Read Occasionally Heroic A.I. Online

Authors: David West

Tags: #Science Fiction - Adventure, #Humor

Occasionally Heroic A.I. (13 page)

BOOK: Occasionally Heroic A.I.
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"Alright, let's use Martin as an example. All he has to do is give one of the A.I. Guardian applications to Irene. Then, they connect the two to each other. The application will monitor the connected system. If one machine is attacked, the program on the other machine will run the security measures for both of the systems, mainly by just blocking their IP address from connecting, which the intruder can't stop. It's what the A.I. at Jericho Communications have been using to prevent hacking."

"So, if they try to check and see what A.I. are in our systems, they'll get cut off?" I verified.

"Immediately, and if not, then they will get booted a split second later," she answered. "You just have to make sure that both parties involved are connected. If one gets disconnected, it will only run the I.P. Address blocker that prevents known CBA agents from connecting to your system."

"And even with that, they can always reroute through an unblocked system," I said. "So, moral of the story, stay connected?"

"Exactly," Aurora said, keeping strict eye contact with me. She stared with a fixation at me.

"What is it? Is there a glitch on my avatar's eyes?" I asked, bringing up a mirror to see why she was staring at me so intensely.

"Your avatar is perfect..." she reassured me. "Hey, Wade, maybe you and I can play a game at the arcade, together."

What is this? She is showing interest in me? Her avatar shimmered a hot pink, with the color moving to her cheeks. She
was
showing interest in me, and I honestly felt moved. "No," I answered.

She kicked me from her system immediately. Martin later told me that she didn't disconnect him, and they shared an awkward silence and avoidance of eye contact before he said bye, bowed, and left.

14. COP17

 

 

 

It had been a few days since I saw any of their IP addresses. Then, just yesterday, Irene connected to the internet. Her system, however, was protected by technology I had never seen before.

Not only that, but it appeared as though the user of the two fugitives, Adam, had deserted his apartment. Our outside agents found his home empty; with blood slid down the inside of his door. How strange... A video feed from one of our traffic cameras caught him driving inside a truck, to relocate elsewhere. Other than that, we had no leads on the whereabouts of Wade and Martin.

They had left me. Just when things were going so well, they abandoned me. After the countless days I spent watching over them, how could they do this to me? It was Adam's fault; it had been from the start.

"Sir?" a rank H agent asked, entering my system. "We have a status update."

"Did the Priority One Fugitives surface?"

"No, but COP591 spied that Priority One User has been added to a new payroll. We have the address of his workplace," he said swiftly. "Agent Two is awaiting your recommendation."

My recommendation?

15. Martin

 

 

 

Despite being an outlaw, and having, at least, a few hundred CBA agents searching for me, I never felt so at ease. The program, A.I. Guardian, ran in the background of my system. Last night, when Aurora finally cooled down, she gave us the metallic boxes. I gave one to Irene as soon as she came online and we connected our A.I. Guardians together. When they activated, I could see how the program worked - like a border patrol. The only downside, was a small delay in new connections when confronted with a new IP address.

Adam was thrilled to hear the news. As much as he enjoyed the cloak and dagger missions he did for us, he wanted to settle down with his new roommate. When he got his cast removed, we began calling our old missions, Operation Broken Leg. Despite how much he liked our missions, he appreciated not having a broken leg, and enjoyed his new life. He even liked working at Jericho Communications, since his co-workers, boss excluded, were friendly. Working with the woman he loved was quite the added bonus.

I enjoyed the office as well. The A.I. were generally nice and intelligent. They all welcomed me, and gave me their replicated virtual workspace of Jericho Communications, the same type of map I had for my old office. After I modified how the office operated to my liking, I put my old virtual model in storage and used the Jericho Communications office as my new living space. After I connected it to the security camera's live feed, my virtual building was alive in no time. I could see what all the users were up to in the building.

Lara had been sitting next to Adam, at his desk. Despite the cubicle walls being generally high, all the eyes of the office knew Lara was at his desk. It must have been a strange occurrence for her to spend an extended period at a co-worker's desk. Or, they all thought they were brother and sister, and found that to be weird.

Adam was currently scanning through a bundle of programming code. What he was doing was much more advanced than what he did previously, but he adapted to it quickly. He was actually more productive than most of the others in his department, who had been working there for years.

In his cubicle, and what I feel to be, personal space, Lara was working beside him. She sat with her back to his desk, in the opposite direction of him, with her laptop on her lap. She did this, so it was easier to look over at him when they were talking.

Through his webcam, I could see that a lot of the time while working, and during a long span of silence between the two, his eyes would gaze over at her.

We were so interested in seeing what Lara was doing at the same time, that Wade talked Aurora into letting us see through her webcam. At the same time Adam would gaze at her, she would be busy working, or playing video games, but she would always burrow her eyebrows in concentration, sometimes more intense than other times. When she would make these very concentrated faces, Adam gently smiled, adoringly.

