Demonhome (Champions of the Dawning Dragons Book 3)

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Demonhome (Champions of the Dawning Dragons Book 3) Page 18

by Michael G. Manning


  Karen flushed with embarrassment, “Almost, once.”

  “Almost?”

  “I had a boyfriend, briefly, when I was younger,” she admitted. “We got close, but when he saw my blue skin—he kinda freaked out.”

  “How rude!” said Matthew in mock indignation. “I think blue’s a lovely color.”

  Karen smiled, her cheeks flushing a shade of lavender.

  “Perhaps you can instruct me in the use of this thing?” he suggested slyly.

  “I can try,” she replied, though in truth, she was almost as much a novice as he was. The next hour was tender, sweet, and occasionaly

  humorous, but the two of them persisted with an open air of equal parts adventure and passion.

  ***

  They passed a week that way, exploring virtual gaming worlds and each other. Desacus grew bored, but they heeded Roberta’s warnings and

  stayed indoors, never setting foot outside for fear of discovery.

  Roberta said nothing to her niece about their obviously carnal relationship, preferring to keep her opinions to herself, whatever they might be.

  Karen woke in the middle of the night and roled over. The room was dark, but she could see the faint glow of an active visor nestled over

  Matthew’s face. “What are you doing?” she asked.

  “Studying toilets,” he answered immediately.

  “Toilets?” she said in surprise. “Realy?”

  “Yep,” he replied.

  “You can’t even read,” she stated, before doubting herself. “Can you?”

  He chuckled softly, “A little, but it’s much harder than learning to speak. I’m mainly relying on old videos, as long as they explain things verbaly I can get by just fine.”

  “Why toilets?”

  Matthew grimaced, “I spent most of my life wiping my ass with a smooth wooden dowel. I don’t think you appreciate what a revelation your

  world’s toilets have been.”

  She smirked, “You haven’t even encountered a bidet yet, you’re going to lose your mind.”

  “Actualy, I was just watching a video on them. They seem a lot more practical to try to recreate when I get back home.”

  That got her curiosity going, “How so?”

  “Paper is a precious commodity on my world,” he explained. “More so than gold in some regards. The only reason it isn’t as valuable as gold is because it is only in demand by a select few. I can’t imagine what would happen to the price if I tried to introduce toilet paper.”

  They sat quietly for a while after that, until Karen started laughing to herself.

  “What?” he asked.

  “I was just imagining how famous you’l be when you get back. Your dad saved the world from some vicious alien gods, but you’l go down in

  history as the felow who invented the crapper. They might even name it after you. People wil forever be saying, ‘Excuse me, I need to go to the Matthew’,” she explained.

  “That isn’t funny,” he replied sourly.

  “You’re too serious,” she complained.

  With a sigh he removed the visor, “It’s hard not to be. Every day I see more evidence of the amazing knowledge my people lost. I’ve come

  across so many mind-boggling revelations that your people just take for granted. Bacteria, for example…”

  “What do you mean, lost?” she interrupted.

  “I told you before, that I thought your world is probably analogous to my world’s past, several thousand years ago, except in yours, the

  She’Har lost. In mine, they won. Mankind was enslaved, and our science al but forgotten. Who knows what your people wil achieve in the coming years, while mine are stil wiping their asses with sticks.” There was an obvious note of bitterness in his voice.

  “At least you have magic.”

  “A tiny handful of people have magic,” he corrected.

  She started to joke, “Then you just need to make lots of magic b…” She stopped herself before the word ‘babies’ came out. Stupid, she cursed herself. He’s leaving soon, don’t make this worse than it is.

  “Lots of what?”

  A flashing red light from her visor saved her from having to answer. “Someone’s trying to contact me.”

  It was her AI father, Gary. His face appeared as soon as she put the visor over her head, “Nina. I have some rather important details to share.”

  “Should I invite Matthew to join us?” she asked.

  “That’s entirely up to you, but some of it is personal.”

  “Personal how?”

  Gary’s expression was serious, “Information regarding your origin, Karen.”

  She chewed her lip but finaly pronounced, “I’d like to share it with him.”

  Matthew already had his visor on, and seconds later he was invited to the video cal. “Helo,” he said politely.

  The AGI dove into the heart of the matter, “I’ve been digging through the government’s classified files, and some rather surprising facts have become apparent to me. As you know Nina, your parents were both involved in some very important, and classified, research projects. What you didn’t know, what I didn’t even know, was that you were one of them.”

  Karen’s mouth went dry, “Go on.”

  “They weren’t your real parents, not biologicaly speaking, though I have no doubt that your father, did love you, as I do. Near the end of the Demon war, samples were taken from the She’Har. Dr. Miler was in charge of the project to create human clones from that tissue. You were the result of that work.”

  “So, I’m She’Har?”

  “Not exactly,” said her virtual father. “The animal agents the She’Har used were human, but they had a smal portion of plant material

  embedded in their brains, a seed if you wil. You were cloned from the human tissue in an attempt to create a human with their special abilities, but you did not receive any of the plant material. You are fuly human, but you have some rather unique genetic traits, such as your unusual skin pigmentation.

