by K S Augustin
He passed under the cover of several data pipes. It should have been dark under the umbrella of blood-red, but it wasn’t. Darkness, sunlight, shadows were all constructs of the real world. In cyberspace, Carl could clearly see whatever his mind could comprehend. Unfortunately, he was currently comprehending everything.
The pipes – Tania liked to call them tentacles – closed over him, making him draw in a deep breath.
“The only way is forward,” he told himself and willed his body to put one foot in front of the other.
According to his research, the IRC channel port he was after should have been situated quite close to him. The distance wasn’t a problem. What concerned him more was the kind of defences it had. He moved further into the maze of pipes, stepping over some at ground level and bending his head to avoid others. The closer he got to his destination, the more tightly the pipes wound around each other, until he was brushing against them as he slipped through narrow gaps. He thought he felt a faint pulse beat against his skin as he knocked against them, and tried not to shudder.
The port he was looking for was old and he let out a breath of relief when he finally found it. It was circular, matte black and a little wider than the width of his shoulders. Over it, like a nesting spider, lay a locking mechanism. The lock was hexagonal in shape and from each side, a thick leg extended, soldered seamlessly in place against the port’s casing. Carl stared at it for a long moment and tried not to think of how much time he had left before the Rhine-Temple recovered from Tomek’s attack code.
“Why am I seeing a six-legged spider?” he muttered. “Six defences? Or maybe just one defence in six parts.” He narrowed his eyes. “Maybe if I can break four legs that’ll be enough to open the port.”
He wished Tania were here. She’d be able to identify the lock’s underlying structure within minutes. All he could do was rely on his intuition…and guess.
Without moving his gaze from the lock, he reached into the side pocket of his suit and pulled out a small device. It resembled the tether that he had first worn when entering the Blue so many years ago. In fact it was that tether, but it had been modified extensively over the past fifteen years. He hadn’t told Tania that he still had it. Flipping open the lid with his thumb, he finally dragged his gaze to the small screen on the unit, choosing several diagnostic programs to execute. He then pointed the tether’s hinge at the port lock. He had worked for months on the hinge, inserting a small probe into it then making sure it was protected against knocks and falls.
He watched as the programs ran through their analyses and smiled when, after a few minutes, the device beeped at him. He perused the results carefully.
“Got it,” he said softly in triumph.
As he had suspected, the Rhine-Temple had closed down the IRC port back in its infancy to prevent its original operators from interfering with it. That shutdown had occurred at a time when it wasn’t as sophisticated as it was now. Ticking that task off its list, the botnet had then moved on to taking over other computer systems.
The lock had effectively been forgotten.
But not by Carl.
Rather than representing six layers of defence, the spider that squatted over the port’s cover used only a relatively simple hash algorithm to protect access. That was easy enough to crack, especially as Carl had fifteen years to work on the problem. He directed his modified tether to work through the combinations using a method he created and was gratified when, only five minutes later, the spider’s legs clicked open and the lock mechanism fell off the port.
Carl stamped on the lock with his foot, in case it somehow came back to life and blocked the exit again, then wondered why he cared. After all, wasn’t this supposed to be a one-way trip?
“Habit,” he told himself and carefully eased up the port lid.
The cover was surprisingly heavy and creaked as it moved. That was Carl’s brain telling him this was an old and disused access port...as if he didn’t already know.
When he had the lid fully open, he peered inside. A long dark tube snaked down and away to the right. Under the circumstances, he wouldn’t have been surprised to see cobwebs obscuring part of the passage. Gingerly, he crouched and entered the tube.
It was an eerie journey. His path was dark but it wasn’t clothed in shadow. He hadn’t brought any form of illumination, yet could clearly see every square centimetre of space. Bent over, he shuffled along the tube, his fingers brushing against faint, regular corrugations, and was happy when he saw an end to it finally emerge from the eerie gloom. Pulling himself through the opening with a grunt, he jumped down two metres into an octagonal room.
The walls were streaked with grey, meeting at a point many metres above his head. On each wall was fixed row upon row of monitors, rising to the ceiling. Some of the monitors showed information he could comprehend, such as views of the Blue, or close-ups of some data pipes. Others showed no more than flashing lights zapping across the screen or animated graphics that perhaps tracked performance of one kind or another and defied easy labelling. As fast as his clocked up brain was working in cyberspace, it appeared that parts of the Rhine-Temple were capable of operating at even faster speeds.
Carl knew he should be moving but couldn’t help gazing around him in fascination. Nobody in either world, real or cyberspace, had ever stood where he was standing at that moment, in the very centre of a malware-AI hybrid. Assuming his plan was successful, would such an entity ever exist again? The worst of it was, considering this was a suicide mission, there was nobody he would be able to talk to about it.
