Cybernetic
Cadet 2: Drone in the Dorm
First day
at Starfleet Academy.
Greg
Braxton carried his suitcases into the dorm a few minutes before the new
cadets' deadline to report. Not that he wasn't eager to begin his 'Fleet
career, but he'd been busy with other important matters, such as a long and
very pleasant goodbye to a girlfriend. He'd probably never see her again, but
that didn't stop him from getting the most mileage out of the situation.
He didn't
know anything about his assigned roommate except the guy's name, Daniel
Wilcox. Such an ordinary human name had come as something of a disappointment;
he'd been expecting something far more exotic. The Academy had a practice of
assigning roommates of different species to the extent that was feasible. The
prospect of this object lesson in interspecies tolerance didn't bother Braxton,
who had grown up on a space station and had seen just about every race
imaginable.
Well,
almost, he thought, as the door to his new quarters slid silently open to
reveal the extent to which the left side of the room had been converted into a
jungle of unfamiliar computerized devices. Beyond question, this was the first
time he'd seen a Borg drone up close and personal. Given that the Federation
was still officially at war with the Collective, he hadn't expected to see one,
either.
The Borg in
question, whose armor didn't look quite like the pictures of drones that
Braxton had seen, was busy attaching some dark metallic implement to his right
foot. It took Braxton a moment to realize that the modifications to the armor
had the exact shape and color of a cadet's uniform, even to what looked like
properly shined boots. Glancing toward the closet, Braxton saw another suit of
armor in several pieces on the shelf, looking more like the standard external
components of a drone.
"Your
civilian clothes?" Braxton put down his suitcases and began to unpack a
more conventional wardrobe.
"Something
like that."
The Borg
spoke good English, without an accent, but the overly precise enunciation of
the words indicated that it wasn't his native language. Probably not a human
rescued from the Collective, then. Although he looked close to human, it was
hard to tell what he might be under all the cybernetics. More likely a Delta
Quadrant species.
Weird way
he'd rearranged his side of the room, too, with no bed or desk. God only knew
what those alien machines were supposed to do. As long as they all stayed on
Wilcox's side of the room, Braxton didn't particularly care. He wondered how
the heck a Borg drone got a name like Wilcox, anyway. Didn't the Borg all have
numbers instead of names?
He could
just imagine himself trying to explain all this to his mother when he called
home. She'd been expecting him to room with a human, or perhaps a nice quiet
half-Vulcan. Well, hi, Mom, guess what, my roommate is a Borg, but there's no
need to worry, I haven't been assimilated yet.
Yeah.
Right.
And besides
that, just how was a guy supposed to have a conversation with a drone? Forget
all the usual talk about beer, sports, and women. Borg drones probably
preferred to talk about computer engineering, if they talked at all. Might as
well try to have a nice pleasant chat with the door frame.
Then again,
it was never a good idea to jump to conclusions when dealing with an alien
species. Couldn't hurt to say something polite to Wilcox, after all.
"How
do you like being at the Academy so far?"
The Borg
turned his head with a deliberate motion and focused one eye that was paired
with some sort of cybernetic visual implant. Braxton felt like an insect being
studied under a microscope.
"These
surroundings have been sufficiently configured to provide all required support
functions. Additional information remains to be assimilated, however. It will
take approximately three point two hours to download and cross-reference the
contents of all first-year texts."
Closing his
eye, Wilcox stepped backward into an alcove along the wall. He stood
motionless while the machinery hummed quietly around him. No doubt he was
absorbing all data necessary to bust the curve in every exam for the
foreseeable future. So much for polite conversation.
Sweet
dreams, Braxton thought sarcastically, but he didn't say anything out loud.
For all he knew, even though Wilcox looked asleep, he might be automatically
recording everything that went on around him. Or maybe one of those devices
was. Braxton looked dubiously at the alien machinery again. And they really
expected a human roommate to sleep in here?
He caught a
glimpse of himself in a mirror on the wall. Clean-shaven, hair freshly
trimmed, crisp new uniform, yeah, the look of a first-year cadet, all right.
But the pictures he'd seen of Academy life never came with a background image
straight out of a Borg cube.
"Welcome
to Starfleet," Braxton muttered.