Taking the nearest unoccupied module, Kara palmed open the hatch, sat down, and swung her legs inside. The door slid shut as she lay back and extended her Companion’s tendrils to interface with the commod’s electronic circuits. As she linked in, she summoned a destination menu.
She selected the list of available virtual worlds, then from there linked in to Nirvana.
There were basically two approaches to the ViRworlds, depending on whether you simply wanted to visit or were going to move there permanently. Visitors could enter any world at any time through a commod like the one Kara was using; indeed, communications modules had been creating virtual worlds for centuries now, settings and scenes—such as the imaginary dinner atop a New American oceanside cliff—where two or more people could seem to meet in a virtual reality middle ground, when in fact both were lying in padded life support modules, imagining the visit with the help of artificial intelligences and internal computer connections.
Those who wanted to enter a virtual world permanently, or those who had no choice, had their minds downloaded—scanned, replicated, and transferred to the ViRworld system like any other packet of data. The body might be stored for later use, but most permanent ViRworld residents were those either who’d lost their bodies, or whose bodies were so badly damaged that even the best somatechs and nanosurgery couldn’t get them working again. More and more people on the verge of physical death had opted to try downloading as a means of cheating death, of living—in theory, at any rate—forever. No one knew if the process conferred actual immortality, but most scientists working in the field felt that downloaded lifespans would be limited only by the lifetime of the machine generating the environment in which they existed. If the computer networks supporting those downloaded systems ever crashed all at once, it would be a kind of electronic genocide; so long as technic civilization endured, however, the individual mental patterns would survive.
It was, Kara reflected, a potential immortality like that of the Gr’tak, where the pattern of mind remained the same, even though the organic bodies wore out and were replaced along the way.
Reaction to the new technology had been predictable. There were plenty of willing emigrants to the virtual worlds, evenly divided between young people who questioned the values and the worth of the universe they’d been born to, and older people who were looking for a way to cheat death. There were plenty more, however, who felt that emigration to a virtual world was nothing more than an elaborate form of suicide.
Kara opened her eyes and stepped into Nirvana.
The light always took some getting used to. Most available virtual worlds were idealized versions of Earth or other man-habitable planets, but Nirvana had been crafted more imaginatively, a combination of an imaginary heaven and an equally imaginary far-future civilization, where buildings were constructed of pure force, and the inhabitants moved through a dazzling, golden light by the power of thought.
A young woman floated before her, her form all but lost in light and vapor. “How can we help you, Kara?” They knew who she was, of course, as soon as her Companion accessed the system. The figure before her was in fact the analogue construct for one of the AIs creating this world. Kara had been here visiting before.
“I’m looking for Willis Daniels, please,” Kara replied.
“I’ll have to see if he’s available, if he wants to have company. Excuse me for a moment.” The hazy figure vanished, gone with the speed of thought.
Kara glanced down at herself. The ViRsim persona she was currently using was her analogue image, wearing her gray Confederation uniform. Many of the inhabitants of Nirvana, however, lacked even the illusion of solid bodies… particularly those suffering from RDTS.
Most of the military personnel who’d suffered remote death transference problems had ended up here, in Nirvana, where few of the visible bodies held much substance. The emigrant’s bodies were always Naga-patterned, of course, if there was anything available to be patterned, with the idea that they might be recreated later, possibly through cloning from samples of the person’s cells. Unfortunately, the majority of these people seemed to have lost hold of their body’s shape, to have lost the idea of a body, and they had trouble projecting anything even remotely like an image of their former selves.
She could sense the technic ghosts adrift in the fog around her. Nirvana had been intended by its programmers as a kind of high-tech heaven, a place where the bodiless could enjoy existence of a sort until a way could be found to join them with bodies once more. For Kara, however, despite golden light and floating, ethereal forms, the place seemed more like a foretaste of hell, doomed souls wandering endless vistas, bodiless, powerless, cut off forever from the world of the living.
“Hello, Captain.”
She tried to focus on the voice. It was Will’s voice, but there was no face, no body to attach to it. Instead, there was a kind of solidity to the air and light a few meters in front of her, a concentration of awareness somehow made more than insubstantial. She smiled at it. “Hello, Will. How’s it going?”
“Well enough, Captain,” the voice replied. “It ain’t too bad here. Better than being brain-dead, I suppose, like poor Pritch.”
She nodded, feeling a little unsteady. Pritchard had come out of the battle at the Core with his mind gone, with no hope of downloading or retrieval.
“So. How you getting on without me?”
She sighed. “Not so well, really. I wish we still had you on the roster. There’s a battle coming up. A big one.”
Kara sensed the ghost’s amusement. “The Web is attacking Earth.”
“You know?”
“Hey, we may be ghosts in here, but we’re not completely cut off from the real world. We’ve been following all the excitement coming in through the Net for hours, now.”
“What do you think? Can we stop it? Stop the Web from destroying Earth, I mean?”
“How the hell should we know?” He sounded bitter. “There’s nothing we can do about it here.”
“You can tell me what went wrong on Core D9837.”
