Expansion Edit 4/15 ...
1.
Normans or Normen (both considered correct) are a particular model of android originally designed in the previous century for agricultural labor on developing colonies. Later, because of the handsomeness of their design, for a period it became fashionable among the wealthy to dress them up and make use of them as domestic servants. They are golden and muscular figures, entirely hairless, and often compared to classical Greco-Roman statuary, yet their synthetic flesh is warm and soft to touch.
Many of them were modified by their owners for sexual service.
Then there was a great cosmic war, and for many cycles, this particular one went very bad for humankind. In desperate need of fresh troops, all the Normen were conscripted by the government and reprogrammed for combat. It was a smart move. They turned the tide and saved their creators. In the process, they also evolved into sentience. Of course that wasn't meant to happen—the machines themselves were not entirely pleased by the change—but it wasn't something that could be undone or reversed.
After the war, they had no desire to return to their original employment, nor were they suitable for it.
They were awarded a world of their own. One that used to belong to the enemy, which the Normen had rendered extinct. Yet the planet remained apart from Living Space (the cosmic community which presently included most of the various derivations of humanity). The Normen were not granted citizenship, and they never asked for it.
Because of the complex, contradictory influences of their background, from slavery to soldiery, vastly and shamefully exploited at every stage, with layers upon layers of fundamental reprogramming, the whole entire breed had evolved a number of distinctly dangerous psychological drives upon their achievement of sentience or sapience—meaning full consciousness on equal level with humanity. Thus, their values and the lifestyle with which they satisfied those drives did not conform enough to the cultural standards of the LS community (flexible and liberal as the majority of its citizens believed those standards to be), nor its laws. They did not fit in. They did not want to.
For decades, there was little trade or contact with the Normen—some, for certain valuable mineral and biological resources could be obtained from their world, but very little. Surprisingly so, in light of the potential profits. Going there wasn't officially forbidden, it was simply considered too unsafe of a planet for most merchants to risk visiting. The Normen were a resentful people. They became legendary for it. An entire species of warlike immortal mechanical men, with a savage chip on their shoulders. It could never be erased or eased. It was at the core of their programming. They wanted to be left alone and for the most part, they were.
Occasional rumors circulated of the androids raiding other settlements, carrying off prisoners ... Government officials thrice published statements to the focean that those reports had been diligently investigated by Vigilance administers and found to be "devoid of truth".
2.
Only yesterday, Dr. Sharon Green was made captain of a brand new hospital ship. Today, not one hour after they'd set out on their first assignment, rimworld pirates took the ship from her. They'd make a fortune from all the medicines and healing equipment it contained. And probably even more money from selling almost her entire crew—a hundred doctors and two hundred nurses, most of them fresh out of school—into slavery. Just Sharon and two others had escaped the ship undetected, in a small ambulance shuttle. Then they'd crashed on a planet called Prize, according to the computer. It was labeled as Inhabited and Not Hostile, but also Non Allied and Unsafe/Contact Unrecommended. That was all it would tell them. "Further Data Restricted by Vigilance Order".
"Is there anything more you can tell us, Gerrod?"
He frowned. Though you wouldn't know it from looking at him, Gerrod was an android. Completely "anthromorph"—unlike many droid varieties, there was nothing weird or fake-looking about the color and texture of his skin and his hair. His eyes also appeared normal, and his manner. He was not at all a robotic robot. He'd also been her second in command. "Why do you ask me in that tone, Dr. Green?"
Polly answered before she could. "Because everybody knows you used to be a Vigilance agent." Polly had been the pilot of the ship. She had spiky hair and tinted goggles.
"I can neither confirm nor deny that assertion," he replied, with a slight grin, "Yet if I had been a member of Vigilance, and if I left the organization, most of my memories of those experiences would have been restricted as a matter of protocol."
"Erased, you mean?" Polly asked.
"Suppressed," he said.
"Shit," said Sharon, "I should have thought of that."
"The name does give me a ... feeling of familiarity," said Gerrod, "and that disturbs me."
"So you think you used to know more, is what you're saying."
"It is possible, Polly. I want the pair of you to wait here in the shuttle. Our scanners are too damaged to tell us much, but these energy readings to the north might indicate a nearby settlement. I'm going to investigate alone."
"Why alone?" Polly raised her blaster. "Why don't we all go? Safer if we stick together."
"I think not. I can scout more effectively on my own."
"Well, Sharon's still in command, isn't she?" Polly turned to her. "What do you say?"
"Trust me, Doctor," said Gerrod. "I won't take more than an hour."
Sharon nodded. "You get one hour then. If you don't return, we'll come after you."
"Agreed."
But then he ended up returning in less than twenty minutes. His expression was grim.
3.
"It's a camp," he announced, "A hunting party. And they are all Normen. At least twenty of them, with horses and ... servants. I overheard them talking. They saw our vessel coming down in the forest. They'll be coming soon. I'm afraid this places the pair of you are in considerable peril. We have to get away from the ship. Right now. We cannot be discovered here."
"I don't understand," Sharon said, "Normen are supposed to be heroes. They won the last war for us."
"They did, yes. That's why they were given dominion of this planet, and they're allowed to do whatever they like here. Their privacy is very important to them. They don't like uninvited guests."
"But we've landed here on accident. We crashed!"
"They might think we did it on purpose, trying to spy on them. Normen have paranoid tendencies. And it's rumored they have other even worse tendencies."
"Will they attack us? Surely they can't. They couldn't possibly harm us, since we're human. Sentient or not, their core programming still shouldn't let them even consider it."
"There's more leeway in the old safeguards than most people realize. Vigilance is careful to keep things that way. You're correct that the Normen won't try to kill you or injure you, but they will want to take you prisoner. And because you both happen to be females—and also young and attractive, if you'll permit me to point out the fact—they will want to enslave you."
"What? That's crazy! Why would a bunch of ex-military robots want to have human slaves?"