Part 1 In the beginning there was nothing. The factory production line was empty and forlorn, with only dimmed lighting splashing solitary pockets of light in small circles. Row after row of massive cranes and assembly arms were protectively nestled into their resting places along the ceilings and walls, where they were content to brood and wait for their turn to serve. Doors the size of starship engines stood their ground against the foul smells of grease, burned metal, and paint that fouled the air.
What was remarkable about the scene was the last of a cast, for what story can start without a cast? And this one would be a tale for the ages. Before it was done there would be heroes and villains alike, enough to regale audiences in bars and children in schools. Cowardly men would roam alongside women as tough as armor plating. Dashing heroes with spotless military records would step forth to mix alongside the traitors, thieves, and liars. But for now the story would have to content itself with The Man and his iron horse.
To serve The Man was like responding to a calling. No, not a calling: a call to arms. As an instrument of policy and arbiter of the ultimate force, The Ship would serve The Man and those who he served, in turn. For this was the way it had always been, and this was the way it would continue to be. And what was The Man without his faithful steed and trusty companion? He was nothing.
In response to the demands of The Man for his iron horse, the lights began to slowly turn on, irregularly buzzing and flickering to life. Gears groaned as the arms shook in their cradles. As small pinpricks of light erupted through open doors steam billowed from rusty pipes and safety valves. Men and women of four different empires began to converge on the production floor, wearing multicolored jumpsuits and hardhats. Above their heads in the control room their supervisors intermingled with cups of coffee and half-eaten sandwiches.
"Another one, huh?" one of them asked his neighbor as they regarded the empty production line. "Haven't had to build one of those in what, six months?"
"Something like that."
They stood there for a while longer until he spoke again. "Any idea why?"
"Something about wanting a good ship."
A newcomer to their conversation snorted as she overheard. They both turned to look as she spoke from behind her row of dirty, grease-fouled panels. "Men: all you care about is sentimentality. If he wanted a good ship he should've gone for something else, but what do I know? I'm just some grease monkey sitting in a factory."
Had The Ship had a voice in the conversation it would have of course argued otherwise. Its cousins, brothers, and sisters were heirs to tradition. They were versatile ships with long histories of service, known for sporting bedeviling arrangements of weapons and electronics that were fined-tuned to individual specifications. And if they weren't good ships, then why were they sold to become the faithful iron horses of The Man, the ships that were instantly recognizable as belonging to the ones who rode with death as their wingmen?
But of course The Ship had no voice or body, and thus no say. All its soul could do was sit, and wait, and watch while its physical shell took shape.
The first things to arrive were the prefabricated sections. Four stories tall and filled with empty conduits and passageways, they lacked doors and the sounds of voices. If The Ship was a physical vessel and iron horse for The Man, in its most basic form then these sections would have been the community of voices that came together to forge the perfect weapon of war. As yet unmet with each other, however, they rolled into the factory on assembly lines, wondering all along what they would look like when fully assembled.
A warning siren shrieked somewhere as yellow lights came alive on the walls. Bodies scattered as the cranes descended, sniffing for the sections. Like giant claws they were unceremoniously slammed into the pieces, grabbing and squeezing them before lifting them away from the chaos down below. Men and women watched as, in an intricate ballet, a precise sequence of computer scripts and commands choreographed precise measurements and rates of motion. Lines of text flew across display screens in the control room as the first two arms slammed the pieces into the cradle where the shape of The Ship would take shape.
There were nods of satisfaction all around. Another construction process underway on schedule. Throughout shift after shift and under the eyes of hundreds of people the work continued.
Line after line of parts and components streamed into the production area as it became an arsenal. There were unrecognizable pieces of machinery that rolled in on trucks, stacked alongside elongated hardpoints for the weapon launchers. Racks for missiles lined up around the enormous power core assembly. On day six of the construction process a door high up on the wall hissed open to reveal a que of five engines laying parallel to the assembly area, standing ten men high and dwarfing everything in sight. The engines reeked of grease and fresh coats of paint that marked bolting and caution areas with expert precision.
By day eleven of the process a sister ship was taking shape alongside the first. At all hours of the day and night they sat there and regaled each other with stories of what had come and what was to come, watching as the men and machines swarmed over each other. Their sides and ribs grew higher and higher, taller and fatter. Wings took shape, the better for them to fly upon.
Then came the day when the engines were lifted into place. Men and women stopped what they were doing as the enormous shadows blotted out the lights. Work barges hovered overhead and shepherded the process. After the last engine had been slotted into place the sparks erupted as men and machines alike attacked them in a valiant effort to securely fasten them to the bones of The Ship. Its sister watched enviously, waiting for its turn.
Fast forward a few days, and soon it was time to go. Engines thrummed with power, and feet walked the inner guts of The Ship. Interior lights shone brilliantly out through the viewports. Metal gleamed on the armor plating that provided that all-important protective cocoon. Running lights twinkled as if to declare its readiness to the world. One-by-one the gantries hissed and let go of the armored belly, to fall away towards the floor. There was no fanfare, no ceremony, and nothing special to mark the occasion for the workers who had labored so long and so hard. The iron horse awaited its trusty rider.