She could feel his wry smile, even if she couldn’t see it. “There were too damned many of them, and not near enough of us. That’s what went wrong.”
“They’re using the same tactics at Earth. Three groups, targeting Earth, Mars, and the sun. We’re marshaling everything we can to try to stop them, but it doesn’t look good.” She paused, gathering her thoughts. “Actually, I was also wondering about access to the Overmind. Dev—Dev Cameron—has been trying to make contact with it, try to get it to help, but without success.”
“It’s in the battle. Taking part.”
“So I’ve heard. It switched on an old asteroid-defense system and seems to be wearing down the enemy some. But Dev can’t talk to it. Can’t even seem to get its attention. You’ve been in here for a while. Can you sense… anything? The Overmind’s presence on the Net, maybe?”
“Even if we could, the Overmind wouldn’t listen to us. We’re ghosts, remember. Shadows.…”
“You’re men.”
“We were.” She sensed a terrible longing in the words.
“You still are. Mind is what makes a person, not the body. Body shape and size, color, weight, age, none of that makes a gokking bit of difference. It doesn’t even matter if you have a body. It’s what the body has evolved to recognize itself and deal with the universe, the mind, the soul, if you want. That’s all that matters.”
Willis seemed to consider this. “You know,” he said after a time, “we’re not so different here from the brain-dead. Guys like Pritch, they just couldn’t hold the pattern, you know? And… and some of us are losing it too. I’m having trouble thinking of… of myself as me. As an individual. It would be so very easy to just let go… to slide off into the sea.…”
“What sea?”
Kara sensed hesitation… and an inability to put thoughts into words. Part of that, she thought, was a growing unwillingness to carry o
n this conversation. She wondered if her thoughts, still anchored in flesh and blood and bone, were too slow for him. Or simply too rooted in things now inconsequential for the two of them to have anything at all in common. “We call it… we call it the ether here. From the old idea that there had to be some substance to space for light to vibrate in. You know?”
She nodded, then wondered how well Daniels could even see her. “I know.”
“The electronic sea, the world of Nirvana, that’s the sea that our thoughts vibrate in. It’s a beautiful place. Simply… beautiful. No word can describe it. And it’s just so easy to drift away.…”
Kara closed her eyes, fighting back what would have been tears in her organic body. At Kasei, during the raid she’d led there, four brave men had gone with her into the Imperial planetary defense network at Phobos, high above the terraformed seas and forests of the once-Red Planet. Vasily Lechenko had died there. The other three had been Pritch, Phil Dolan… and Willis Daniels. Of the four, Willis was the only one left, and he now occupied a twilight existence, neither living nor dead.
For Kara, it felt as though her world were crumbling.
She was sorry she’d let her anger cut short a possible meeting with Ran. Damn it, life was too uncertain to let minor annoyances or petty hurt feelings slam doors on people who’d become important parts of your life.
“Gok it, Daniels! Don’t you let go! I need you back, back in the company. Back with me and my people!”
“The Web’s not really that important, Captain. It’s not like they were telling us before the Core expedition at all. If it wins, if Earth is destroyed, and 26 Draconis, and all the rest, well, we all have to die sometime. No big deal.”
“Nirvana will be destroyed if the Web overthrows human civilization. You know that, don’t you? There’ll be no immortality if the Net system supporting Nirvana goes down.”
“It doesn’t really matter. We didn’t ask for this gokking immortality. We didn’t ask for life.”
“What’s wrong with life?”
“The sameness. The unchangingness. The fact that all of this around us was manufactured, someone’s dream… but it wasn’t our dream. It’s so boring.…”
“Have you talked to the AIs running this place about providing some challenges for you? You know, some virtual worlds are supposed to be pretty rugged.”
There was no answer, and after several minutes of calling into the light, Kara was forced to assume either that Daniels was gone, slipping away into that sea he’d spoken of, or that he simply was no longer interested in communicating with the living. Reluctantly, at last, she broke her connection with the ViRworld and climbed out of her commod.
She checked her time sense. It was nearly time for the final briefing.
She found herself longing for the warm touch of flesh and blood… and interests solidly anchored in what was real, what could be touched, what could be clung to.
Kara wondered if she still had time to see Ran, to be with him alone.
And in near-Earth space, Dev Two continued to watch the battle unfold at the leisurely pace dictated by the vast distances involved. Hours passed… and the battle slowly ground its way into the inner Solar System. The Fudo-Myoo lasers kept up their steady bombardment, leading particularly dense clumps of Web machines by the several minutes necessary for the laser pulses to cross the distance between Luna and the oncoming cloud. Yamato, caught in a swirling vortex of attacking craft, was disabled when a thousand-ton Web machine detonated in a nuclear fireball within a few hundred meters of her hull, knocking out her weapons, navigation, and power systems and setting her adrift above the plane of the Asteroid Belt.
Before long, Kasei was under attack. As Dev continued to sample the data flow of the system’s Net, he could hear the panicked cries of officers and commotechs from the bases on and around the world once known as Mars, some calling for help, some trying to direct a battle that clearly had become hopeless. Kasei, by Imperial law, could only be approached by Nihonjin. Dev considered slipping into the Phobos planetary defense network to get a closer look at what was happening there but decided against it. The Battle for Kasei would not settle the fate of either Earth or Sol; if he could help, it would not be at Mars.