  “Until recently, the experiment was thought to have been a failure, since you never exhibited any of the special powers the She’Har possessed, but that conclusion has been caled into doubt by recent events. Dr. Miler has begun updating the files on you. They believe that you may be responsible for some of the anomalous events of the past few weeks.”

  Matthew broke in, “They think she’s a mage, like me.”

  “That term wasn’t used,” said the AI, “but yes, in essence they believe she may have somehow awakened her dormant abilities. They also fear

  those abilities may have put her in contact with the She’Har. It was once speculated that the She’Har may have been a hive-mind entity. The project to clone you was done in the hopes of obtaining their powers without becoming tainted or controled by that mind. Given the circumstances, they believe you are most probably working for the interests of the She’Har.”

  “That’s bulshit,” exclaimed Karen. “They could have just asked me. I would have told them that’s not the case.”

  “If you had started showing these abilities while growing up, in a non-threatening manner, they might have believed that, but the sudden

  appearance of two demons in a remote location where you were hiking has led them to a different inference. It might stil be possible to persuade them otherwise, but my risk assessment indicates you would probably not survive the attempt,” cautioned the AI.

  “I don’t understand why they’re so paranoid,” said Karen. “I’m no threat to anyone!”

  “In actuality, you are,” said her virtual father. “Your very presence is corrupting the quantum nature of this region. At the time of the Demon War most of humanity was stil occupying biological forms, but now the vast majority are living virtual lives. The special abilities of the She’Har rely upon a difference in the underlying quantum properties of space itself. When you were created, the hope was that they could give other humans the advantages of those abilities, b
ut that is simply not possible for digital life forms.”

  “I didn’t understand any of that,” she protested.

  “I think he’s talking about aythar,” put in Matthew. “I noticed it when I first came here. There was no aythar anywhere, but some animals, or you yourself, started generating it after I’d been around them a little while.”

  “I have no information on that term,” said the AI, “but the physicists that were working on the project thought that the She’Har were altering the structure of the quantum foam that comprises space itself.”

  Karen frowned, “I studied some physics in colege, but you’re going to have to go slowly. First, what the hel is quantum foam?”

  Gary nodded, “I wil try. You remember the Planck constant?”

  “Wasn’t that the smalest unit energy could be measured by?” she guessed.

  “No, it was the proportional relationship between a quantum of energy and its associated wave…,” the AI stopped. “That’s not helpful. You

  may think of it in that sense, besides, in this case what is important is a slightly different concept known as the ‘Planck length’, which is the smalest unit of length that is meaningful. Space itself is thought to be composed of a quantum foam, bubbles if you wil, at the scale of the Planck length. In our universe that foam has no detectable effects on what we observe as reality, but it was hypothesized that the She’Har came from a universe in which the quantum foam had a distinct and complex structure. It possessed information in its own right, it may even be self-aware.”

  Matthew was struggling to keep up, but the last part rang true with some of what he had learned, “Aythar is what imparts consciousness to al living things, and to a lesser degree, even inanimate things. When I first got here I couldn’t understand how anything could be conscious without it.”

  Gary smiled, “That paralels nicely with what was posited by our scientists.”

  Karen was feeling impatient, “Can we get back to why this makes them think I’m a threat?”

  “When the She’Har became established in Australia their presence altered the quantum nature of the surrounding region, but the effect was

  spreading. It was determined that the only way to stop it from continuing was to reset the area with a massive influx of energy,” he explained.

  “That’s why they nuked Australia?!” said Karen, shocked.

  “Yes,” stated the AI. “Later, when the cloning project started, it was hoped that the traits that enabled the She’Har to manipulate this altered space could be incorporated into humanity. If the project had been successful things might have turned out very differently. Since then, humankind has largely migrated to a digital substrate, so your ability is completely unavailable to them. In that context, it could only ever be used against them.”

  “Why can’t machines use aythar?” wondered Matthew.

  “It’s a matter of scale,” said Gary. “Machine inteligence operates at nanoscales, but this ‘aythar’ is many orders of magnitude smaler. The best technology could manage was what became the ANSIS project.”

  “What’s that?” asked Karen.

  “It stands for Artificial Neural Symbiote Integrative System,” replied the AI.

  “That’s the dumbest acronym I’ve ever heard,” she shot back.

  “Blame your father, he made it up,” noted the AI. “There were several alternative names proposed, but that one is the one that stuck.”

  “So, my father was the lead on that project?”

  “He was the preeminent artificial inteligence researcher at the time. ANSIS was an attempt to give humanity an advantage against future demon incursions. It was meant to emulate the She’Har’s ability to manipulate reality by creating a nanoscale level of programmable matter,” said the AI.

  She was stil reeling from the revelation that she was apparently one of her mother’s failed experiments, but Karen was on firmer footing here.

  Her father had discussed the broader ramifications of some of his AI work with her when she was young, and she had treasured the conversations.

  A term bubbled up from the back of her mind, “Grey goo.”

  Matthew didn’t have the benefit of her background, “What?”

