Alice2015
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Alice listened intently as the voice of the Artificial Intelligence guided her through reanimation. She'd been in cryogenic stasis for 9 months and needed physical and mental rehabilitation. They began with simple things like wiggling her fingers and toes, turning her head left and right, etc. For communication purposes she was instructed on clearing her throat, waggling her tongue, humming, and finally speaking.
"Alice Walker, Captain, United States Space Force," she answered to the questions what are your name and rank and of what organization are you a member. When asked her current location, Alice growled, "In the middle of the fucking Nevada desert."
Her tone and chosen profanity were warranted Alice believed for two primary reasons.
First, she felt weak and in pain, both physically and mentally. She didn't like that. Alice had always been a strong person: physically, mentally, emotionally. Feeling exhausted, sore, and foggy made her irritable, which tended to bring out the tone and choice words.
Second, being in what amounted to a coma for 9 months hadn't been on Alice's career bucket list. Since she was a little girl, all she'd ever wanted was to stand on the surface of Mars. She'd dedicated her life to that goal, and ultimately made the list for an upcoming crewed mission to the red planet.
Then, she was offered a choice position in the Deep Space Exploration and Settlement Project. Already an astronaut, Alice had mistakenly thought that meant she'd be on the first crewed mission to Europa. Uncrewed missions using sophisticated 3D printers were already fabricating the construction needs for a permanent settlement to be assembled by human beings once they arrived.
Alice abandoned her life goal to be a part of something even bigger, only to learn that she would instead be a test subject for a suspended animation project. The stasis project was part of the Europa mission, yes. But it wasn't space flight and planetary settlement either. Over the course of 4 years, Alice was to be in stasis for a month, then three months, then nine months.
She'd been denied reinstatement to the Mars Program. The highly classified nature of the Project meant that resigning would mean an end to her career with Space Force.
Lifting her head a bit for a better look left and right through her stasis pod's transparent cover, Alice asked with that same irritated tone, "Where the fuck are the Overseers?"
"There are no Overseers on duty, Captain," Bertha responded.
That made absolutely no sense, of course. Following her previous stints in stasis, Alice had always awoken to the numerous faces smiling down at her from beyond the Plexiglas,
"You have completed the post-cryogenic stasis reanimation procedure, Captain," Bertha announced. "Are you ready to open and exit your pod?"
"Yes, yes!" she answered impatiently. "For fuck's sake, get me out of this coffin."
The locks clicked open, and the lid lifted up and away. Without an Overseer there to help her, Alice found it near to impossible to get herself up and out, but eventually she managed it. She took a minute to stretch and twist, during which time Alice began to notice more than simply the absence of Overseers.
"Bertha, did they move me?" she asked the AI. "This isn't the room where..." She hesitated, finding even more surprises. "Where'd all the pods come from? When they put me under, there were only 4 of us. I'm counting ... 16 ... no, 18 pods." Each of the coffins appeared to be energized and illuminated. She asked, "Are these all occupied?"
"There are 18 cryogenic stasis pods on this level, Captain," Bertha responded, continuing, "And they are all currently occupied. Some of the occupants are deceased, however."
Alice's eyes and mouth opened wide with shock as she exclaimed, "What? What're you saying? Some of the test subjects are dead?"
"Yes, Captain," Bertha said in her matter of fact, emotionless tone. "Of the 18 occupied cryogenic stasis--"
"Oh, for fuck's sake!" Alice cut in. "Pods! Call'em pods! Give me the numbers."
"Yes, Captain," Bertha apologized, without the emotion a human would offer. "Of the 18 pods on this level, 6 are occupied by deceased subjects."
"Of the pods on this level," Alice repeated. "How many levels are there ... and how many pods are there? And as far as that goes, where the fuck am I? This isn't Harris Air Force Base, is it?"
