” The Head Doctor said, the thought he was being commanded so easily by someone other than Sukuna leaving a bad taste in his mouth.
An-Yi took note of his distaste and raised an eyebrow, but said nothing about it for now. “If you’re ready to begin I’ll have the Hoverguard brought in here.”
“Sure. Let’s do it.” He said, nodding to the engineer.
Shen sighed, and called the team in. The legless Advent soldier was still in their armor - characterized by the helmet of a flight suit that formerly had glass hiding the face, but now revealed a visage paler than your average ADVENT soldier with cybernetic eyes blankly aimed upwards in death. Its armor consisted of a sleek black jetpack and similarly colored armor with some yellow markings. A supplementary jet covered where its torso ended and legs should have begun. The recently-thawed flier was wheeled to the side of the table, and then carefully placed on it.
“So remind me again why exactly I am here and not someone more suitable like another engineer or maybe even Jennifer?” Kai asked the head of engineering, a bit unnerved by the ghastly dead face, even if it was an enemy, it still looked too human to not disgust him.
“Because while I’m able to figure out how their armor works by itself… which inspired me to work on some advanced tracer rounds to deal with flying units a little better… I need someone who understands biology to work out how those systems work in tandem with the organic components,” Lily answered, crossing her arms. “The words ‘alien biocybernetics’ - what we are going to study in here - should make that much apparent.” And you installed Atka’s cybernetics, so don’t act like this is out of your element...
“Yeah, just wanted to make sure.” Kai said, moving closer to the body. He grabbed a saw tool, then bent down, turning on the instrument as he began cutting into weak points in the armor, being careful to avoid the thicker portions where it would be hardest to break into. Satisfied with the cuts he made, he grabbed a magnet with a handle on it, slowly attaching it to the piece and he pulled, forcibly removing the metal coating, setting it aside. It seemed that the skin of the Advent soldier was bonded onto the armor, and tore off some of the cadaver’s skin that attached to the alloys.
Next, Kai picked up a scalpel and cut into the body underneath, opening the skin and looking inside, raising an eyebrow. “My, my… this is quite interesting…” The Head Doctor mumbled, stepping to the side. “Look at this. The whole spinal column has been altered. New receptors attached, wires leading down to the bottom jet pack. It is like they hacked it open and remade the nervous system to use it as some sort of main network. A conduit for the brain to give more complex commands quicker. I am sure if we cut open the head, we would find many implants hooked up there.”
Lily nodded. “Wonder if we can make it work for us… I’m sure you’ve heard of how clunky the wristpad to control the Gremlins is. It eats up a lot of time for more complex commands, which can be deadly in combat.”
“Yeah…” Kai looked over the modified spine and he stood up, going to the head of the soldier. He cut inside, opening up the skull to look inside, and he nodded. “I knew it. Looked at all of this. They must not have spent a lot of time trying to retrofit their designs, because these are… primitive. Almost torturous. Guess that’s the point though.”
He grabbed some scalpels and slowly began removing some of the chips in the brain. “I’m already getting ideas here. If we were to compact these, make sure it all fit into one system, got the proper receptors onto the Gremlins and what not, we wouldn’t need to completely remake a human spine. Just send signals from the PCS to the Gremlin. Almost like old style bluetooth devices. It will take trial and error until we get it exactly right, but it is certainly doable. Just gotta compress it down.” He stood up, handing the tray of implants to the engineer.
Lily was looking away for the moment, more unnerved by the dissection of what was once a human than even Kai had been. “G-good plan... “ she agreed, shakily taking the tray. “We should… be able to accomplish that, I just need to… make some recalibrations to the Gremlins and the Specialist PCS to allow the connection to work properly.”
Is she… scared? Kai asked the woman inside his head, having hidden himself behind a meditative shield he had made for himself so he was able to work with Lily a bit better at the cost of his emotional state.
Unnerved more like. Maybe she needs a big, strong man to comfort her. Sukuna suggested, and embarrassment rolled over the void he made like a bubble rolling up the side of a fishbowl and he let out a slow breath.
“That isn’t funny…” Kai mumbled to himself.
Despite her apprehension, Lily raised an eyebrow, placing the implants in the hands of one of the people that had brought the corpse in. “Take this to engineering.” She glanced over at Kai. “What isn’t funny?”
Kai straightened and his void completely shattered, the man’s hand shaking a bit. “W-What? Did I mumble something? Sorry just uh… um… morbid joke I heard from… from a doctor uh… before.”
“What’s morbid is your lack of attention,” Lily muttered. “In regards to cybernetics, there’s one other thing we could stand to develop from the Hoverguard and the experimental parts we have left…”
“You mean the soldier who recently lost her arm on the mission?” Kai guessed, having been there to properly seal up the woman’s arm. It took a long while to remove all the cauterized skin and make sure everything was clean, but he and his team had done it. The fact he was becoming a better surgeon was not exactly a happy thought.
“Yeah, Private Stacie Belle. If we could finally develop proper cybernetics, then she could be able to fight again. Otherwise… we may be down a Sharpshooter.”
Kai nodded his head, and he offered Lily something of a smile. “We can’t fail then. Let’s get this project underway. And I know just how to assist you.” He went over to the table and picked up a datapad, tapping through it until he finally handed it to An-Yi. “The notes we have of the cybernetics from two years ago, as well as surgical notes. With these we may reduce the amount of thinking we need to do.”
“Yeah, but…” Lily frowned. “From what we could tell from the Hoverguard, it didn’t involve the whole ‘cellular replication’ progress you had to do to make Atka’s cybernetics psi-capable. Regular cybernetics seem complex in their own ways.”
“Ah. For that, we could just take notes from how a normal arm works. Make the proper pathways and such for the nervous system. We have a base socket to fit it into. All that really needs to be redesigned are the limbs. Things like eyes and the like would be harder, but that is stuff that we don’t technically need right now, so we have time to develop something proper.” The doctor said, crossing his arms with a satisfied look.
Lily smiled. “Fair enough. We just need to calibrate the electronic pathways to make sure they respond correctly to input from a live subject, and make sure the mechanical parts integrate properly with the organic ones. For the latter, I’ve gotten traces of some sort of nanite solution akin to what we use in our medkits but a lot more advanced from that MEC Trooper we… found out wasn’t entirely mechanical.” The thought of the brain encased in metal still sent shivers down An-Yi’s spine. At least we’ll be using the integration solution for a better cause…
Kai chuckled nervously. “You okay? You seem more uncomfortable than even I am about our enemies. If you want, I can make sure any unsavory business may be handled by someone else should they come up.” Leaning against the table he shrugged, “Though I doubt something unpleasant may come up regardless. Am I coddling you?” He asked quickly, Kai starting to sweat unusually profusely despite trying to keep cool.
“A little… yes…” Lily grumbled. “I’m not going to cease doing my job because something unsettles my stomach, but that doesn’t mean I don’t have a right to feel disturbed by what the aliens do in the first place. Does the thought of someone with no legs and a bunch of crap wired into their nervous system not bother you?” she questioned.