| The
alarm on Steampunk's nightstand brayed insistently and for the first
time, succeeded in its purpose of rousing the girl. It had taken
a solid week to get her to the point that an alarm clock that didn't
sound like an emergency signal awakened her, but it was a step forward.
With precision
one wouldn't associate with someone just awake, she reached out
and turned the alarm off before sitting up on the edge of her bed.
She'd never
needed an alarm before. The first fourteen years of her life had
been strictly scheduled by the Project Lead and carried out by various
uniformed and helmeted staffers at the Generations Project facility
concealed inside a Woodbridge Township, NJ factory.
Waking up there
was different depending on which staff members were assigned to
take her through her morning routine. Uniform attire and a rigid
routine was meant to keep her from differentiating them from one
another, but their voices and general attitudes toward her varied
enough that seeing faces was a formality.
Some mornings,
she would be shouted awake and led through her morning ritual by
a steely grip and barked orders. Other mornings, she would be cautiously
prodded awake and kept at arm's length for the remainder of the
morning. On rare mornings, someone would awaken her with soft words
and genuine questions about her physical and emotional wellbeing.
Staffers who
fit into that last category usually didn't last long. Speaking to
her kindly led to sneaking her candy or small toys and that inevitably
led to their termination for 'loss of objectivity'.
Out of force
of habit, she stretched, following the same technique she'd been
instructed in as part of her typical mornings at the factory.
Until six months
ago, the factory was all that she'd known and not the whole of that;
just her ten-foot cell, the room where she worked, and the corridor
that connected the two. She vaguely remembered other areas such
as the infirmary, but she could count her visits there on one hand.
Then came a
night of chaos and confusion. There had been a multilevel power
failure in the factory and then a firefight. Many Generations Project
staff members had died or fled and Steampunk had found herself moved
to a sub-level of McGuire Air Force Base, the 'guest' of a covert
military branch she eventually learned was called Rogue Operations
Counterintelligence Command, the ROCIC.
Suddenly everything
was different. Everyone wanted to know who she was; how she felt.
A team of doctors and psychologists under the direction of a woman
named Patricia Masters examined and analyzed her for weeks on end.
They told her
that what the Generations Project had done to her was wrong and
that they would see that it was put right. Steampunk wondered why
this was. After all, she was alive, undamaged and properly nourished.
There had been
issues at McGuire. The first one was when the first doctor assigned
to her had insisted on her removing her containment suit for her
examination. Steampunk had tried to explain how her body secreted
superheated water from her sweat glands and how her suit was designed
to contain and safely channel the resultant steam to do work. The
doctor wouldn't listen.
The doctor
and her assistant had been hospitalized with second degree burns
over forty percent of their bodies.
Steampunk felt
a tithe of remorse for that. But she had given ample warning. Still
seated on the edge of her bed, she looked down at her current attire,
acquired as a direct result of the scalding incident.
It was a full
body suit in much the same style as her normal one, but instead
of the complex assembly of thin layers of a custom meta-amarid,
two types of silica aerogel and carbon fiber, coated in a Nephilia
derived epoxy that everyone around her seemed to confuse for rubber
(something she deigned to correct as the suit's actual construction
was restricted by Generations Project Class C permissions), it was
simply beige cloth designed to wick moisture away from her skin
and diffuse it into the air in a more controlled fashion.
The new suit,
commissioned by Masters, definitely helped her sleep more comfortably,
but at the cost of her room being transformed into a near sauna.
Luckily, her
roommate, an upperclassman named Shannon Henretty, had no objections
to living in a room with humidity well over sixty percent and temperatures
steadily ten degrees above anywhere else in the dormitory. In fact,
from where she sat, Steampunk could see the steadily expanding population
of tropical plants Shannon was continually buying now that she had
'her own greenhouse'.
Even ignoring
the plants, the room they shared was a far cry from the ten-by-ten
concrete block she'd grown up in. In the space, she'd been afforded
a cot, a toilet, a water dispenser and a bathtub. The tub was a
special necessity as she needed to throughly clean and vent her
pores once every few weeks or suffer painful blisters from steam
build-up under her skin.
She had access
to a nice tub at the Institute, but she had to share it not only
with her roommate, but with Joy Duvall and Margarita Clay Thomas,
roommates who lived on the other side of the shared bathroom.
Finishing her
stretches, she glanced at the clock. Five minutes after the hour.
Without further dawdling, she got up and went into the bathroom.
Life in the
Institute was a vast departure from that at the factory. And the
largest difference by far was the privacy. Not just the ready abundance
for anyone seeking it, just the simple presence of the concept.
From her earliest
memories forward, she couldn't remember ever truly being alone until
her 'rescue' by the ROCIC. There had always been a staffer or technician,
or researcher. Even when there was no one physically in the room
with her, there were always cameras or two-way mirrors.
She stopped
brushing her teeth to stare at herself in the mirror. Over the years,
she had learned to discern two-way mirrors. This wasn't one. The
only person looking back at her was her.
