Seedling
-
1.04
I walked down the street, considering my options for the day. I'd shaped my unused fungus into a large backpack, with the space my meager possessions didn't fill acting as a portable store of biomass. Between the strength of my new physique and my shaper powers wiping away any exhaustion, the weight was a non-issue, though I might need to burn some biomass at some point to replace all the calories I was burning lugging it around.
I knew I'd want to buy some property soon so I could set up a lab and some permanent living quarters. I could almost certainly afford to do so right now, but for a couple of reasons I decided to hold off on it. For one thing, concentrating too much of my money back in one place too soon could lead angry criminals or investigating authorities back to me. For another, spending a large chunk of my seed cash would slow down my long term growth substantially.
Of course, just because I couldn't set up an official base today, didn't mean I couldn't set up a base. Having a completely off-the-books hidey-hole or two for emergencies and secret projects would probably be useful in the long run anyway.
I'd found another net-cafe while exploring last night, so I decided to stop in to check on some things and help solidify my plans for the day. To my delight this one doubled as an actual cafe, selling some half-decent food alongside the computer time. I got myself some coffee and a croissant to munch on, then grabbed a computer and got to work. I started off by looking over aerial imagery and USGS maps of the region, identifying some good spots for both of the bases I was going to end up building. After that, I spent some time browsing realty listings to get a rough idea of how much my official base would cost me, jotting down the more promising listings in one of my notebooks as I found them.
With that taken care of for now, I popped my thumb-drive into the computer and checked base with the VI I had working the stock market. As expected there wasn't really much growth yet, it had only been a few hours after all, but everything was running smoothly so far. None of the accounts I had it managing were showing signs of having been made and it was having no problems finding underlying market trends to exploit. Before long I'd have all the money I'd need to finance my plans.
I finished my morning by getting ahold of all the technical specifications I'd need to spit out a Wisconsin Driver's License on my maker and have it hold up as valid under scrutiny, taking a moment to verify the details that I'd fed into the DMV's servers the other day while I was at it. After all, It'd be pretty silly to make a perfectly forged ID and then go and print the wrong information on it.
By the time I'd finished up at the cafe and made my way to the nearest bus-stop it was mid morning, the spring sun already starting to make the day pleasantly warm. I'd thought about setting up shop in the boat-graveyard but it was such a cliched thing to do and really, with Leviathan coming, storing anything I actually wanted to keep by the water was just dumb. No, much better to make a base as far from the ocean as possible. Which was why I soon found myself trundling along on a bus. It took three transfers to different lines, a fair bit more waiting at different bus stops (though I did use one such wait to hit up a nearby grocery store for some supplies) and several hours that I would never get back, but eventually I found myself at the north-western edge of the city. Public transit would take me no further from here. I resolved then and there to address my transportation situation before I had to make this trip too many more times.
Still, it was a nice day out, and the way I was eating up the kilometers to my destination had me appreciating my new body more and more with every step. I'd done plenty of walking in my previous life but tackling hills with a heavy pack like this would have been exhausting, especially since I was slowly gaining elevation the whole time. I was definitely glad I'd thought to get some water before I left town though; new body and funky powers or not, I still got thirsty. I mean, I could easily pull any water I needed out of a tree or drink stagnant water out of a ditch without worrying about getting a disease, but it was nice just having a bottle on hand, ready to go.
The sun was starting to dip towards the western horizon as I left the main road and started following a long gravel track into the Brockton Bay National Forest. The bay was far enough north to have a pretty short growing season and between the poor, rocky soil and the hilly terrain there was never much incentive to develop this area as farmland, so a vast swath of land had ended up designated as national forest. It was pretty lightly visited even in the warmer months, so I was pretty sure I wouldn't run into anyone else out here now, as early in the season as it was.
Best of all for my purposes though, I had a fair bit of elevation on the city and a number of hills between me and the water to act as breakwaters. Anything I set up out here should stay nice and dry when Leviathan paid his visit, unless things went terribly wrong. Reaching the end of the road, I found a decently sized parking area with a neglected-looking notice board and several trails leading off into the woods. Not wanting to get lost, I picked a nice, healthy maple tree near the parking lot and started working on it with one of the more esoteric aspects of my shaper powers.
I'd had a vague awareness that I could do something like this every time I'd put my powers to work, but it was still incredibly strange to pour something of my own essence into the tree I'd chosen, widening the link I shared with it further and further as I went. Without conscious direction on my part, a small nodule formed in the tree's root system, eerily similar to the structure in my own brain that allowed me to control my powers. As the changes finished, well, the closest thing I could compare the experience to is seeing double.
I could sense and control biology around the tree I'd chosen the same as I could around my own body, though given our proximity the ranges overlapped more or less completely, hence the double-vision. Above and beyond my normal biological sense, I could tell exactly where my new node was. It was like proprioception; this was part of me now, of course I knew where it was. Beyond even that though, my sense of the tree's biology was... different. Like my meat-body, the tree was me now, not just something external that I happened to have control over. I could feel myself soaking in the last of the evening sun with my new spring leaves, nutrient-rich sap flowing down into my trunk, water and minerals flowing up through my roots. It was an alien existence, and strangely humbling to experience.
