This is my first venture into science fiction; 'On Becoming Eve' is more of what I consider Fantasy, so please be kind. Also please be generous with your comments. I hope I have created likable characters and the beginnings of a believable universe, perhaps we will travel it together as the story progresses. This is also my first foray into serial publication. I have big plans for our new friends and will do my best to keep the episodes coming and the story exciting and fresh. Once again, please let me know what you think, your comments are the lifeblood of a writer.
Episode 1 -- Birth of the Phoenix
Guinea Pig, that's what I was, a goddam Guinea Pig. Of course, I had been 'volunteered' by Colonel Marshall himself, he was still holding a grudge for what had happened at the war games. I actually found that I was looking forward to the break from the tedium. The job was simple, the latest version of Earth Force EV armor needed to be tested, specifically the CO2 converter, so I had been dropped two hundred clicks from base and got to walk home. There were crates and crates of them in storage just waiting for the results of my little hike.
If I made it great, the converter worked, if I didn't, well, they might get to me in time to save me. While I didn't understand the science, I wasn't overly concerned; the setup had been lab tested and field tested in various configurations for a couple of years and larger scale versions were in place at all of the Martian colonies providing breathable air for close to thirteen million colonists. Getting the reactor, accelerator, and filter system small enough to be wearable had been a real breakthrough.
If the version in my suit worked like they expected it to, it would change ground warfare on Mars forever; not that we had an enemy to fight, but you know the military. If nothing else, it was a five-day vacation from the excitement/boredom of being lucky enough to be posted on Mars. Fucking Guinea Pig, yeah that was me. I laughed to myself at the thought.
Our EV armor was a true thing of beauty, an elaborate composite of Kevlar, carbon fiber, and titanium, it could withstand just about anything short of a mining laser. As I mentioned, oxygen was provided by a CO2 converter with all nutrition being provided by the water flowing through the reactor's cooling system in my suit, which double duty by keeping me warm in the process. I replaced NC's or nutrition cartridges once a day, there was effectively no solid waste and any liquid waste was recycled back into the system with pollutants being filtered out and ejected in what looked like rabbit droppings.
Coms were built into the helmet with a heads up display for nonverbal communications and pneumatics in the exoskeleton made me stronger and faster by a large margin with only limited restrictions in agility, I could almost do gymnastics in the thing. Like I said, a true thing of beauty, the damned thing even auto sized to whoever put it on, so it was a true one-size fits all. A normal rig out would be two-weeks' worth of NC's, my weapon and all the cartridges I could carry for my railgun. With no weapon and no ammo, I should make excellent time getting back to post.
"Nav," I said softly, waiting for the logistics of my position relative to the post and suggestions for the best path between the two. It took a couple of seconds for the map and my suggested heading to appeared in front of me, I turned south and started walking.
"Systems check," my heads-up display lit up like a Christmas tree, all green.
"Base, this is Rider, all systems optimal. I am in route, see you slackers in a few days."
"Rider, this is base. Copy that. Granger says not to get lost; you still owe him a beer."
"Yeah, tell Granger to piss off. He knows I'm good for it. Besides, he's just afraid they'll send him to find me if I'm late."
"Roger that," the voice on the other end of the radio laughed," See you when we see you, base out."
"Rider out," That would be it unless complications arose and I was on fricking Mars, there was nothing between me and the base except red sand and a few hills; I could do this in my sleep. Keep the big hole, Juventea Chasm on my left and keep walking. Our base was built into the northern walls of the Candor Chasm, part of the Valles Marineris system just south of the equator; around twelve thousand soldiers, airmen and Marines, defending Earth's interests on Mars from some unknown threat by playing war games in the red sand; but hey, the pay was excellent and there was nothing to spend it on, all dorms were co-ed, and chemical birth control was mandatory for everybody; the American Puritan Ethic had died years ago about the same time inexpensive, reliable, cold fusion was discovered by a physicist at, of all places, Uruguay.
The power structure of the entire world had changed overnight as fossil fuels had become irrelevant, South America had unified as a constitutional republic and become the world power as Uruguay shared its new wealth. Buenos Ares in the now province of Argentina had become the capitol of the new world government. The cost in sharing in the new world was an immediate cessation of all hostilities. Certain factions in the Middle East had been the last to give in but the fear of being left behind as the world flourished around them was too much; it took less than fifty years for peace to finally take over.
Two hundred years later, poverty was effectively gone, opportunity abounded at every turn, if you had the resources to take advantage of it, and travel throughout the solar system was commonplace, taking mere hours to reach the asteroid belt; there were research facilities and resorts on the moon, colonies on Mars, research facilities, space stations, mining operations and private estates dotted the asteroid belt, even Jupiter's moons had outposts.
Advances in science and astronomy had identified the reality of other technologically advanced worlds in the galaxy and the world military complex had taken the task of preparing for threats from outside the solar system, researching new weapons systems and defensive technologies, establishing bases on the moon and Mars, and manning listening stations in the asteroid belt and on Titan.
Of course, people being what they are, we found ways to segregate ourselves and create tension; the most common was the gap between spacers, people that had the resources, and therefore the chance to go to space, grounders, those that didn't, and ringers, those that lived and worked in the asteroid belt. Ringers were mostly conscripted workers who had amassed some type of debt, either to society as criminals, to a corporation through some transaction like failing to meet the required return on the training expenses for a new employee, or those that worked for the super-rich that had estates and personal retreats on some of the asteroids.
While poverty was gone; nobody wanted for basic necessities and even those at the bottom of the ladder could save and make a trip of a life time to Disney World Luna, that didn't mean that all opportunities were open to all people; having money and connections would always get you the choice options and the truth was, for most grounders, that 'trip of a lifetime' was more of a dream than a reality.
For me, that dream had become nonexistent the minute my father died. I had been an above average student but when my grades dropped, admission to any university that offered a chance at a degree that would get me off world was not in the cards. I could either effectively sell myself into corporate slavery by signing on with a mining consortium and become a ringer or join Earth Force. Against my mom's wishes I had joined Earth Force Marines. When I fulfilled my ten-year commitment, I would be set.
My propensity for martial arts and skill with weapons of all kinds got me assigned to a Special Operations unit. It took two years to get there, but the orders I had been waiting for finally came through. My mom cried her eyes out but understood what it meant to me to get into space, two weeks later Corporal Case Rider reported to duty at Camp Candor, Mars.
Eight years later, only six weeks short of the end of my tour, I was a day and a half into my trek back to base, seriously second guessing that choice as I trudged through the Martian wilderness carefully eyeing the huge sandstorm to the west, wondering where I was going to find shelter until it passed. On a normal mission, I would be with my squad and we would have tents and supplies for such an occurrence.
The weather forecast had been completely clear, and this was such a walk in the park, that we had all agreed none of that was necessary, well I guess we were wrong, shit! Other than completely obscuring my sight, the sand and wind weren't the real issue, it was the static electricity that filled the storm that would mess with my electronics, making navigation problematic and any communication impossible. Then there was the chance that the dust could clog my filters; in other words, if I didn't find shelter, I was thoroughly screwed," Base, Rider, do you see that?"
"Copy, Rider, we're on it, came out of nowhere, your best bet is Juve, see if you can find some shelter in the canyon, and hurry, it's coming fast and it's nasty. You've got about ten minutes. We'll send S and R as soon as it passes."
"Got it, Rider out," I turned east and started running as fast as I could, Juventae Chasm wasn't far and with the pneumatic assist in my suit, I just might be able to make it in time to find a nook or cranny that would shelter me from the blowing dust.