Fleet of the Damned (Sten #4). Allan Cole
the walruslike being who happened to be the Empire’s most talented psychologist was a rapidly hidden eye flicker.
“None, sir. Would you explain?”
“I’ll try it another way. What would you say if I suggested that you, and all the other people in this barracks, all of you who’re so helpful and such great servants, were actually part of Selection?”
“Of course we are, sir. We realize that the candidates desperately need study time and relaxation time, and we try to help by taking care of the minor—”
“Not what I meant, Pelham. One more time. What would be your reaction if I said I thought that all of you are trained psychs, and this whole barracks, relaxed and gentle, is a good way to get us off guard and find out what we’re really like?”
“You are joking, sir.”
“Am I?”
“If you are not, I must say I am very honored. To think that I have the talents to be a doctor.” Pelham chuckled. “No, sir. I am just what I appear.”
“You did answer my question. Thank you, Pelham. Good night.”
“Good night, sir.”
* * * *
Dr. W. Grenville Pelham, holder of seven degrees in various areas of psychology, applied psychology, human stress analysis, and military psychology, closed the door and padded down the hall. Some meters away from Sten’s room, he allowed himself the luxury of low laughter.
CHAPTER SEVEN
THE FIRST WEEKS of Selection were quite simple—the IPs bashed the trainees’ brains out in the morning, at noon, and in the evening. There were also unexpected alerts in the middle of the night, although the callouts were always handled by the staff. The IPs never entered the barracks.
In between the physical and mental harassment, the tests went on. To a large extent, they duplicated the basic exams—reflex testing, intelligence quotient testing, and so forth. The testing standards, however, were far higher than when a being entered the military. Also, the tests were readministered severally and at unexpected times.
Sten was not impressed.
He had the idea that this duplication wouldn’t have happened before the Emergency began. There must have been better, if slower, ways to test for the same abilities.
Sten was starting to develop an active hatred for the Tahn.
Sten’s belief that the testing was catch-as-catch-can turned from theory into certainty the day he was shuttled into a tiny room that had nothing more in it than a large chair and a livie helmet. His instructions were to seat himself, put the helmet on, and wait for further developments.
Sten had been through this, way back before basic training.
The idea was that, through the livie helmet, he would experience certain events. His reactions would be monitored by psychologists, and from this reexperiencing and reacting, his personality could be profiled.
When Sten had gone through the experience before, the livie tape had been that of some not very bright but very heroic guardsman who got himself slaughtered trying to kill a tank. It had made Sten nearly throw up and had, by his reaction, disqualified him for normal infantry, but made him an ideal candidate for the essentially lone-wolf Mantis Section.
Before he sat down, he went behind the chair and checked the tape in the feed. Various codes appeared, then the title: shavala, guardsman jaime, combat/death, assault ON DEMETER.
Possibly there could be some kind of validity for that choice—for prospective infantry types. But for pilots?
Sten examined the helmet and found the input line. A little subversion was called for.
He curled his right fingers, and the surgically sheathed knife in his arm dropped into his hand. The double-edged dagger was one of Sten’s best-kept secrets. He had constructed it himself from an impossibly rare crystal. It had a skeleton grip, and its blade was only 2.5 mm thick, tapering to less than fifteen molecules wide. In other words, it could cut through practically anything. But in this case cutting wasn’t what Sten was interested in.
He used the knife’s needle point to rearrange a few tiny wires inside the sheath of the helmet input line. Then he replaced the knife and, as ordered, sat down and put the helmet on.
Let’s see. The tape has just begun. I should express bewilderment. Fear. Excitement. Doubt as to my ability. Shock on landing. Determination to accomplish the mission.
Sten’s Mantis schooling had included indoctrination on the various ways to fool any sort of mental testing machine, from the completely unreliable polygraph through the most sophisticated brainchecks of Imperial Intelligence. The key, of course, was to truly believe that what you were thinking or saying was the truth.
This training worked. Coupled with a conditioned, near-eidetic memory, it made Sten mental test-proof.
Let’s see now… Shavala should have seen that clotting tank show up… Horror… seen his combat teammates slaughtered… Anger… seen the tank rumble on… More determination… doodle around the tank getting various pieces shot off… Pain and still more determination… hell, the clot should be dead by now. Shock and such.
Sten pulled a corner of the helmet away from his ear and heard the tape behind him click to a halt.
More shock. Pride at being part of this Imperial stupidity.
Sten decided that was enough input, took the helmet off, and stood. He set an expression of sickness and firmness on his face and went out of the room, artistically stumbling just beyond the door.
* * * *
Sten gasped to the hilltop, then checked his compass and timer. He decided he could take four minutes to recover.
The exercise was a modified version of that military favorite, the Long Run or March. But, typical of Selection, it had a twist.
Candidates were given a map, a compass, and a rendezvous point that they were supposed to reach at a certain time. Once that point was reached, however, there was no guarantee that the exercise was over. Generally the candidate was merely given, by an IP, another RP and sent on his or her way.
The exercise didn’t have much to do with pilot training, but it had a lot to do with tenacity and determination. Plus, Sten grudged, it probably showed which beings had learned that their brains were fools, telling the body to quit when the body’s resources had barely begun to work.
Again, it was simple for Sten—Mantis teams ran these exercises as recreation.
But it did trim the candidates. Already ten of the thirty-plus candidates in Sten’s group had withered and vanished.
Sten, flat on the ground, feet elevated, and in no-mind, heard footsteps.
He returned to reality to see the small woman who on their first day had made the cogent observation
about pilots trot smoothly toward him.
Instead of going flat and shutting the systems down, she dropped her pack, went flat, and began doing exercises.
Sten was curious—this was an interesting way to con the mind into going one step farther. He waited until she finished, which added an extra minute to his time.
The downhill side of this part of the course was rocky. Sten and the female candidate—Victoria—were able to talk as they went.
Data exchange: She was a lieutenant in the navy. She was trained as a dancer and gymnast. Successful, Sten guessed, since she’d performed on Prime World. Sten even thought he’d heard of a couple of the companies she’d been with.
So why the service?
A military family. But also, dancing was work. She said being a professional dancer was like being a fish in sand.
Sten found the breath to laugh at the line.
Plus,