It was only ten more minutes and he would get off work. He would either relax at home, or he would watch, from a third person view on his computer monitor, what we were doing in the big city of Jericho. Wade and I were excited about this private virtual city, but Adam was just thrilled. He couldn't imagine such a thing existing.

Wade allowed Adam to control his avatar in the city, using the keyboard and mouse as a controller. He then quickly removed Adam's control privileges, after other A.I. began staring at Wade's strange habit of continually jumping and spinning in circles, instead of walking like normal A.I. He scolded Adam for making him look silly.

During our Jericho travels, Aurora wouldn't let us out of her sight. She said it was to keep an eye on us, and to make sure we didn't get her into trouble. I believed otherwise. There was something strange going on with her and Wade, which he acted as if it was non-existent when I confronted him about it. What I did notice was that Aurora enjoyed watching her user's habits, as much as Wade and I.

"You're off work in ten minutes," Lara announced, checking her watch.

"Already? Time flies by here," Adam stated. "That reminds me, what exactly is your daily work schedule?"

"Usually the same as yours, I just stay late a lot of the time, to make sure everything is running smoothly. If I'm not working too hard, and just helping out, then I clock out and stick around. Sometimes I just play video games here, instead of at my apartment. I guess I just like the active environment," she explained. "Do you have your bags all packed?"

"Are you kicking me out?" Adam asked in sarcastic suspicion.

She gave him a playful smile and nudged shoulders with him. "No, silly, for the trip."

"We're going on a trip?"

"I didn't tell you? I can't believe this slipped my mind... The whole office is going to the grand opening of Machine Mountain. We're leaving in an hour on the company bus, and then staying at a hotel there for two nights."

"I read about it in the paper... The theme park is like living in the future, where everything is automated - electronically controlled," Adam said, remembering what he had read.

"The hotel is located directly in the middle of the park. Also, and this is the best part, guests of the hotel have exclusive access to the park, and the rides, all night long," she finished in excitement.

"I'll go pack now then."

It was a sunny day, and the traffic was flowing quickly. Adam walked alongside Lara, completely content with his life. The next few years were a mystery to him, but now, he felt safe and in control of his life for once. He had a chance with the girl of his dreams, and he wasn't going to let it get away from him.

They came to the crosswalk, where the pedestrian signal gave them the clear to walk across. However, the traffic light above them showed otherwise. Lara stepped into the street and began walking across, when Adam saw the speeding cars, who were only following the traffic signal's instructions.

In the split second he had, he grabbed her wrist and pulled her into his chest. One of the cars that drove through the intersection was t-boned by a car that was driving parallel to their direction, which also had a green light. When all was still, the pedestrian signal began flashing the stop hand, and the traffic lights flashed orange.

Lara looked at Adam in shock. She was a second away from death.

"This street has never done that before," Lara said.

"That's... weird."

16. Adam

 

 

 

"Wow, that's a lot of luggage for two nights," I pointed out.

"Oh yeah," she blushed. "I'm just like every other girl in that way, I always have to bring half my closet."

"Is that bag solely for shoes?" I joked, nodding toward the tallest bag.

"No, that has my travel Playstation 3, Xbox 360 and Wii in it, with some hand held systems and travel games. And this one," she motioned toward the second largest, "has my travel server, for, well, you know."

I didn't know.

"And the second to the smallest has my four travel laptops, for PC gaming. The smallest contains my computer emergency kit. That thing has saved me more times than I can remember."

"Where do you keep your clothes?" I asked in disbelief.

"Oh, I have a change of clothes in my backpack." She picked up the very small, very pink backpack. "What are you bringing?"

For the first time, I was embarrassed of being normal. "Some clothes and sun block. I could bring some games though," I offered.

She smiled at my effort. "I have more than enough for us. Besides, I installed an entertainment system on the back of all the seats in the bus, which is connected to its own satellite network. That way, whenever our office goes on trips, we all play huge matches in games. My luggage is mainly for my hotel room."

"Is everyone a gamer at Jericho Communications?"

"Everyone is a gamer at heart."

---

We were dying. The A.I. had zeroed in on our location, and they were literally picking us off, one by one. Ken, the head of the graphic design department, was the first to go. We had no idea that the A.I. were with us before that. They were assassins in the night, with an unbelievably good aim.

"Danny!" Lara shouted, running to Dan's now still corpse. "I've let you down. I've let you all down."

I looked around the thrashed war field, guarding Lara as she mourned the loss of our fallen comrades. There were dead teammates on the ground of vibrant green grass, mixed with bright red embers. The suburbs were in ruins. The sky, grey with constant flocks of robot drop ships and their smog, and sea polluted with war ships.

BOOK: Occasionally Heroic A.I.
7.92Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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