Bertha responded to the series of questions in order: "8 of this facility's levels house pods. There are a total of 14 levels in this facility. In total, there are 60 pods. 24 of those 60 pods are occupied by deceased test subjects. You are in Cryogenic Stasis Bay #4 of the Richardson International Bunker Complex inside Gunnbjørn Fjeld in the Watkins Mountain Range on Greenland's eastern coast."
Again, Alice's eyes and mouth revealed her surprise. She tried to grasp what the AI was telling her, her mind filled with an array of questions. The first to come out of her mouth was, "The Gun-born what?"
"Gunnbjørn Fjeld," Bertha repeated, pronouncing the word properly and with an accurate Danish accent. "A Fjeld is an alpine peak that protrudes through glacial snows or an ice sheet--"
"Greenland?" Alice interrupted yet again. More to herself than to Bertha, she asked, "What the fuck am I doing in Greenland? And how the fuck could there be ... how many pods did you say?"
"60 pods, Captain," the AI answered. Then, believing that Alice's murmured question had been for her, Bertha responded, "I have not been programmed with knowledge as to how or why you were brought here, Captain."
Alice slid forward, dropping her feet to the cold deck and testing her ability to stand. She was unsteady at first but finally managed to walk the three steps to a nearby bench. Sitting, she pulled open a locker before her, finding the clothes she'd taken off and stored months earlier in Nevada, thousands of miles away.
She stripped out of the cryo pajamas, down to her birthday suit, then donned a pair of modest panties, a spaghetti strap tee shirt, a pair of cotton socks, and a pair of tight fitting but stretchy pants. She found a mirror on a nearby wall and stood to check her appearance.
Haven't changed a bit, Alice thought to herself, as if she'd expected to lose or gain weight or even wake up looking like a wrinkled ol' decaying zombie. She took a moment for some body movement exercises, stretching her muscles and verifying proper balance.
Speaking to the only company she had at the moment, Alice asked, "Bertha, am I the only reanimated test subject?"
"You are the first reanimated test subject, Captain," the AI responded with a sense of formality. "My programmed instructions were to reanimate you specifically if either of a number of certain circumstances arose."
"What circumstances?" Alice asked.
Bertha's answer was vague. "This facility has suffered some systems failures, resulting in the death of 24 of 60 cryogenic test subjects. A recent earthquake has amplified those failures, leading to the need for your reanimation."
Alice didn't understand why she herself was brought out of cryo to deal with the troubles about which Bertha spoke. The Overseers should have been dealing with them, making Alice again ask herself, Where the fuck are the Overseers?
She made her way toward the nearest pod. She'd been putting this off, but she knew she had to deal with this eventually. She peeked down through the Plexiglas, and -- to her relief -- found a live subject, a female perhaps 10 years her junior, looking as if she was simply taking a nap. Alice moved on to a second pod, finding a man whose age might be ranged from mid-20s to late 30s. He, too, was still alive and looking fine.
Reaching the third pod, though, Alice looked through the cover, then turned away quickly in shock; she was struck by the dry heaves, what with having nothing in her belly to be expelled onto the floor. She looked down into the pod again at the female test subject. Her appearance reminded Alice Egyptian mummies after archaeologists had removed their wraps.
"How did this level of decay take place so quickly?" Alice asked herself softly. "I mean, we've only been in stasis for..."
Looking at what was left of the dead woman, an incredible thought came to Alice. She asked with a hesitant tone, "Bertha ... how long ago was I put in stasis?"
"Until you were reanimated 36 minutes ago, you had been in cryogenic stasis for 114 years, 44 days, 11 hours, and 19 minutes, Captain" Bertha said with her programmed matter of fact tone.
Alice just stood there for the longest time, staring at the glowing red eye on the wall. Her mind was blown; she didn't know what to say or ask, and even if she had, she doubted she could have formed the words.
"You must be hungry, Captain," Bertha asked, unaffected by Alice's dismay. "Would you like to eat? I have heated a fully balanced meal for you in the mess hall."
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