He reached for the sphere that had been nestling under his arm. There would be no time left once he activated the bomb. Its program would start immediately. Was he satisfied he had made peace with the universe? Was there anything else he could’ve said to Tania? Anything other than information regarding several transfers that had moved ownership of his assets from him to her? He had completed that task while she had been taking one of her power-naps and had left a message with Tomek to give to her once he was – he swallowed – dead.
It was such a hard concept for him to grasp and, despite the lethal black bomb he held in his hands, he couldn’t help wondering – was there a chance he could get out of this thing alive?
“No there isn’t,” he said to himself. “And you knew that going in. Now’s not the time for second thoughts. Just hit the damn button and get it over with.”
With a shaking finger, he tapped at the surface of the bomb and a display lit up. A blinking button said only one word.
Activate.
He moved his finger forward—
“I think you should pause for one second,” a voice told him.
Startled, he spun around and caught sight of a dusky face peering at him through the open porthole.
Tania?! What the fuck was she doing here?
She jumped down to the floor then straightened and held up a hand when it became obvious to the both of them that he was about to erupt into a rage-filled tantrum at her appearance.
“Don’t get hysterical on me, Orin,” she warned him.
Hysterical? He was livid. “What. The. Fuck. Are you doing here? Are you fucking suicidal?”
She regarded him with cool eyes and Carl didn’t know whether to start the bomb’s sequence or put it down someplace so he would have both hands free to shake some sense into her.
“This isn’t an experiment, Tania. This is for fucking real. Now g
et out of here!”
She looked so calm and collected, he almost screamed in anguish.
“There are two things I know,” she said, and damn her if that melodious voice of hers wasn’t as steady as she looked. “One, I know this is real. And two, I also know that neither you nor I are suicidal.”
“What the hell are you talking about?” He looked around in desperation. Tania’s appearance had taken him completely by surprise. If she had managed to find him, would a squad of botnet drones be next?
She reached into the pocket of her suit and withdrew two gel-packs, throwing one to him with a flick of the wrist.
Carl caught the soft pack and looked down at it. The thick liquid encased in a matte polymer skin was warm to the touch. When he squeezed it, he thought he saw little points of multi-coloured light move within the gel, joined to each other with faintly visible strands of silver.
“What the hell is this?” he asked, looking back at her.
“It’s a customised Transport Layer Security shell.” Her lips twisted. “The latest thing. I should know, I designed it myself.”
He frowned. “A TLS? So what? All a TLS does is enable communication between internet objects.” He made a sound deep in his throat. “Look, I’ll give you a minute before I hit the button. That should give you enough time to get out of here and out of the range of the Rhine-Temple.”
Her voice was firm. “I’m not leaving here without you.”
Carl gripped the gel-pack tightly in his hand, surprised when it didn’t rupture. “Damn you, Tania, as much as I think I love you, this is way bigger than both of us.”
Her dark eyes lit up. “You love me?”
Carl paused, as if suddenly aware of what he’d just said. “I….”
“Or was that just the kamikaze spirit talking?” She didn't look impressed.
He shook his head savagely. He didn’t have time for this but, from past experience, knew she wouldn’t budge until he could hammer some sense into her.
“You’ve driven me crazy from the moment I met you,” he told her. His voice was angry. “So smart, so in control. It was like a nuclear detonation couldn’t move you, once you formed an opinion.”
“You took it as a challenge, didn’t you?”
“You had the education. You created half the theory we’re dealing with here. What did I have? A big mouth and an incredible streak of luck?”
“You underestimate yourself,” she said, but he wasn’t really listening.
“You want me to admit it? Okay, I was a bastard. I thought the only way I could get ahead was by bringing you down. I’m sorry. I was wrong.”
She spread her hands. “And this is your penance? Letting your bomb disassemble you into your component bytes?”
He sidestepped the answer to that too-revealing question.
“Unless you’ve come up with something better?” He’d had fifteen years to think this through and he wasn’t about to give up on his plan now.
The tone of his voice prompted her to raise an eyebrow. “In fact, I have.” She nodded to his hand. “You’re holding it right there.”
“The TLS shell?”
“Think about it, Carl. If you’re an object that uses TLS, what does that mean? In order to communicate with you, touch you, another object has to handshake with you. That’s the first, inviolable rule of the protocol.”
A light dawned in Carl’s head. “But if I refuse the handshake...”
She was nodding. “…the other object doesn’t get access. Period. You’re protected.”
He rolled the concept over in his mind. Damn it, but she was right. For years, he’d researched the subject of using some kind of encryption suit, but he hadn’t thought of something as simple and elegant as a TLS shell. All his other options had led him to decide that the Rhine-Temple would have enough time to hack through and destroy him.
“You’ve created a cyberspace condom,” he said with growing wonder.
