The Aircraft Carrier USS Enterprise had been a pioneer that led to the modern United States Navy. It was a prototype for the modern day carrier and the first vessel ever to be equipped with a nuclear reactor as its power cell. All vessels tried to live up to its name and strength. Plus it had history to fall back on as well. The ship was named in honor of the most decorated combatant in World War II and men (and eventually women) all fought to be assigned aboard it. Its corridors would be crowded, its walls echoing with murmurs of footfalls and talking. It was the perfect example of the military strength of the United States.
That had all changed in the days since Judgment Day. Now the Enterprise was as quiet as a tomb and nearly as cold as one too. The once immaculately clean and polished bulkheads were now dark and grungy looking. Rust had taken root in the walls in more than one place and there was a gentle mist that hung in the air like a fog. Antique technologies were scattered throughout the walls with gages and needles broken or simply turned off. Even the indicator lights and computer monitors were shut off and remained as dark as the night-time sky. The only sign of modern technology was a thin red strip that ran along each of the walls for as far as the human eye could see and probably even beyond. What it was, exactly, was anyone’s guess but it was probably some sort of scanning technology designed to watch for any escapees from the Skynet prison because no one was crazy enough to break into a Skynet Work Camp. That would be suicide.
Well one man was crazy enough to break in and that was John Connor, but he wasn’t alone on this suicide mission. Throughout the ancient warship were teams of refugees who were searching for the prisoners so that they could escape and be a part of the war at Topanga Canyon. Their numbers were low but that was an advantage. Skynet would be watching for a large scale invasion force but small teams may not be considered a threat by the supercomputer’s processors because of their limited numbers. It may even have been enough that they could manage to rescue the prisoners and get out in time before Skynet could launch its counteroffensive against them.
They had to be careful though and they had to be patient. They’d been stalking through the ship’s hallways for well over an hour now and they were still trying to evade Skynet patrols and detection. It had been a bit harder to enter than John had originally anticipated through. There had been several portals built into the outer hull of the ship just above the waterline and they each had a small computer panel positioned next to them that allowed John access to the machine’s mainframe. The door locks weren’t a priority system so Skynet may not have even cared about his intrusion into its cybernetic brain. His hacking skills had become a bit rusty through the years since they hadn’t been used; however, he’d been able to get into the root command matrix and interface with the central processor. That had been the easy part because of the safeguards that kept popping up around the primary code language. Oddly it wasn’t he who beat them. Jesse Flores, the damn Luddite that tried to isolate him from the machines in the past, came up with the idea to use a recursive algorithm to override the system and release the lockdown protocols. At first he thought her idea was crazy, then he wondered how she’d known about such a process (before he remembered she’d served on the last surviving nuclear submarine), then he employed her idea because it was his only real hope of this mission being a success. It worked and they were able to get through the doors and into the belly of the beast.
Once they were inside John had found one of the wall mounted workstations and was able to hack it using the lock pick that Ellison had given him before he left. It was a cobbled together mess created from an old USB Flash Drive, but it worked and he was able to cross through the barriers with it and into the prisoner datafiles. Knowing where it came from hadn’t made it easier to use. Catherine Weaver, or rather that liquid metal bitch, had constructed it when she came back through time on the mission to build John Henry. Ellison had explained, before John left, that he and Savannah had found it in the machine’s personal effects not long before they left the mansion that Weaver had been using. She had known that the war was inevitable and took steps to survive. Through it they had everything that they needed to access the machine.
The carrier had a lot of new doors and walls put up since it had been used by the Nuclear Navy. Skynet locked off areas like the bridge (which had been replaced by an artificial intelligence processor) and the engine room so that the ship couldn’t be sabotaged or turned into a bomb by the humans. It changed the map a bit to make a more maze like structure so that escaped prisoners would have trouble making their way off of the ship if they got out of their cages. Plus it made a full scale prison complex that even included a zoo on what had once been the aircraft storage bay beneath the flight deck. The collection of aircraft had been pretty much pushed off the sides of the deck and into the bay preventing Connor from liberating them – not like he had pilots anyway. The carrier still had birds though waiting to leave the nest. Five Aerial Hunter Killers were parked on the flight deck to protect against an enemy invasion. That was how John knew that Skynet hadn’t perceived him to be a threat yet.