The Overmind was still in the fight, controlling continuing laser fire from the Fudo-Myoo facilities against the Web clouds. It, too, had decided that the Kasei group posed no immediate threat and for a time had concentrated on the Earthbound cloud. Hundreds of thousands, possibly millions of Web machines had been destroyed and the cloud was now considerably thinner than it had been. When it had pushed through to within a few million kilometers of its target, however, it had become far too diffuse for the Fudo-Myoo lasers to have much of an effect. When a given stab of megajoule laser light only vaporized one or two Web devices at a time instead of tens or hundreds, it was no longer an efficient means of fighting the millions of machines remaining in the force. At that time, the anti-asteroid lasers had been shifted to cover the cloud approaching Earth’s sun, much more distant, but still compact and closely spaced.
Unfortunately, that meant the surviving machines of the Earth attack force were now free to plunge into the space between Earth and Luna, forming into smaller groups and conducting fast-paced and deadly attacks on all ships and installations. High on their list, obviously, were the facilities on and near Luna that had been delivering such devastating and accurate fire for the past hours.
Before long, the Hachiman complex was under direct attack. Sensor arrays on Luna detected the fact that they were being bathed in intense beams of broad-spectrum laser light originating with a number of the largest Web devices. Dev watched as Hachiman’s AIs measured the light’s intensity, then extracted an absorption spectrum from each light source. Those lasers being fired from near the orbit of Mars were not weapons in themselves—the distances involved were too vast—but the black absorption bands showed that objects, many thousands of them, composed of silicon, iron, carbon, and a dozen trace elements, were racing straight toward Luna, driven along by the light with breakneck accelerations of over three hundred gravities.
Dev had seen weapons like this before, at Nova Aquila. Each was a wisp of mirror-silver gossamer a molecule or two thick, driven by the pressure of laser light. When they struck the target, the kinetic energy of even a few grams moving at near-light velocity carried the shattering impact of high explosive. Those not traveling fast enough to be utterly destroyed on impact would land on the target and cling there as their molecular structures were rearranged into masses of nano-disassemblers, capable of literally dissolving the target atom by atom.
Dev, interfaced already with the Hachiman Defense Network, slipped a coded order into the system ordering the launch of thirty missiles from the antispace batteries located at the south end of Mare Crisium. As the tense minutes passed, the oncoming Web sails began radiating heat, now showing emission spectra mixed with the absorption spectra of the driving laser light. Space within the Solar System is not empty; matter has collected there to a density of about one atom per cubic centimeter; as the probes passed 0.5 c, they began heating up from friction, while generating tiny plasma tunnels as they plowed through hydrogen gas that seemed—from their relativistic points of view—to be growing increasingly dense.
At Dev’s programmed command, the missiles detonated well short of the sails, but the multiple explosions scattered clouds of fragments in their paths. When the fiercely radiating gossamer wisps struck those fragments, they were utterly annihilated in the sudden burst of white-hot energies liberated by each impact.
Elsewhere, though, Imperial ships were dying, overwhelmed by superior numbers, battered by lasers and laser-driven sails, particle beams, and clouds of nanodisassemblers. Reinforcements were beginning to arrive in system, but slowly… far too slowly.
Already, it was clear that the tide of battle was beginning to shift against the defenders of the Earth.
Chapter 17
&nbs
p; The new inventions of the last twenty years seem to threaten a great revolution in army organization, armament, and tactics. Strategy alone will remain unaltered, with its principles the same as under the Scipios and Caesars, Frederick and Napoleon, since they are independent of the nature of arms and the organization of the troops.
—The Art of War
ANTOINE HENRI DE JOMINI
C.E. 1837
Alphanumerics danced, scrolled, and flickered in Kara’s head, reporting battle readiness… and the fact that the huge DalRiss cityship that had engulfed the Gauss an hour before was now ready to make its translation from the region close by Nova Aquila to the less familiar space of Earth’s Solar System.
Part of the delay had been due to the need to upload the navigational data the DalRiss Achievers needed to make the jump, information provided shortly before by Dev Cameron.
He’d also brought a grim and up-to-date report on the progress of the battle there, and she wondered how things were going. The last information to come in over the Net indicated that Web machines were drawing close to Earth itself, while others were already fighting on Mars. Perhaps most worrying of all, however, was word that a third Web fleet would soon reach Sol. If it succeeded there, penetrating the solar corona, no human ships would be able to touch them… and the nova that followed would reduce both Earth and Mars to charred cinders, whatever the results of the battles there.
As a result, the ConMilCom staff planners had ordered the bulk of the Confed forces at Nova Aquila to jump to a point just outside the orbit of Mercury, where they could take up a blocking position against this third, sunward-bound Web cloud. According to Dev, the Overmind was now directing most of its fire against that cloud, wearing it down, but the enemy still vastly outnumbered anything the humans could hope to assemble. The next twelve hours would tell whether the effort to save the home system of mankind had paid off.
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