General Katherine Mason hated field work. Since the dawning of the Resistance she’d been more of a supporting player serving behind the lines as a veterinarian and, from time to time, a physician for injured TechCOM forces. When the Resistance attacked Serrano Point during the Battle of Avila Beach, Kate had been behind the lines helping at the field hospital trying to keep wounded soldiers in the fight. All the while she was scared to death about her son: Scott Mason. Named after his father, Scott was little more than fifteen and he was already fighting for humanity’s freedom from the machines. Katherine didn’t want to let him go, but she knew that she really didn’t have a choice. Her son had a fiery streak that was just as strong as his mother’s. When he put his mind to something and was focused on it there was no stopping him.
Leaving his mother at home to worry was something he did a lot these days. While she worked in the field hospital and they fought Kate had to tend to a lot of boys who shouldn’t have been there. These were kids that were fighting, not deserving of the cards they were dealt, but they were stronger than anyone could have thought possible. That didn’t help much as she treated their wounds and sent them back out onto the line. All the while she dreaded, fearing that Scott would be next.
Then life played a cruel trick on her. The endos outflanked them and came in from behind. Command and Control were taken out and, by virtue of her rank, Katherine Mason had become her father: a General. It was her job to deal with the arrangements, her job to send those kids out to die. It wasn’t a job she relished. With each passing second she had prayed that someone higher up would appear out of nowhere and take over the reigns of the war horse. No one came. From the hospital where she should have been doing triage she issued orders, sent hundreds of men and women of all ages against the machines, and they somehow pulled it out of their asses and won the battle. Her son had even survived.
Because of what they accomplished John Connor, her longtime friend, made her the Commanding Officer of the newly captured Serrano Point and installed her and her staff as the overseers. Mainly her posting was ceremonial and she let her Exec handle the commanding part. She was more comfortable tending to her dogs. But, rank had its privileges. When the Resistance broke through the barriers of the machine’s coding the key leadership were each assigned a machine of their own. Katherine Mason was one of the few to get them. What she was assigned was one she never expected to see again.
He looked exactly the same as she saw him inside the bunker. His hair was in a military crop, his eyes fixed steady forward. He had the body of Hercules and the strength of Sampson before he lost his hair. The machine stood perfectly still, but there was an underlying readiness that made her know he could strike at any time. Despite being older, he was only a Eight Fifty when the majority were Trip Eights, he was still more than a match for most of the Skynet forces that would try to hurt her. Mainly though he was meant to be an assassin; that making him more than a capable bodyguard for her. One day she’d have to send him through the transporter to save her in the past, but for now it was comforting beyond belief to have him back. It made her feel safe.
Then John Connor’s voice came through her memory: “No one’s ever safe.”
How right he was. A short while ago they’d received an emergency transmission that a Skynet Base had been found deep inside what was considered to be a safe zone. The Resistance Soldier (Miles Beaumont – whoever the hell he was) had cut off midsentence but that just relayed to them the importance of the find. Skynet wanted to keep their newest hiding place secret. What better way to say hello than to blow them to hell? General Mason selected one of the best strike teams available – the Razors – and ordered them to investigate. But there was something else. She knew that she had to be a part of this mission; that she had to be on the front line for this battle.
So she went. Colonel Michaels had hated the idea from the get go and threatened to have her relieved and put under a psych eval. It was his right, but he knew it wouldn’t do any good. Their shrink was killed by a Houdini because she decided to stray too far from the base. Ed knew though that there was no stopping her when she was set on something. Better just to agree and get it over with. Though her infiltrator protector wasn’t too happy about it either. The Eight Fifties didn’t have the emotional protocols programmed into the Triple Eights, but they made their points known with cold hard logic. The chances of her surviving this ‘ill advised mission due to the security risks inherent in attacking a Skynet Outpost’ were only 18%. Her gut told her though that this was the place that she needed to be.