It wasn't a
normal thing for her to regard herself in the mirror, but this time,
she indulged herself.
She was slender;
not athletic, not skinny. She was too valuable to the Generations
Project to subject her to malnutrition, but her mind was also too
important to waste time giving her anything but the minimum exercise.
Her dull, blond hair would have been cut into a less obstructive
bob by now, but over six months, no one had attended to it, so it
now brushed her shoulders.
Under normal
circumstances, her complexion would have been olive, but a life
of no sun and LED only light left it looking oddly greenish. Even
regarding herself in the mirror, her hazel eyes remained demandingly
inquisitive.
After a moment,
she blinked. Her reflection was slowly fading away behind condensation
from the steam exuding from her. The mirrors she'd had growing up,
or at least after her powers manifested, were treated to prevent
that lest the researchers lost track of her.
Silently, she
waited until the image of her in the mirror was little more than
a vaguely familiar shape before wiping it clear and resuming brushing
her teeth. She preferred life at the Institute to her old home,
though she couldn't quiet verbalize why. It had something to do
with the mirror.
It was Laurel
Brant who had arranged for her to be there; she had visited her
at McGuire and unlike the others, talked to her plainly instead
of trying to address her like a child or a mentally ill person.
The first thing
she'd asked her was her name and Steampunk didn't have a proper
answer.
The staff,
when not calling her 'you', usually called her 'the girl'. After
her powers manifested, they took to calling her 'Steampunk' almost
exclusively.
As part of
her duties at the factory, besides using her steam to power her
section of it, she was tasked with committing the Project's entire
archive to her eidetic memory, including her own files and it seemed
that the project built around her after she gained her powers really
was codenamed 'Steampunk'.
Still, it wasn't
a real name and she knew it. So she instead used a name that appeared
frequently in her project file dating back to her birth; Alice Tatopoulos.
For all she knew it really was her birth name.
Following a
shower; another new habit she'd picked up at McGuire, she bought
her suit into the bathroom and carefully examined it for wear or
breeches. In the four years she'd been wearing it, she'd suffered
a containment failure eight times and each time, nearby personnel
had been badly burned and expensive electronic components destroyed.
After the last
failure, the Project Lead mandated that she be taught to examine
the suit herself. There were no more failures after that. She worked
methodically, inspecting each seam and nozzle as she did.
Once she was
satisfied that she wouldn't be accidentally steaming her classmates,
she returned to her room and retrieved her tablet computer before
exiting into the hall. It was just unfortunate timing that she found
herself leaving her room just as Betty “Rapunzel” Sinclair
was coming down the hell.
A fellow resident
of the third floor girls' wing, Betty sat upon a litter formed of
her own chestnut locks, carried aloft by six thick braids that moved
like the legs of a giant spider. As always, she wore a sour expression
of malice searching for an outlet.
“Out
of the way, Rubber Girl.” Two stray tresses snaked out to
shove Steampunk none too gently aside to make way for Betty's passage
even though the former hadn't even been in her path.
Steampunk stood
statue still, watching Betty's retreating back with detached confusion.
As far as she knew, she'd never done anything to give Betty a reason
to take offense. In fact, in the week since school started, she'd
never talked to Betty.
But that was
the treatment she'd come to expect from the other girl.
Tammy Kaine,
one of the group Steampunk had been spending much of her free time
with, simply attributed it to Betty being a 'stuck up witch', but
that didn't strike Steampunk as a valid psychological interpretation.
Seeing Rapunzel
disappear into the elevator at the end of the hall, Steampunk turned
in the opposite direction; toward the large living area situated
between the boys' and girls' wings on the third floor.
When she'd
first arrived at the school, Laurel suggested that Steampunk should
spend time with the other students to learn how to live a 'normal'
life with the caveat that she shouldn't do anything illegal or against
school rules.
In advising
her on how to interact with others, she told her not to assume that
logic and science had a hand in all human interaction; to not over-analyze
things. In some cases, especially with Betty, Steampunk found this
difficult advice indeed to follow.
It had been
part of her basic conditioning, dating back to as young as five
years old when testing proved that she had an eidetic memory, for
her to cross-reference new information with knowledge she'd already
committed to memory from existent sources.
In the case
of Betty or her equally ill tempered friend, Annette St John, Steampunk
tried to apply knowledge from the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual
of Mental Disorders, 9th Edition, and The Analytical Guide to Behavioral
Psychology. Despite her certainty that they suffered mental illnesses,
neither book could offer a definitive diagnosis without further
observation or interviews and there was roughly a gasoline soaked
propane tank's chance on the surface of the sun that she'd ever
be able to carry that off.
Mulling over
the problem, she didn't realize that she'd arrived in the living
area until she was several steps from the open archway that separated
it from the girls' wing.
