Damage Control
- Hey.
- Hm? Eh, hi. What’s up?
- Same-o same-o. It’s hard to keep current with anything that’s not work lately anyway. How´s it going?
- Well, you know, I’m contractually bound to a life of servitude with no entertainment breaks. But seriously, I’m swamped.
- Cool blueprints.
- Hah, yeah, I’ve been working on these for quite some time now.
- What’s that?
- Parts designs. Remember the incident with Building C, some time ago?
- Are you kidding? We’re still cleaning debris from that one.
- Yeah, it was pretty bad. Many people got killed.
- Well, it had been waiting to happen for a long time. We informed Operations that the device was failing, but they wouldn’t shut it down. Said they couldn’t.
- It doesn’t matter anymore. Thing is – right now, they need to repair it, so I’ve been assigned to work with Reengineering. They don’t want…
- Wait a minute, is that thing still running?
- Of course it is.
- But I thought the building had gone through the air!
- It did – most of it did, anyway. Quite literally.
- Then how…?!
- Well, turns out the contraption in Building C – like every other piece of old machinery within the Complex – goes very deep. It was severely damaged during the incident, but it never stopped functioning.
- That’s about the scariest thing I’ve ever heard.
- I know. This whole situation is messed up on many levels. After the collapse, they had to send in teams of technicians to do underground maintenance. At present, it’s relatively stable, but back then it was still kind of unpredictable. Dangerous.
- You mean the bodies that were removed last…
- Post-incident casualties. But listen, you’ve got to keep it quiet.
- …of course.
- I mean it. I want to go through with this job. It’s very important.
- I said “of course”, so don’t worry.
- Alright.
- Now tell me, why do they need reengineered parts? Couldn’t they fix it with spares from our current stock?
- No. Apparently the mechanism’s malfunction was primarily structural. They do not want it to happen ever again, so I need to come up with entirely new parts.
- To do what? These parts you are designing, what are they for?
- I am not entirely sure.
- Excuse me?
- I´ve studied some of the blueprints from before the incident, and there seems to be a lot of redundancy in the system, whole sections if intricate machinery without any specific purpose. As far as I can tell, all they do - ehm, all they DID was dissipate energy. Yet, they somehow contributed to keep the whole thing’s integrity. I don’t know. I wonder what those sections would have to be like without the redundant components. Moreover, there’s the problem of attaching static parts to a continuously working – and not perfectly steady – instrument.
- Looks like a nice pickle.
- It is. But I believe I’m on to something.
- Good luck with that. Just tell me something, since you have already had access to the original device’s blueprints. Something I’ve been thinking of a lot lately…
- Shoot.
- What’s so damn important about this machine? What does it do, anyway?
- I understand your concern. Most of us had never considered the matter until the incident, me included.
- So tell me. What is that thing? What does it really mean to us?
- Well, ultimately…
- Yes?
- Everything.
- Hm? Eh, hi. What’s up?
- Same-o same-o. It’s hard to keep current with anything that’s not work lately anyway. How´s it going?
- Well, you know, I’m contractually bound to a life of servitude with no entertainment breaks. But seriously, I’m swamped.
- Cool blueprints.
- Hah, yeah, I’ve been working on these for quite some time now.
- What’s that?
- Parts designs. Remember the incident with Building C, some time ago?
- Are you kidding? We’re still cleaning debris from that one.
- Yeah, it was pretty bad. Many people got killed.
- Well, it had been waiting to happen for a long time. We informed Operations that the device was failing, but they wouldn’t shut it down. Said they couldn’t.
- It doesn’t matter anymore. Thing is – right now, they need to repair it, so I’ve been assigned to work with Reengineering. They don’t want…
- Wait a minute, is that thing still running?
- Of course it is.
- But I thought the building had gone through the air!
- It did – most of it did, anyway. Quite literally.
- Then how…?!
- Well, turns out the contraption in Building C – like every other piece of old machinery within the Complex – goes very deep. It was severely damaged during the incident, but it never stopped functioning.
- That’s about the scariest thing I’ve ever heard.
- I know. This whole situation is messed up on many levels. After the collapse, they had to send in teams of technicians to do underground maintenance. At present, it’s relatively stable, but back then it was still kind of unpredictable. Dangerous.
- You mean the bodies that were removed last…
- Post-incident casualties. But listen, you’ve got to keep it quiet.
- …of course.
- I mean it. I want to go through with this job. It’s very important.
- I said “of course”, so don’t worry.
- Alright.
- Now tell me, why do they need reengineered parts? Couldn’t they fix it with spares from our current stock?
- No. Apparently the mechanism’s malfunction was primarily structural. They do not want it to happen ever again, so I need to come up with entirely new parts.
- To do what? These parts you are designing, what are they for?
- I am not entirely sure.
- Excuse me?
- I´ve studied some of the blueprints from before the incident, and there seems to be a lot of redundancy in the system, whole sections if intricate machinery without any specific purpose. As far as I can tell, all they do - ehm, all they DID was dissipate energy. Yet, they somehow contributed to keep the whole thing’s integrity. I don’t know. I wonder what those sections would have to be like without the redundant components. Moreover, there’s the problem of attaching static parts to a continuously working – and not perfectly steady – instrument.
- Looks like a nice pickle.
- It is. But I believe I’m on to something.
- Good luck with that. Just tell me something, since you have already had access to the original device’s blueprints. Something I’ve been thinking of a lot lately…
- Shoot.
- What’s so damn important about this machine? What does it do, anyway?
- I understand your concern. Most of us had never considered the matter until the incident, me included.
- So tell me. What is that thing? What does it really mean to us?
- Well, ultimately…
- Yes?
- Everything.