As they crossed through the necropolis that was once her home of Los Angeles she was a bit on edge. Most of it was fear of the mission and what could come of it, but there was more to it then that. She knew that this could very well be a suicide mission just as Moe (the 101) had said. It wasn’t the first time that she faced death at the hands of the machines, but this was the first time that she was going to be on the front lines with her son during such a fight. When she selected the best of the best she knew that group included her son; nonetheless, her brain wouldn’t let her remember that. Or, perhaps, it was her heart. Back in the day Mostow had told her that she and her children were important, perhaps this was why. She had to let him grow into the leader that he needed to be. That meant she couldn’t hold him back. But it was hard to imagine. What if you knew that you were going to do something great, but the cost was something terrible had to happen?
That was a question she wrestled with every day. The Razors were one of the Resistance’s best kept secrets. While not as capable as the Horsemen or Lieutenant Dietze’s team onboard the Jimmy Carter (but Queeg said they wouldn’t be back for three more days and he was their driver), they were more than capable and had training that made them among the best machine hunters on Earth. In the past they’d carried out missions that others couldn’t have dreamed of and come back with only scratches – if that. They had casualties, but one of the lowest rates of any group, and they were the reason that the Resistance won Avila Beach. Their quick thinking made it possible to capture the Tactical Unit and stop them from melting it down.
But were they capable enough to win this battle? Kate hoped to God they were. As they marched forward – the five of them – she hoped that this wasn’t a case of wrong place at the wrong time. There were many battles, but maybe this wasn’t the one that they were meant to be at. Why hadn’t she saved Moe’s chip? If she had she could’ve just plugged and played him into the body and found out everything that she needed to know. Why didn’t she ask more questions? The way that day went it wasn’t like she’d probably remember anyway. Most of it was still a blur and it wasn’t getting better with the progress of time either.
Time travel – it could make you want to tear your hair out.
“Where are we?” The General questioned as they passed through an arch made by support beams from a collapsed building.
Moe was, of course, the one to answer. While their connections to the Skynet communications network were severed for the Resistance’s protection (in extreme cases they could be authorized to reconnect if needed) they were still there. That meant everything from the artificial brain of Skynet buried in some laboratory they’d yet to find to the orbital GPS satellites were at its disposal.
It spoke without inflection of any type; just a perfect monotone with a hint of an Austrian accent, “Pico Boulevard.”
Every time she heard the skinjob talk it brought a smile to Kate’s face. Years ago her father, an Air Force Officer in Special Operations, had worked with a Sergeant that served as the design template for the Model One oh One. What always tickled her was the voice change. Sergeant Candy had a distinctive Texan drawl that you couldn’t ever forget. This machine had a different voice. It was deeper, more macho, with a thick accent from Eastern Europe. It was more fitting.
“How much longer would you estimate, Moe?” Kate’s son Scott asked wondering if he should take a drink from his canteen. What a way to spend your sixteenth birthday. Not too long ago she would’ve been taking him out for a driving lesson. Instead, these days, she got to take him on a hunt of mechanical killing machines that wanted to kill him. Happy Birthday indeed.
“Three minutes, forty-seven seconds.”
Kate didn’t want them to go right to the coordinates of the last transmission of Beaumont. They were stopping a mile or so out of the way so that they could get a glimpse of the layout and, with any luck, a backdoor they could sneak through. Not that you could really sneak onto a Skynet base. The sensor strips ran along the walls and Skynet always knew when someone who wasn’t supposed to be there was inside its facilities. Self improvement was its friend and humanity’s enemy.
From the side of the group Corporal Davison grumbled, “Damned metal probably leadin’ us into some sorta trap.”
“My systems are operating within normal parameters,” said the machine in their party. “I am not under Skynet’s influence any longer.”
General Mason didn’t dare confirm or deny that to the men in her team. Truth was the Time Displacement Equipment – the Temporal Transporter – was still classified. Only a handful of Resistance personnel knew about it and not even Kate was supposed to be one of them. Past experience was the only reason she even knew it existed. “Let’s push on.”
Davison held his pulse rifle with the barrel close to aim at Moe, “Just as long as he stays ahead a me we ain’t got no problems.”
“Stow it,” ordered Sergeant Kovach. “We have a job to do and we’re gonna do it. The metal’s fine – it’s on our side. So cut the damn chatter.”
“Yes Sir,” mumbled the Corporal.
Young Scott Mason was walking next to his mother, “They just don’t know about Moe, Mom. They don’t know what we know about him; what he did for us.”
