Overclocked
Page 4
Tania skimmed the buttons and pressed the second icon from the left. It was decorated with a thumb in the “up” direction.
“I made it here okay, Don,” she murmured.
On the screen, a blue dot—her acknowledgement—travelled against the tide of oncoming amber and disappeared to the left. It would make its way, via the servers, to one of the monitors in the observation room. She knew Don would breathe a sigh of relief that the first hurdle had been overcome.
But then, hadn’t Carl also done that?
Tightening her lips, Tania closed the tether unit and hooked it back on her belt.
It had been pitch black when she arrived, her mind’s way of shielding itself until it made sense of this new world. Now, the space around her was gradually lightening, like someone slowly turning a dimmer switch. As she watched, frameworks started to form around her. They resolved into skeletons of buildings. Level by level they formed, the thin lines snapping into place with swift precision. Once the wireframe was complete, details started to appear. Tania saw interior floors and steps being added, the start of furniture appearing in rooms before exterior cladding obscured her view.
She started walking down what was swiftly turning into a boulevard, buildings springing into being on both sides of her as she looked.
If she concentrated hard, she could see inside some buildings. Even back to the wireframe, if she wanted. Those were unsecured networks, open to anyone with the curiosity to explore them. Other large grey blocks were completely smooth and opaque. They were probably banks or government networks. Some of the grey blocks sported doorways perched incongruously halfway up the surface or at the topmost storey. Those were entry ports for those with the credentials, and ability, to enter.
Tania stared up at one such doorway. Against what looked like grey polished concrete, it was an eccentricity. She saw an eight-panelled solid timber door, three steps leading up to it and a carved portico above it.
It had worked in the sandpit, but she wondered....
Concentrating, she focused on the old-fashioned doorway. With an initial wobble that turned into something smoother, she slowly rose. The doorway came closer. She kept rising. Finally, she was on par with it. Stepping forward, she stood on the bottom step and turned.
Around and below her, cyberspace was laid out like a bustling night-time city. The tiny dots on her tether screen revealed themselves as wheelless vehicles travelling along wide freeways, some slower than others. Sometimes she would see several vehicles, slim and fast like motorcycles, merge into a single, bigger unit and speed off down a street.
She turned back to the door and saw that it was now dominated by a large brass escutcheon. Her proximity had triggered the password protocol, conjuring a lock on the previously unmarked panels. Tania didn’t have the key. It might have been fun to attempt a breakin—she thought she knew enough about banking systems to get past at least the first level of security—but she was on a mission. With a tight smile of regret, she stepped away from the door and serenely floated back down to street level.
Maybe next time.
The level of complexity that was still forming around her was amazing, and Tania thought the mass of detail would make her job that much harder. How was she going to find Carl in all this mad bustle? The sandpit had been a tiny one-road town compared to the metropolis that now sprawled in every direction. Which way should she go?
Something buzzed in her ear for a split-second and Tania recoiled. It sounded like a bee. A very angry bee. In cyberspace? She frowned, instinctively swatting at the space beside her head. There were no animals in the Blue. Not unless they knew the fundamentals of computing and had managed to source a neural headset in their native habitats.
She smiled momentarily.
And heard something else.
It sounded like a cushion hitting the ground behind her and Tania twirled. Unbelievably, in front of her stood a large white rabbit wearing a plaid waistcoat and sporting a walking cane. The tip of the cane was carved in the shape of a dragon’s head. Tania usually liked rabbits, but this one towered over her by a head, not counting its ears. Was this a delusion brought on by her thought of a rabbit-hole when she was first inserted?
“You’re new here,” the rabbit said.
“Who the hell are you?” Tania demanded, ignoring the implict question in the rabbit’s statement.
The rabbit cocked its head to one side. “You can call me Krulik.” Its voice was male.
Tania took a moment to steady her breathing. Of course she was right. There were no animals in the Blue. The rabbit in front of her must be an avatar, a representation of a person, just as she was. Except, while she still retained her human form to explore cyberspace, this person had decided to appear as an oversized rabbit.
“What are you doing here?” she asked, eyeing it suspiciously.
“No doubt the same thing you’re doing here. Exploring.”
Tania wanted to ask the rabbit about Carl but remembered Don’s words about foreign governments. Was this Krulik character a foreign agent? He certainly hadn’t come from Basement Five.
“That’s right,” she said, after a tight second. “I came here to have a look around.”
Was he trying to lull her into a false sense of security by materialising in such a ridiculous outfit?
“You’re dressed like someone else I met.”
