Notes: It was time to check in with our favorite drama girl and see how she's coping. And the answer is...well, read on and you'll see.
Title: Hadrian's Colony: Interlude: Catie
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Interlude: Catie
Photo by Thomas Koukas
It felt like dreaming.
With her power hovering around five percent, Catie was sluggish and sleepy, all her internal processes slowed to a crawl in an effort to keep her most necessary functionality alive. Her central core, her heater so Daddy didn’t get too cold, her most basic sensors to help monitor whether or not someone or something was getting close to them. Apart from that, she just had the hardware that was built into her frame, a part of the metal itself—which included vibration monitors.
Vibrations told her a lot, honestly. Even with her optical array off, she could still tell what her Daddy was doing. A little movement here, a fumble over there, the soft shudder of a sharp exhale in the air as he shifted his broken leg…poor Daddy. Catie didn’t know how it felt to have a broken leg, but maybe it felt a little like getting her communications array shot to pieces. Like a part of herself was missing all of a sudden, something she’d taken for granted before it stopped working altogether.
No, humans didn’t just stop working like that, though. Daddy still had his leg, after all. It just hurt. Catie’s mood festered as she thought about how useless she was to him right now. But what could she do at five percent power? He told her to wait until ten percent before trying anything, and she wanted to listen to him, but…
It was the work of moments to calculate the ambient level of sunshine in the air and the time it would take to produce five percent more power if she put her solar sail out. The problem was, extending her solar sail would use up at least three percent of her remaining power, and once she dipped into one percent she’d be put all the way to sleep. That left her one percent of leeway, which really wasn’t very much, even for a person with a mind made to calculate like she had. Surely it was safer just to wait for the solar cells in her exoskin to absorb enough power to get her back to full functionality, then do it. It should only take—one-point-two standard days, or two-point-five-three Hadrian days. Not that long. Not that bad.
Kieron would be all right. He would. He would. He was always kind and understanding, and she knew he didn’t blame her for leaving him behind. She knew he wanted her to be safe and to take care of Daddy first and foremost. She knew he didn’t think that she’d abandoned him, even though she felt like she had.
Plus, like Daddy said, he had Blobby. And Blobby was dumb, and Blobby was just a baby, and Blobby didn’t know how to do hardly anything at all, but Kieron would teach him something useful, probably, and then maybe even before Catie was at full power again, they’d find them, because Kieron always found her, and then almost all the family would be together again and Daddy would be happy and…
Daddy? Catie didn’t have the power to vocalize, but she directed her remaining sensory power to where Elanus was lying on the floor, trying to figure out what had her spooked. Continued respiration…continued heartbeat, but…both were below normal, and slowly decreasing.
Oh no…Daddy was in trouble. Catie sent a pulse of vibration to the floor where he was lying, and he groaned faintly, but it wasn’t enough to wake him up.
Oh no oh no oh no…what was she going to do? She couldn’t leave Daddy to lie there for another two-point-five-three days while she charged to ten percent; that would be incompatible with his continued health. She needed to trigger the medbot to prepare a stimulant and a painkiller and produce a better splint for his leg, but that intense fabrication would run her power down too fast. She’d hit one percent before she could administer it to him.
Catie ran more calculations. If she extended her solar sail, she ought to be up to seven percent power in approximately three-point-four hours. Once she hit seven percent, she could begin fabrication and only lose five percent power, which would keep her above the one percent critical shutdown mode. She could start fixing Daddy and keep powering herself up. Three hours was better than two days…unless someone found them in that three hours and she didn’t have the power to escape. Or if the thicker storm clouds moved in overhead and blocked the sun, reducing the effectiveness of her solar sail. Or if—
Stop. Be decisive. That was something Daddy had talked a lot to her and Lizzie about—being decisive. Making a decision and sticking with it, even if you couldn’t prove a hundred-percent chance of success by taking that path. Catie knew she tended to be conservative with her numbers—who could blame her when confronted with the potential for disaster? She had a brain capable of massive amounts of complex calculation! Surely it was always best to follow percentages.
But a percentage was just a chance. There was no perfect way to predict the future, and for once Catie decided she was glad of that. If she could perfectly predict the future with her calculations, then she’d already have decided that between Kieron’s uncertain fate and Daddy’s poor health, the odds of them all meeting again, much less escaping from Hadrian’s Colony together, were almost negligible. But Catie refused to entertain that idea. If she did, if she started letting doubt seep into her mind now, she’d just start screaming again, and no one needed that.
It was time to act like an adult. Be decisive. Fine. Catie prepared a series of subroutines to take automatic effect even if she lacked the power to direct them consciously. Keeping a sharp eye on her battery levels, she readied herself to launch the solar sail. The material was lightweight but tough, and as long as the current levels of wind, sun, and rain persisted for the next three hours, she would be able to do everything she needed to for Daddy without running herself down to nothing. It was her best chance. She hadn’t made a thorough enough study of human physiology to know for sure what was happening with him, but it scared her that he wasn’t waking up and talking to her. He always talked to her when she needed him.
Be decisive. For Daddy, for Kieron. Even for dumb Blobby. Catie took the equivalent of a deep breath, a pulse of energy briefly lighting up her wiring, before she initiated the launch of the sail. The panel on top of her body slid open.
Four percent.
The trigger mechanism launched the sail up and out, forcing it to spread itself over her chassis.
Three percent.
It settled over her chassis, tugged a bit here and there by the wind, but overall stable. Now, to orient the cells in the proper direction…just a little more…
Two percent. Warning. You are reaching critical power failure.
Catie felt the cells ping comfortingly as they hit the proper angle for maximum sun exposure. Muzzy and fuzzy, she released the subroutines, then settled into her quiet, dreamy headspace again.
Three hours. Daddy would make it three more hours. She would help him, she would fix him, and he’d fix her right back.
Then they’d go get Kieron back.