The floor plan
for the student living building, like the rest of the Institute
was more in line with a university than a high school and the living
area was no exception. The main room had a vaulted ceiling with
a simple, but bright chandelier hanging down over a large, airy
room. The center of the room was arranged around a 61'' television;
a roomy, semicircular couch flanked by a pair of plush recliners
faced it with a low coffee table between.
To one side
there was a game table designed to convert between several table
games including pool and air hockey, along with an eight person
table embedded with an OLCD screen designed to run a number of programmable
board games. To the other, the space was kept clear to allow easy
access to the two sound-proofed study rooms.
“Come
on!” A voice whined. “You've gotta! They won't be good
if you don't!”
The living
area was on one side of an imaginary line one could walk between
the boys' side of the building and the girls'. The other side was
bounded by two chest high walls, really the backs of two counters,
with a gap between them leading into the kitchen.
In the kitchen,
Tammy, armed with a spatula, was defending the stove top and the
sizzling skillet resting on it from a Tabasco wielding Kura Akagi.
The Japanese girl was floating about a quarter foot off the floor
and trying desperately to juke around her friend to get at whatever
was cooking.
“You're
not getting anywhere near those eggs with that stuff.” Tammy
warned her off with lazy swats of the spatula. “You want it
on your eggs, put it on your eggs, but we've both gotta eat these.”
“But
this is how my dad makes them. You've got to cook the Tabasco into
them.” Kura tried to rise up and over the other girl only
to earn a swat on the head that worked remarkably well in causing
her to sink to the ground.
“No.”
Tammy said simply, regarding Kura like a naughty pet. “You
can make it taste like I did that, deal?”
“It's
not the same.” Kura pouted.
“Aw.”
Tammy feigned sympathy. “Cheer up. Go play with Steampunk.”
Without warning, she grabbed Kura's shoulder and span the floating
girl around to face Steampunk before giving her a light shove in
her direction.
Hot sauce and
eggs were instantly forgotten as Kura propelled herself into the
stoic blond. “Steampunk! Morning!” She hit off center,
wrapped her arms around Steampunk's neck and let her momentum take
her one-hundred and eighty degrees around until she was floating
from her back like a humanoid scarf.
Steampunk didn't
blink. Kura greeted all her friends like that and she seemed to
take special pleasure in doing it to Steampunk.
“Hey,
Steam.” Tammy waved with the spatula before turning back to
her now safe eggs. “Did you see the hair-beast on your way
here?” There was no end to Tammy's nicknames for Betty.
“I did.”
With Kura still floating with her arms around her neck, she stepped
into the kitchen, transitioning from carpet to tile.
“And
was she a witch to you again?”
“She
pushed me and called me 'Rubber Girl'.” Steampunk reported
with a neutral expression.
“We should
get back at her!” Kura concluded, her mouth three inches from
Steampunk's eardrum.
That was the
usual 'solution' those two had for Betty's attitude. Along with
another friend, Phineas Michaels, they had so far sealed her and
Annette's rooms shut (with sap courtesy of Phineas's powers) and
turned Betty's hair plaid. Needless to say, neither action made
Betty any more friendly toward them.
Steampunk and
the fifth member of their group, Phil Simms, had suggested telling
the staff, but the others warned that involving teachers would only
lead to retribution and to getting in trouble for pranks already
pulled.
This time,
Steampunk decided to remain silent on the count. Instead, she made
her way to the faucet.
“Wait.”
Tammy stopped her. At the same time, she took the eggs off the heat
and dumped them on a plate. That done, she scurried over to a cabinet.
“Last time, you used every cup in the kitchen and get everyone
mad at you.”
Steampunk nodded
reluctantly. “I will only use one glass from now on.”
“You
don't have to!” Kura finally let go, sliding off her back
and landing on the floor.
“Ta-da!”
Tammy pulled two stacks of glasses out of the cabinet, waggling
them back and forth as if she was trying to get the lights to play
off them. “Look what we had made for you.” Crossing
the floor, she pressed one glass into Steampunk's hand.
At first blush,
it was a standard, eight once glass, but on the side was an icon;
an interlocking S and P with the curves of the S and the loop of
the P set off with gear teeth and the shaft of the P striated to
represent a gear as seen in profile.
It was a childish
design, but an endearing one.
“We figured
that if you need to drink water all the time anyway, you might as
well have your own.” Tammy explained. Pride radiated from
her face as she watched Steampunk silently examine the glass.
“I did
the logo!” Kura grinned. “So everyone knows they're
yours!”
Tammy's prideful
expression started to slip after nearly half a minute of Steampunk
not saying anything. “You don't like them.” She deduced.
Steampunk's
eyes snapped up and focused on Tammy. Had she given any indication
of that? The truth was, she couldn't be sure. “No. I like
them.” She finally said. “Very much. Thank you, Tammy
Kaine, Kura Akagi.”
The other girls
smiled in relief. Steampunk didn't know how to express how she felt,
but they both realized that they have just received a heartfelt
and emotional thanks. It was just quieter than most.
To
Be Continued... |