Despite the tenor of its voice, Tania realised that this “Krulik” character might not even be male. After all, it had lied about its appearance, projecting itself as an animal rather than a human being. Why not lie about its sex as well?
“Am I?” Tania tried to appear unconcerned. “I’m sure there’ll be many more visitors around here as time goes on.”
“You’re trying to find him, aren’t you?”
“Find who?” she cadged.
“Carl. Carl Orin.”
Tania started. She couldn’t help herself. “What do you know about Carl?”
“I was there when he terminated his tether.”
Tania was overcome with conflicting impulses. Should she ask the rabbit more about Carl? Ignore it and continue on her way? From her initial reaction, it was already too late to pretend that she didn’t know what it was talking about.
“He had a good reason to do it,” the rabbit said. “Terminate his tether.”
Tania took a step back. “I don’t think I want to know any more.”
“Wouldn’t you like to know where he is now? I could take you to him.”
Was Carl still alive? In their briefings, both Carl and Tania had known that there was always the chance of something catastrophic occurring. Something that would destroy the mind while leaving the body intact. Tania didn’t want to admit it to herself, but the thought had been niggling at her ever since Don told her about Carl’s accident. What if he had severed the tether because...his personality had been destroyed? By the rabbit?
Tania took another step back.
“Thanks for the offer,” she said, keeping her voice calm, “but I think I’ll do a bit more exploring.”
She turned and started walking away from the giant rabbit.
“Be careful out there,” it said, from behind her. “You’re running barely above human-normal. That gives anybody the chance to attack you.”
Tania kept walking, deliberately keeping her gaze to the front.
/> “Stay in the less-populated areas until you clock up. You’ll know where they are by the width of the pipes. The bigger the pipe, the more traffic it carries.”
The rabbit’s voice began to fade.
“We’ll meet again, I’m sure.”
When the silence stretched to ten seconds, Tania finally turned around. The rabbit was gone.
What the hell had that been about?
To her chagrin, the rabbit had spoken some truth. The engineers at Basement Five already knew that routes of high data traffic would appear as wider and busier roads. But what were the “pipes” the rabbit spoke of? And what did it mean by “clock up”? And, now that she thought about it, where were the vehicles she had seen from her vantage point at the bank’s doorway? If they represented data packets, they should have been swarming around her. Yet, the boulevard was as deserted as a ghost town’s main street.
Shaking her head, Tania resumed walking.
The rabbit intimated that Carl was alive and that it could take her to him. If it was speaking the truth, surely that meant he wasn’t that far away?
She stopped at a crossroads and looked in the three directions available to her. Grey featureless blocks of varying height lined the streets, disappearing into the distance. She caught an occasional dot of colour moving along the streets and blinked. The dots disappeared.
Was she seeing things now? Was there some kind of psychosis that affected people inserted into cyberspace? Tania looked down at her tether, flipping open the lid. According to it, she had been inserted eight minutes ago. That was two minutes longer than any of their sandpit excursions. Strange how it seemed a longer time, now that she thought on it. She would have estimated she had been in cyberspace for an hour at least.
Tania clicked the lid shut, chose the left street and continued walking. Despite her mistrust of the rabbit, she had picked the narrowest of the three choices available. If there were agents of a foreign government infiltrating cyberspace, they would probably use the wider, more frequently used streets to travel along. She hoped that, by choosing the equivalent of a side street, she would be avoiding discovery by them.
The rushing in her ears that she first noticed upon insertion had changed. Instead of one big waterfall, Tania was now hearing a series of waterfalls. It was difficult to make out, but some rushes sounded slower than others, as if they were trickling from streams instead of gushing from the ends of rapids.
As she walked, more lights began to blink beside her. Amber, green, red, blue, magenta, yellow, cyan. Some approached her head-on before veering away at the last minute. Others brushed past her so closely, she thought she felt the breeze from their passing gust against her arms.
She was also clearing blocks at a faster rate. It had taken roughly thirty minutes to walk the last block. Now, Tania found herself at another intersection after only fifteen minutes. She turned to check, but the length of each block appeared the same.
When she faced forward again, a moving block almost collided with her. Tania threw herself to the side and watched with horror as a long green trailer sped over the spot where she’d just been standing. She blinked and solid objects suddenly coalesced before her eyes. Cubes, rectangles, spheres. Bearing no wheels, they bobbed centimetres above the street, hurtling down the road. Rather than two lanes as she had surmised, it appeared she was now walking beside an eight-lane highway. Each lane was full of traffic, the space between each object barely enough for her to fit between. The roaring in her ears had finally resolved into the sound of these travelling vehicles. They must be what she had seen from the bank portal but why hadn’t she seen them at street level before?
