Chapter 1
Someone apparently named the planet Bacchus after some ancient God of Harvest and Wine. This God was supposed to represent having a good time. As Bron shoved another corpse into the reclamation vat, he considered the hellish reality behind the face of the
party planet
.
Bacchus was dedicated to the pleasures of the flesh. If it felt good, tasted good, smelled good, sounded good, or looked good, you could find it here... for a price. And people were willing to pay for their pleasures. From every civilized and not so civilized planet in the Confederacy, a steady stream of interstellar cruise liners and private corporate and personal yachts arrived regularly, disgorging travelers to spend their money on thrills. They'd been making their way to the planet in sufficient numbers for years to make it a very lucrative business.
The planet's administrators were well connected, financed by the crime syndicates, and had a security force equipped with state-of-the-art weaponry. This kept the morally uptight worlds from interfering with Bacchus' very popular enterprise.
Being run by morally bankrupt business administrators meant the planet also offered pleasures illegal on most other worlds. After all, these had the largest return on investment. The biggest ticket entertainment was its highly advanced genetics program, which allowed it to produce any creature you could envision. You want to slay a dragon? They could create one. Want to ride a unicorn? No problem. You want to fuck your boss' wife (or at least a replica of her), it could be done. If you dreamed of murdering your boss (again, a replica), that could also be done. Supply recordings of their voices and mannerisms and the realism of your personal fantasy was all the better. If you could pay the price, they could fulfill it.
None of the creations were allowed off-planet. Genetically Engineered Entities, or Genies as they were called, were illegal on most planets in the Confederacy.
While there were definitely other planets with labs producing Genies for industrial purposes such as terraforming, mining, or hazmat workers, and for pleasure such as sex workers, when it came to making the most lifelike and realistic Genies, the geneticists and scientists on Bacchus were kings.
As the demand was so high, Bacchus also had a policy of buying Genies from
bounty hunters
. They were paid handsomely, especially for Genies with higher functioning minds. None of the Genies that arrived came willingly, as they were treated little better than slaves. They would be put to work, and most wouldn't survive their first year on the planet.
Bron had beaten those odds. His official designation was TSBR0N33-EM12.01, but he'd been dubbed 'Bron' for short. His original function, what he'd been engineered to do, was to work with a team of miners on a primordial planet with higher than Earth standard gravity. The lab which had produced his team had been facing bankruptcy, so they'd taken a shortcut and used maps of living minds to form the highly complex personality matrixes required for the Genies. This technique had been banned because the process more often than not led to unstable personalities, which fractured into madness and violence. Again, Bron beat the odds. While he hadn't displayed the most outgoing personality, Bron was functional, dependable, stoic, and most important to his ongoing survival, a good worker. The rest of his team hadn't been so lucky. After the lab had delivered them to the customer, they'd been inserted onto the planet to begin extracting a rare and explosively volatile ore found there. Within a week, his teammates started to behave erratically. Bron maintained contact with the company from the surface, and as the others became violent, he was ordered to terminate them. Within two months, the base was deserted except for him. The company put the project on hold, stopped their food deliveries, and left him to starve, alone on the hostile planet.
One of the company's lawyers learned of the sole surviving Genie and decided to sell that information to a bounty hunter who sent a drone down to the surface to collect the weakened survivor.
A month later, he was working corpse disposal on Bacchus.
After patrons had their fun with their custom Genie creations or when one of the Genie sex workers was considered too worn out, they were euthanized, and their bodies were put in the reclamation vats. As Bron had previous experience with this, they assigned him the task.
He had the physical strength required. Humanoid in shape, Bron stood a little over two meters tall and a little under a meter wide at his broad shoulders. His dense skeletal system was augmented with carbon-fiber-like ligaments. His muscle tissue was twice as tough and dense as a human's to withstand the pull of 1.8 G, so he had to be extra cautious with his movements on Bacchus, which only had a pull of .92 G. His skin was armored with tiny scales designed to withstand sandstorms with hurricane-force winds. The small armor plates were blue-black to absorb a weaker sun's energy, but they proved to be slightly iridescent in the stronger sunlight of Bacchus. He might have even been considered beautiful if it hadn't been for large goggles which hid his eyes, his minimal suggestion of a nose, his black-lipped mouth, and the grim expression he wore on his face at all times. His eyes were designed for nocturnal duties and were capable of seeing clearly in minimal light. All of his team had been outfitted with tough goggles to protect their sensitive vision during the daytime hours of the planet they were built for. The goggles worked equally well on the brightly lit vacation planet.
Like all Genies on Bacchus, Bron wore a discipline collar. For most Genies, this was a stylish gold ring bonded to the neck. It delivered electrical shocks when activated, and in the case of a Genie going rogue, it would detonate and decapitate them. Bron's was three times wider than normal due to his denser anatomy. The bands also contained a medical monitor for ensuring the Genies remained healthy to maintain the investment, a tracking beacon, and a two-way communicator. The administration could contact any of its Genie population anywhere on the planet at any time.
As a new day was just dawning, Bron's shift was ending, so he was
free
to go back to his apartment deep in the underbelly of the entertainment complex. Even Genies required time to recharge, so housing was necessary. It didn't have to be good, though. All worker housing was underground, so the
good people
of the Confederacy wouldn't have to see them. Human workers got the first floors, and the less human you were, the deeper you went. Bron's unit was ten floors down, only two away from the lowest housing levels. Below that were three more subfloors of loud, smelly, and hot machinery. It wasn't so bad where Bron lived, but Security had called upon him to subdue a tenant of the lowest level who'd been driven mad by the constant noise. Two Security members had been killed before they sent him in. Though he'd managed to take the poor creature alive, Bron recalled processing the Genie's corpse later that night. Or what was left of it. Security didn't take well to losing personnel to rogue Genies.
His help in that event had granted him the luxury of expanding his apartment into the next unit so he could actually have a bed that fit his larger frame. It also earned him the fear and distrust of the other Genies who now looked upon him as just an extension of Security. He never spoke to the others, so he did his best to just ignore their glares and whispers.
Many Genies would have mentally shut down or cracked under the psychological stresses Bron had to cope with. Something about how his mind was constructed gave him the ability to endure it and numb himself to the accompanying loneliness.