Eventually my moment of wonder passed and, confident that I would be able to find my way back to the road out now, I set off into the underbrush. I made a point of deliberately avoiding any of the trails present, wanting to further minimize any chance of discovery. As I walked further into the trees, I could feel my radius of biological control stretch out, eventually separating into two distinct circles when my original body got far enough away from my tree-body.
Between the hilly terrain and the trees it got dark pretty quick once the sun started dipping below the horizon, but between my ability to sense everything biological around myself and my new eyes the dark didn't pose much of a problem for me, especially once I added a tapetum lucidum behind my retinas to make the most of the available light. I'd have to be careful with that once I was back in civilization though, having my eyes go all shiny and weird when I was trying to pass as a baseline could easily give me away. Out here in the woods it was pretty handy though. Even though the moon was only a slim crescent and despite a layer of clouds and a canopy of tree-branches obscuring even that meager light, it might as well have been daytime, everything warmer than air temperature glowing faintly with a red beyond red and everything else lit up in varying shades of gray.
It had been a while since I'd had a good nature hike prior to getting punted into this universe, and now here I was in a new and exciting place experiencing it with new and exciting senses. I hadn't had this much fun in ages, and I must have spent several hours walking deeper into the trees, just drinking it all in. Eventually though, I started getting tired. Not physically, but mentally. I'd done a lot today, and walking through the woods with my awesome new eyes had been quite the trip. I could erase the physical symptoms of tiredness fairly trivially, but I was somewhat leery about messing with my brain like that. So instead, I had a seat against a nearby tree, drawing forth a comfy chair from it's trunk with a thought.
As I sat there, half dozing, I realized that I'd been going about this in a really silly way. I knew I wanted to put a base somewhere in these woods but even if I knew exactly what I was looking for in terms of location (which I didn't), wandering around aimlessly was far from the best way to go about looking for it, given the powers I possessed. With a thought, I reached out to every tree in range of both my meat-body and my tree-body pushed with my power, and twisted new nodes into existence. Then I did it again, using all my new bodies to repeat the process. My awareness rushed out from my bodies like a wave and I became multitudes. By the time I forced my self to stop expanding, I was the forest. I was aware of every living thing for miles.
My leaves reached for the heavens, my roots gripped the soil. In the dark I was quiescent, burning my stores of energy and breathing out carbon dioxide, but come day I would soak in the sunlight and use it to replenish myself, refreshing the air for those that lived beneath my branches as I did. It was difficult to pull myself away from it, to push the awareness back down into the body I was born in, but I knew it was essential that I do so. The forest was so much bigger than I, and it would be all too easy to lose myself in the green if I wasn't careful.
Becoming myself again had turned my fatigue into exhaustion. Seeing to my physical needs with shaper, I had the tree body I was still sitting on pull me up into it's canopy. Once there, I wove a basket of branches around myself and softened the wood beneath me into a comfortable bed and pillow to lie upon. I drifted off to sleep under the stars cradled, from a certain point of view, in my own arms.
---
I'm not sure rather to say I woke up with the dawn or not, that morning. One the one hand, the part of my awareness that was a forest certainly perked right up as the sunlight hit it. On the other hand though, my meat-body stayed sound asleep for at least another hour. It was a strange experience, to say the least.
Eventually the novelty of existing as nothing but trees started to wear a bit thin and I decided to spend my tinker charges for the day. The flood of knowledge as I assigned my charges to personal transportation, cybernetics, life support systems, architecture and excavation was actually what woke up my original body. All the new information gave me a much better idea of what a good place to build a base would look like, so by the time I was done lowering myself to the ground, using shaper to see to my cleanliness and scarfing down a granola bar (there's still something to be said for actually eating once in a while) the part of my consciousness that lived in the trees had already picked out a good spot, about a mile away from me. I started walking to my chosen site, but didn't bother waiting till I was there in person to get to work.
Collecting biomass (mostly in the form of invasive species), I shaped it into a biological excavator. It was basically a giant worm, about three meters across, equipped with row after row of rotating, diamond hard, razor-sharp teeth at the front and a specialized nano-swarm in its guts designed to convert dirt or stone into a specialized epoxy that it could leave in its wake, sealing and reinforcing the tunnels it would dig. I had it start digging down in a gentle spiral, starting beneath a mighty oak. I shaped that particular tree-self into a hidden entrance for my new base, and had its roots flow into the tunnel behind my borer, extending my range of control down into the ground behind it and carting away excess stone and dirt to the surface for disposal. Using the biomass I'd gathered, I grew steps for the long spiral staircase I was creating and lined my tunnel with preternaturally dense and strong wood.