“And they can’t,” reminded Kate. “Not yet.”
Before anyone else could say anything the scrubbed infiltrator paused and held an arm up. It was telling them in no uncertain terms to stop, that something ahead of them was a risk. The machine turned its head in sweeping motions from right to left. While the humans were limited the machine was scanning different spectrums looking for surprises. It was thorough, methodical. Its focus was unwavering.
“What the hell’s it doing’? Tryin’ to get us caught?”
“Negative,” interrupted the machine. “I am detecting combat ahead. Weapons fire is confirmed.”
Kate lifted her right eyebrow, “Distance?”
“The coordinates of the Skynet Outpost we are to investigate. I am also detecting the engine thrust of a Hunter Killer Aerial – VTOL classification.”
“Makes sense,” Kovach joined the conversation. “They’re protecting themselves. Standard procedure and all that is to have guardians patrol the bases. Isn’t that right?”
“Affirmative.”
It was Scott that asked the obvious question, “But who are they fighting?”
Kate feared that question’s answer. She knew that General Perry and the Horsemen were on their way to Serrano Point and this was the route they’d take. General Perry was John Connor’s second. They couldn’t risk his being captured. While she would’ve preferred stealth instead of the direct approach it looked like they weren’t getting a choice in it. Time for the direct approach.
“Moe,” she formed her question carefully, “can you hack in and tell me what we’re up against?”
“If I would attempt to infiltrate the Skynet system for anything more complex than location finding I calculate a 64% probability that my systems could be overrode and control be restored to Skynet. Do you wish me to continue?”
For a moment she wished that she were no one other than little Kate Brewster home safe in her bed, but being the leader sometimes meant that you had to roll a hard six and make the choice that you didn’t really want to make. Regardless of the consequences.
“You can’t be serious,” protected Davison. “If he turns or’s hacked then we’re screwed. He knows ‘bout Serrano, he knows ‘bout us, and he knows that General Perry’s out there.”
Kovach stepped in front of the Corporal and stared him dead in the eyes, “You need to learn to quit while you’re ahead. Do your damned job, quit your bitching, or you won’t have to worry about what metal’s gonna do to you because I’m gonna do it first. Do you get me?”
“Yes Sir,” he said grumbling again.
James nodded to General Mason, “It’s your show Ma’am.”
How she didn’t want that to be true. With a heavy sigh, “Moe, do it.”
Firewalls were really an impressive thing. Designed years ago during the age when computers were nothing more than infants they were used to block unauthorized access to computer systems from outside sources. That was, of course, if you were smart enough to know how to use them properly and not stupid enough to download something that would override their defenses. To Skynet there was no such thing as a stupid decision. It monitored at all times, watching and waiting should it be threatened from outside. The Resistance was smart – it had programmers who knew more than their fair share about computers – so that meant that Skynet had to be smarter.
It didn’t take long to discover the intrusion. Little things like GPS Scans hadn’t been much of a threat, but direct attempts at communication weren’t something that it liked. Hacking was something that humans hated, but Skynet hated it more unless it was the one doing it. The computer brain locked in on the source and began to scan the networks. In orbit of the Earth it had thousands of satellites – some of its own design and others relics from the past – at its disposal. With simple thoughts it redirected them to scan the surface for the source. Meanwhile its advanced equations were calculating, looking, preparing to terminate.
The source was close to one of the data nodes. It was on a transceiver assembly Skynet itself had devised for endoskeletal use. It was an older model though not used on the front lines anymore. A T-850 it had to lock down its modem so that it couldn’t break the connection. Time was growing more critical. The machine consciousness had to focus more directly. Its attention was unwavering, its ground units now relying on their base programs to oversee the war in their homes.
Within seconds it had it. The source was on what was once Pico Boulevard near what they had called Pico Tower not long ago. Orbital satellites were locked in. Four humans and one machine – an older model just as Skynet had suspected. The connection was established. Skynet was breaking through the protocols. The entirety of its collective consciousness was breaking through the firewall of the scrubbed as the humans called them. It took only a few more seconds for the machine mind to be reached. When humans took Skynet’s children they had to erase the memories, but they were still there buried deep in the subconscious. Skynet brought them back to life with one task: TERMINATE.