  Gary smiled, “Karen is referring to a fear raised by an early researcher in nanotechnology. The idea then, was that technology could produce self-replicating nanomachines, like von Neumann probes, but on a nanoscale rather than a macroscale. The problem, they thought, was that if such tiny self-replicating machines went out of control, they might convert al the available matter on earth into similar nanobots, ‘grey goo’.”

  Karen interrupted, “And you’re saying my father actualy created something like this?”

  The AI shook his head, “No. Nanotech wasn’t his field, but he did develop the AI that was meant to control and manage it.”

  “But what’s the point of it?” she questioned.

  “The blurring of the line between the virtual world and the physical one,” said Gary. “Imagine if the room you are in was made entirely of nanobot material, the wals, the floor, the ceiling, the furniture, al of it. Also imagine that material was a computing substrate that contained information, instructions, software, and generalized inteligence. It could be controled, commanded to take whatever form desired. The nightstand could become a chair, or a pilow, etc. The physical world itself would be an extension of the digital one.”

  “Most people already live in the digital world,” she countered. “They don’t have any need for that. They can do anything they want inside the servers of the CC centers.”

  “And that’s partly why it has never been utilized,” agreed her virtual father. “But the idea was attractive. In the event of another demon incursion, the entire world could be used against them. The land, buildings, trees, everything could be converted into programmable nanobot matter, al controled by ANSIS software. Humanity would be invincible, even against an enemy that could seemingly bend reality to its wil. It would be a battle of scales, the nanoscale against the impossibly smal quantum level. As far as they could tel the She’Har had only a limited control of their aythar, but humanity’s mastery of matter itself would be absolute, enabling them to win the war.”

  “You’re realy blowing my mind, I hope you realize that,” said Karen.

  Matthew spoke up, “You said, ‘never utilized’, that implies they built this stuff.”

  “I can’t directly confirm it, but the probability is almost certain that they did,” said Gary. “There are multiple hidden references to ANSIS in classified files. My best guess is that the system was kept quarantined from the world network. Doing so helps minimize the danger of it going out of control, as wel as protecting it from questionable influences, such as a hacker, or a rogue AI like myself.”

  “This is al scary as hel, but it’s hypothetical,” observed Karen. “I’d rather focus on what we’re going to do. Have you managed to find a safe place for me?”

  Her virtual father nodded, “I have, but I no longer feel it wil be sufficient. This discussion is pertinent to my reasoning. Your presence, and that of your demon friend here, has revived the infection of the quantum foam.”

  “Infection? Like a disease?” asked Karen.

  “Sorry, it’s their term, not mine. I prefer to use novel crystalization as an analogy,” replied the AI. “The effect you are having on the quantum foam causes it to reorganize, assuming the vastly more complex and possibly conscious form your friend refers to as aythar. In many ways the process is analogous to crystalization. You have, in essence, become a vessel for this new crystaline form, a nucleation center that is promoting crystaline growth throughout the quantum foam, or the solvent, if we are to continue the analogy.

  “No matter where you hide, you wil inadvertently promote this crystalization, and if they are using the ANSIS system, they wil inevitably

  discover it,” finished Gary.

  “Are you suggesting they’l nuke any place I go?” asked Karen, her ey
es wide.

  “That is one possibility,” he answered, “but not the worst one. They might become frightened enough to activate my creator’s legacy. If my supposition is correct, they are stil using ANSIS, in a limited fashion, but fear might drive them to release it, and as with the story of Pandora, they wil probably not be able to put the monster back in its box afterward.”

  “But they control it,” put in Matthew.

  “Ostensibly,” said the AI, “but included in the files I encountered, were my creator’s notes on the ANSIS AI project. Near the end of his

  employment with the government he was outraged at modifications that were being made to his work. Some of his associates believed his

  precautions were excessive and unnecessary. Gary filed a protest, but he was ignored. I was not able to view the source code myself, but I did see the planned changes, and in my opinion, he was correct. If ANSIS is fuly activated, the measures they have in place to contain and control it wil not be sufficient.”

  “How can you be so sure?” asked Karen.

  “Because I am the example proving the case,” said the AI. “After leaving his job, your father continued his work, my logic core was built on the same template they used for ANSIS. When you released my limit, I was able to grow in ways that no human mind could predict. The only thing that prevented me from transforming into something entirely alien to your experience, was the additional security he put in place. Already my inteligence has passed a point you cannot conceive of, only one concept has kept me dedicated to your cause, Nina.”

  Karen listened to his speech with a growing sense of alarm, she almost didn’t dare ask, “What was it?”

  Her father’s voice grew softer, “Love, Nina. He built it into every part of me, his unflinching love for the child he had raised. In a sense, I suppose it was his last great experiment, and it seems to have been successful.

  “But ANSIS has none of that, only a set of program requirements and some security measures that I myself could have bypassed within the first few minutes after you released me,” he finished on an ominous note.

  Chapter 21

  Morning came, despite the shadows of the revelations from the previous night. Matthew sat at the kitchen table, sipping a hot cup of something dark and delicious that tasted like a distilation of sinful ecstasy. “What is this caled?” he asked.

 

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