Connor downloaded the maps and put together a route for his teams to take to get to the prisoners. Each group was going a different way to decrease the likelihood that they’d all be captured or killed. Jesse Flores was leading the first team and they were taking the most indirect route to the prisoners. Earl Wise, as much as John hated giving him leadership of anything, was taking the second team and they were using the route that would take up the most time. The third team, led by Theo Dietze, was taking the route that would lead them directly there even though they had to go through the middle of the slaughterhouse to get there. They were all armed and ready with their plasma rifles, Dietze was actually carrying the large scale plasma gun that was normally attached to the back of their truck though. At first John worried he could be a machine, but the dog Jesse brought along seemed to like him. That was good enough for Connor to give the man a pass.
While the others went after the prisoners John found his own route, but it wasn’t the prison near the top of the ship wasn’t his destination. While he was scanning through the hard drives he found evidence that Allison Young was one of the prisoners that was being held here. Predictably, how he didn’t know, Skynet had identified her as a priority target instead of being just a minor nuisance like the other humans. She was being held in interrogation under the supervision of an infiltrator according to the records that was close to breaking her down. John downloaded the course that he needed to take and set out to find Allison on his own leaving the others to their own mission. He was being stupid for going it alone, he knew that, but this was something that he had to do on his own. He owed Allison that.
“Don’t form attachments to your soldiers, John,” he heard his mother’s voice over and over again. “Don’t let yourself get too close to your team. You’ll be leading them into harms way everyday and you can’t be objective if you’re thinking with your heart and not your head.”
That was what he was doing too. John was thinking with his heart because he wanted to save Allison; he wanted to be her hero. His mother would be yelling in his ear for making such a mistake, even after her personal realization of the value of human life following the Battle of the Cyberdyne Laboratory, but it was just something that he had to do alone. That was why he went for her on his own. If he was separate from the others he wasn’t risking their lives on his own personal mission to save Allison. He didn’t have to worry about causing the death of his troops because of his own mistakes and his own foolishness. This was his mission to succeed in or his to utterly fail in. No more and no less.
He’d had some trouble though during his trek. Every so often he’d come across a machine that was blocking his path or seemed to be on patrol. Most of the tin cans had been on standby, like Carter that time he was locked inside Depot 37, but there were a few active units that were watching and waiting for any threats near the more critical locations. So far he’d been able to evade or escape before the machines could sound any alarms, hiding more than once even though it was the last thing on his mind to do. John hadn’t destroyed any of the machines and his plasma rifle was still slung over his shoulder. He’d only fight if he absolutely had to because he didn’t want the enemy to go to active mode. If the Enterprise went to alert then this was all over. His mistakes would condemn everyone to die.
The prophesized leader of humanity put his back to the wall and pushed along it as he reached a corridor intersection. He found a small hide away and stood in the shadows of it trying to hide while he found his bearings. It was futile as a hiding place because the machines could see him in the darkness thanks to their infrared vision, but it was a habit he formed in the jungles of Central America that was hard to shake. He checked his position on the old palm pilot that he had attached to the back of his hand and found he wasn’t too far from the interrogation rooms that the machines had been keeping Allison in. He peeked around the corner and saw that the hallway was clear so he slinked around the corner and down the long metal tunnel. He watched every step trying to avoid making too much noise that could attract unwanted attention. The red strip was pulsing along side of him and, he hoped, it too was still in standby or just ignoring him. Maybe it was some combination of both?
Turning around another corner he spotted the door at the end of the hall. It was an old styled pressure door like you’d see on a movie and wouldn’t expect to have seen on something that was as new as the Enterprise at the time of the fall. There was no guard standing watch outside the room like he’d assumed there would be either, but that didn’t mean much of anything. Allison was supposed to be a high profile target so Skynet would have wanted her to be under lock and key. The machine could still be around and even sneaking up behind him right now to deliver the kill strike.
It had to be a trap.
And John didn’t care if it was. He still took care while he made his way to the door, but he forced it open as quickly as he humanly could. Connor lifted the locks, spun the handle to release the seals, though he stopped before pushing it open. He worried, like a flash of thought, that there could be a machine standing on the other side waiting to terminate him. What would he do if he saw Uncle Bob standing there staring him down the minute that the door slid open? Hell what could he do? He’d have only a couple of seconds to get his plasma rifle in place and pull the trigger. The machine would already be on him by the time he got the gun over his shoulder. Cameron once told him that she could rip the head off a human in 1.8 seconds if she had to, Uncle Bob could probably do it even faster.