“I prefer to think of it as an environmental suit.” Her voice was dry. “But the concept’s the same. So what do you say? Put the suit on, set the bomb and let’s blow this chicken outfit, as you Americans like to say.”
This was…. Carl couldn’t believe he was being offered a way out of his problem. He had been so focused on sacrificing his life that he hadn’t considered what would happen if he didn’t. Helplessly, he looked at the gel-pack again. “How do I activate it?”
“See that plug at the top? Press it.”
While Tania watched, Carl punched the circular protrusion at the top of the pack with his thumb. The gel started to move, wiggling in his hand. In a couple of seconds, the entire pack started vibrating strongly, then it jumped clear and landed on the floor. Startled, Carl was just about to bend over and pick it up when it exploded all over him. He lifted his arms in a defensive gesture but it didn’t help. The goo engulfed him. He had the sudden urge to hold his breath then realised what a futile gesture that would be in cyberspace. With blinding speed, the gel climbed across his torso, down his legs and over his back. In seconds, he was consumed by it. Through a wavering transparent field, he saw Tania tilt her head, regarding him with dispassion.
“I’ll admit that wasn’t pretty, but I didn’t have much time to spend on it. Looks like you’re fully protected though.”
“When did you get the time to come up with this?” His voice sounded like it was trying to escape through a tank of water. Tania was imitating his actions and only answered when she, too, was fully engulfed.
“Earlier today. The idea came to me while I was out on my walk, but I had to check the parameters of your bomb to make sure it wouldn’t get through the shell. Oh, and I also added a routine to avoid any sectors that matched our, er, condoms, as you put it.”
The floor rumbled and both of them steadied their stance.
“I think it’s time we primed that bomb of yours,” she said. “Looks like the Rhine-Temple is starting to come back to life.”
It was a task of seconds to set the bomb and fix it to the floor of the chamber. Carl hit the button then urged Tania to get out through the porthole first. Behind them, he thought he heard a whoosh as his virus was released then, a few seconds later, the sound of monitors suspended high up on walls crashing to the ground. Glancing up, he saw Tania far ahead of him, then he levered himself into the tunnel and hurried after her.
Carl wanted to have confidence in Tania’s abilities, but the shell she had crafted was still an untested technology. There was a slim chance it could fail, claiming two lives instead of one. Feeling as if he was wading through water, he caught up to her, then pushed her ahead of him.
“What if a handshake completes by accident?” he asked as they staggered back through the tube. As far as he was concerned, they weren’t moving nearly fast enough. He nudged her forward again and tried not to think of the encroaching virus.
“Impossible.” She stumbled but continued to move. “I set it to refuse any and all handshakes as a default. This shell was designed to do only one thing and that was to protect us.”
She put out a hand against the curved wall to help steady her steps. “How much longer?”
“Till we know if my bomb’s working? I think it’s already started.”
As if his words set off a signal, the texture of the tube they were travelling through began transforming. Carl saw the smooth finish start to crack, tiny grid-like fissures growing into one another. With eyes wide, he pressed briefly against Tania’s shoulder, urging her to move faster.
When they
reached the old hatch and climbed out, Carl took one hurried look behind them. The tube they’d travelled down had disintegrated, converted to a dark chasm that appeared to swallow every atom of light that fell into it.
“We have to get out of here,” he yelled. Damn but the stupid suit was hampering his ability to communicate. Had Tania heard him or had his words sounded like nothing more than a series of gurgles?
Swearing, he quickened his steps. They dodged and sprinted through the jungle of data pipes as best they could. They were still moving slower than he liked, and there were dozens of obstructions in their way.
“How far?” Tania asked, her long legs clearing the distance from the heart of the Rhine-Temple, step by step.
Carl didn’t answer, his concentration focused on the overhanging blood-red tendrils. As he watched, they froze and started turning grey then black when the cracks developing on them became wider. He knew the same thing was happening below his feet. He felt himself sinking through what was previously solid ground. He put his left foot forward and pushed down into dark sponge and knew that his virus was overtaking the both of them.
They weren’t going to get anywhere if they continued at this pace. And while Tania’s suits might have protected them, what would happen if they were trapped in nothingness? With no frame of reference to use as an anchor, or a lifeline, they might end up as good as dead.
With a muttered oath, Carl once again looked upwards at the overhanging tentacles. When he saw some of them blacken, he didn’t hesitate. Launching himself away from the crumbling ground, he reached for Tania’s hand, lifting her up with him. She gasped, then held onto him with a tight grip.
They were arrowing up under the closest web of data pipes. Were the tentacles turning black? Disintegrating? Beyond that, Carl could see the clear of the Blue beckoning to them, but he still closed his eyes as they barrelled through, relieved when he felt nothing hitting his body.