Once I felt my borer was sufficiently deep, I had it level off, digging a sixty meter long tunnel before melting into the roots that had followed it down. By the time I arrived at the entrance to my new base I had converted the roots below into biological jackhammers and set them to widening the tunnel out a bit and squaring it off to turn it into a long, narrow room. Seeing the impressive mound of dirt and stone that had accumulated around my tree, I shaped up a few simple automatons, closer to plant than animal, and set them to spreading it out a bit so it wouldn't draw attention.
Before long, the core of my new base was done and I had my roots line the exterior walls, form support columns and partition the interior space with dividing walls. The spiral staircase down now lead to a common area shaped like a backwards L. Along the left-hand wall were three decently-sized bedrooms (in case I needed to put up any guests here) with a small bathroom in the far right corner, against the wall that separated my lab area from my living space. For now, my lab here would be a ten by twenty meter room at the far end of my base.
I shaped a door in my tree so I could start on down, and immediately noticed that I'd neglected to light my base. A simple thought caused portions of my walls to start glowing at regular intervals, lighting my new bunker up with a soft blue-green glow. After I made it down, I spent the next few hours finishing out my base. Probably the most important thing I accomplished was shaping up a more powerful version of the bio-computer from my laptop to serve as a mainframe and tying it directly into an industrial scale fabber. Using my new cybernetics specialty at about the most basic level possible, I added USB ports to both my mainframe and my laptop. With access to the files on my thumb-drive and a few seconds of fab time I was finally able to forge myself some ID.
Not really wanting to spend another night out here when so much was going to be going down back in town over the next few days, I decided to put my new transportation specialty to use. Unfortunately, despite now having a driver's license that would check out as valid, I didn't have any kind of insurance or registration on hand, and I didn't have internet access out here to hack something up either. Not wanting to have a run-in with the cops over driving around in an unregistered, uninsured vehicle this rather limited my options.
Working with a new specialty at an almost painfully simplistic level for the second time that day, I soon had myself a bicycle. Its frame was based on carbon nanotubes, it used ceramic disc brakes and the tires were a nice compromise width, skinnier than a mountain bike because I wasn't really planning on off-roading it, wider than a touring bike because I had a pretty long stretch of gravel road between me and pavement right now. The whole thing only weighed in at a couple of pounds, and with my new musculature I was sure I'd be able to make it fly. With that in mind, I fabbed up a spiffy looking ceramic helmet (even stronger than the stuff my bones were made of, since I didn't have to worry about keeping it close enough to organic for my shaper power to work on), slung my new bike over my shoulder, walked up my long-ass stairway, locked down the entrance to my base and then started making my way back to the road out of here, which wasn't exactly hard given that I basically was the forest, and the underbrush pretty much leapt out of my way.
It was just past noon by the time I got to the road out, but my new ride was sweet as hell. Easily the best bicycle I'd ever ridden. I had to dial my speed back pretty considerably while I was on gravel, but once I hit pavement I was off like a rocket. I didn't have a speedometer on this thing yet, but I'm pretty sure I was breaking the fifty-five mph posted speed limit on level ground without seriously pushing myself. I'd have to be careful using this thing on roads with more traffic, or I could get myself into all sorts of trouble. Still, it definitely made the trip back into town a lot shorter than the trip out had been. I still had a couple hours of daylight left by the time I hit the city limits.
It took conscious effort to keep my speed down to that of a baseline human riding a commercially available bike, but it was still a lot quicker than walking and a lot more convenient than waiting for the bus. I put my remaining daylight to good use, checking out several of the potential sites for an official base I'd found yesterday and getting better acquainted with the docks in preparation for tomorrow night. I definitely wasn't going to let Taylor's debut play out like it had in canon. Just the fact that I was present could have potentially butterflied things enough to make her encounter with Lung a bad end and though the Undersiders had been friends to her when she desperately needed them, her descent into villainy had royally screwed up her life.
With the sun going down again, I grabbed some takeout and found a slightly cleaner motel. After eating I actually got to take a proper shower, and boy was it nice. I did run into a problem after I got out though. I'd been able to keep myself relatively clean with my powers but, the effect didn't quite extend to my clothes. Considering the amount of physical effort I'd been putting in the past few days they were starting to get quite ripe, in addition to being somewhat ill-fitting after the changes I'd made to myself. Not wanting to put a filthy outfit back on after I'd just gotten myself properly clean, I ended up whipping up a few sets of clothes to wear out of my store of biomass.
With my belly full and my hygiene taken care of, I decided to have some fun. Using my new cybernetics specialty, I designed a few new components for my meat-top and printed them out on my personal fabber. It took a bit of fiddling with my shaper powers to get everything integrated properly, but soon enough I could actually get onto the motel's free Wi-Fi. Since I wasn't planning on doing any hacking from here, I took the opportunity to register a PHO account and then spent the rest of the evening browsing the boards and seeing what else there was to do for fun on Earth Bet's internet, not falling asleep till the wee hours of the morning.