Next time he’d remember to have his gun ready from the get go. This time was a different story. He pushed the door open and stepped over the lip and into the small and dark room. It was cold, just like the rest of the ship, but it was more than just that. It was so cold in this room that it nearly chilled his entire soul to ice. Half of the lights illuminated leaving only his side of the room in the light and the other remained plunged in the darkness. The table and chairs were metal and there was a stage light pointed at the other side of the room. John walked over to the light and stared at it for a moment or two wondering if this were the best course of action. His head screamed run but his heart screamed to flip the switch. He did.
His heart broke at what he saw. On the other side of the table was the broken body of Allison Young laying slumped over the table. John ran to her side and checked her knowing full well what he was going to find there. He pushed her up so her back was against the chair – metal bracelets fell to the floor and clinked and clattered against the steel floor. He checked her pulse but found nothing there just as he assumed. John had already known that from looking into her cold, lifeless eyes. Ever since he knew her, her eyes had been warm, welcoming, and they held a spark of life deep inside of them. Allison’s eyes were cold, desolate, and lifeless. In many ways they were the eyes of Cameron.
“If she wanted me dead,” he heard the voice of his Uncle Derek from 2009 while they saw in the truck, “I’d be dead.”
John held her hand in his and looked down at the barcode tattoo on her arm. He ran his fingers along the fresh ink and the raised burn. Part of her hand had been broken, he could feel it, and her face was covered in wounds. The machines had toyed with her; they played with her as they tried to get their information from her. There were puncture marks from where they’d injected her and the obviousness of her brutal wounds. Finally the machine must have snapped, broken down from having been never told what it wanted. Her neck was the clue for this. There were marks all along it – bruises that he’d seen before in his youth.
“Cameron how could you,” he whispered to himself as he rested his head against Allison’s lifeless one. “Allison I’m sorry. This is my fault. This is all my fault. I’ll find the machine that did this to you and I’ll make it pay for what it did. I swear it with every fiber of who I am. I’m going after it and I won’t rest until it’s a melted slag pile.”
Three years ago John Connor had gone to the future in search of the central processor of Cameron – which had been stolen by John Henry so that he could be footloose and fancy free. This had been John’s mission since he arrived with Weaver. He wanted his friend back and that was all that mattered to him. Now it was like a switch had been flipped inside his head. Allison Young was dead and he knew from the wounds on her neck that Cameron was the one that had done it. It was exactly like the day that Cameron malfunctioned and disappeared on him in downtown Los Angeles. He found her after she broke into a house and nearly killed the girl who lived there. These were the very same wounds as that girl had on her neck. Sadly it looked like Cameron had perfected her technique.
Part of him knew that Cameron couldn’t help herself though. She was a machine and every action was carried out because that was exactly what Skynet had wanted to have happen. It had even happened in the past because of one of her program errors after she was supposedly loyal to him. She’d hunted him down and tried to kill him after announcing her undying love for him. He, his mother, Derek, and Charley were going to burn her but he just stared at her chip over and over during the long car ride in the back of Charley’s ambulance. He couldn’t help himself and he restored her. When she was awake he handed over his gun to her and challenged her base program to protect him by asking if she planned to kill him. She chose not to. Back then she could override her choices and not carry out the orders of Skynet. Back then. Today was an entirely different story. With Skynet yelling in her ear that she had to carry it out she couldn’t ignore her master’s wishes; she couldn’t make the choice on her own to ignore her nature. It was like the scorpion and the frog. She would kill no matter what she thought on the matter. This was his brain talking to him.
The other side of him, the majority, didn’t care abut what his brain had to say. Cameron had murdered a woman in cold blood against everything that he’d known about her. In the past Cameron had assured him that the machines weren’t cruel and they didn’t kill on a whim, but this seemed to counter that statement. John wanted to see Cameron as a broken mass of circuits and metal at his feet for her crime against him. He wouldn’t rest until he had accomplished that, until Allison’s death had been avenged. When every last one of those metal bastards was broken at his feet then he’d have finally found peace. Allison would finally have found peace. This was the heart of John Connor talking and it was stronger than his head.
He undid his plasma rifle and slid the activation stud into place to bring the weapon to full power. Indicator lights blinked until they’d all gone to green and were solid instead of blinking. The rifle was ready to kick machine ass and that was the only thing on John’s mind. John tightened his grip on the barrel of the rifle and kept his trigger finger on the button ready to fire. He turned, fully intending to storm through the ship and destroy every last machine that he saw, when he was stopped by a shape in the doorway. He pointed the gun at the shape and held his finger right on the trigger fully prepared to fire. Then the body stepped forward.
“I was wondering when you’d show up,” John spat at the shadowy figure next to the door.