Tania slowly got to her feet and dusted non-existent dirt from her pants. Minutes ago, she had been alone along a deserted highway. Now, that same highway was filled with streams of fast-moving traffic in a variety of shapes and colours. She looked up and gasped. Above her, a network of roads mirrored the landscape she was traversing, also carrying mobile threads of traffic. And above that. And above that again. Tania knew that, if she concentrated, she’d probably be able to see an almost infinite number of levels both above and below her.
This was the Blue. Not the safe equivalent of a sleepy country town she and Carl had practised in, and not the cold barren emptiness that she had seen when first inserted. Now, Tania could finally see the magnificence of cyberspace. And while its bones might be cool blues and greys, it was brought alive by speeding polyhedrons of warm colour. Data, rushing to and from specific points, moved like firework flashes. Tania felt her face being lit up by each object that passed, the breeze of their passing brushing her cheeks and nose.
It was beautiful.
And she thought she understood the rabbit’s term now. It had spoken of “clocking up” from “human-normal”. That would have been her when she was first inserted, her brain used to operating at a particular speed. The speed of the human world.
In the Blue, her brain had to adjust to a different rate of change, one much faster than what she was used to. This was the world of mega-and tera-flops made real and her brain had needed time to adjust. It had started with static elements, like secured networks, before filling in the data pathways. She thought of them as roads, while the rabbit obviously saw them as pipes. Then, lastly, she saw the actual data packets as they sped their way through cyberspace. She had never thought of data packets as things of beauty before. Now she knew how wrong she was.
A yellow cube, brushing close, brought her back to her senses.
There was a pathway between the buildings and the highway. This would be where packets disengaged themselves from the ribbon of traffic, awaiting entrance to their designated network. Tania walked its length, hoping no packet would disengage and crush her. Then the traffic began to slow down. She recognised it as her brain fine-tuning the adaptation, not so much slowing the traffic as giving her mind a boost of speed.
As an experiment, she opened her tether again. According to the instrument, she had been inserted nine minutes and fourteen seconds ago. She continued staring at the tether’s small display, but the seconds’ indicator didn’t click over to fifteen. She stood and watched for what she estimated to be a good minute. The number of seconds didn’t change.
As she snapped the lid shut again, Tania realised that she was now truly a part of the Blue, operating at the speed of cyberspace. She had been clocked up.
Chapter Four
She found Carl a day later, machine time. She was skimming levels, floating upwards and downwards, trying to focus on buildings that looked different, using the level where she had been inserted as her home location. She figured that Carl would need a patch of real estate somewhere to establish as a base, and that he would make it as distinctive as possible in the hopes of attracting possible rescue parties.
This begged the question of how, with so much information to sift through, she would be able to find the right place in an acceptable period of time. The only tactic that seemed to make sense was typing “Carl Orin” into the little screen on her tether. When she executed the command, the universe around her started to rearrange itself. The change wasn’t massive. The highways, buildings and vehicles looked much as they did before. But there was a subtle difference in the kinds of buildings she now saw. Fewer banks, for example, and more community groups and corporate firewalls. These locations were where Carl Orin had been in th
e recent past, leaving traces of his passage, like sticky fingerprints on a stainless steel wall. Being digital, however, the traces were either there, or they weren’t. It was impossible to tell exactly how long ago Carl had visited a particular site, although Tania was hoping that a greater concentration of visits within a particular locality meant that Carl had frequented the area more recently. With determination, she followed her intuition and began looking directly for Carl’s digital handprints.
When she finally found his refuge, Tania had to admit to herself that the building was certainly distinctive. Built as a single-storey cube, its exterior looked exactly like the corridor leading to her apartment, right down to the flecked brown carpet that covered it. Even the number on the door was her apartment number.
212.
She raised her fist, hesitated for a second, then knocked.
Silence.
She was wondering whether she should knock again when the door was flung open and Tania found herself staring down the large black barrel of a weapon.
“Wha—”
“Who the—? Tania, is that really you?”
The barrel dropped and her upper arm was grabbed. She was yanked inside and the door slammed shut behind her with a solid thud.
Tania saw an interior that only superficially resembled her apartment and a man who only superficially resembled Carl before she was slammed against the wall. The giant gun barrel appeared again, aimed between her eyes. Tania’s attention was riveted to it.
“What’s your name?”
“Tania Flowers,” she said. “Carl, what—”
“What was the name of our lab?”
“It didn’t have a name.” She felt her irritation rise. “We called it Basement Five as a nickname.”
“Where was the last conference we attended together?”