Authors: K. S. Augustin
“Yep.”
“Can I see him?” she asked in a tight voice.
“I thought you’d never ask.”
Don smiled, a gleam in his eye. For a moment, Tania was diverted from the main object of her ire. Beneath the director’s careworn exterior, she thought she saw the dashing young man he must have been when he was cutting a swath through the field of computer science. She was aware of his background, as anybody in the field would be. How he had jumped from one bleeding edge laboratory to another, soaking in everything until he finally ended up as the secret director to a secret department in a secret location, floors beneath Rimshot’s corporate headquarters. Very few people in the world had a mind as sharp as Don Novak’s, coupled with the ability to use it.
Although she knew where to go, Tania let Don lead the way, mentally preparing herself for what she’d see. They walked through another, more solid-looking door and into the central lab. The light in the room was subdued. Arrayed in an angular semi-circle in front of them were banks of monitors. Three technicians skipped from one monitor to another, punching commands into keyboards, setting up diagnostic activities and watching the resultant pulses on their screens with calm intensity. They didn’t even lift their heads at Tania and Don’s entrance.
Beyond the desks and behind a large panel of glass was a set-up that looked like it belonged in a hospital. On the left side of the panel, cushioned by a heavy foam mattress and covered with a light waffle weave blanket, lay Carl’s body. Feeling a pull of curiosity and wonder, Tania left Don to speak with one of the engineers. She moved forward to the edge of the glass, peering in at its lone occupant.
Carl was hardly dressed, bare right down to his underwear, arrays of sensors threading untidily from where they were attached to his skin. Tania saw the ripples the wires formed as they snaked underneath the blanket and emerged at the bed’s edge. Looking like strands of spaghetti, they rose to a metal shelf filled with one blinking rectangular box on top of another. The back of the boxes contained enough slots to receive each wire, translating its signals into critical information. Tania knew the sensors were there to monitor Carl’s vital signs, but she didn’t realise there would be so many of them. It seemed that every twitch a muscle made would be recorded.
In contrast, the most important piece of sensor equipment, the neural headset, was completely wireless. It encircled the top of Carl’s skull like a delicate hair net, each intersection glittering as silver-white as a night-time star.
And as for Carl himself. Tania tore her glance from the headset and focused on his face. He looked…angelic. His face was handsome and peaceful, relaxed in repose, looking like nothing less than a fairy-tale prince.
“Waiting for a deluded princess to wake up his good-for-nothing arse,” she said to herself. The breath from her words formed a small sheen of milky condensation on the window.
Don moved up next to her and Tania felt his warmth against her arm.
“How long ago was he inserted?” she asked, her gaze not leaving the supine figure on the bed.
“About nine thirty.”
“One and a half hours.” Her voice was toneless.
“Tania.”
There it was again, that hesitation. This time, caught by something in his voice, Tania turned to face the older man.
“What is it?” His expression mirrored the worry in his voice.
He didn’t answer.
“Damn it, Don. I told you some of the protocols needed fine-tuning.” Her tone was low and heated.
“It’s more than that.” He pursed his lips then took her elbow. “Come on,” he said, with a quick glance around, “I’ll explain in the briefing room.”
They walked past both Carl’s illuminated capsule of space and another room identically outfitted but completely dark. The third door, conventional timber this time with a proper handle, turned at Dan’s twist. Inside, thick carpet muffled Tania’s footsteps.
She twirled before the door clicked shut, premonition raising the hairs on the back of her neck.
“Something went wrong, didn't it?”
Don didn't answer her immediately. He walked over to a poster that decorated one of the room's walls, eyeing the mosaic of promotional images for Rimshot Industries as if he'd never seen them before.
“We gave him a virtual tether so that, in cases of extraction and prolonged non-communication, we’d be able to yank him out. It wasn’t meant to be elegant, but it
was
meant to work.”
Tania nodded impatiently. “Yes, I know about that. If you recall, I disagreed on the tether's architecture. I still think—”
Don sighed as he turned and faced her. “We lost the tether nine minutes after insertion.”
She couldn’t believe what she was hearing. The tether, while not elegant, was the most foolproof piece of software in the entire project. “Lost?”
“Gone. Sheared away. We don’t know how.”
That explained his waiting for her when she arrived. It also explained the tired expression on his face and the three programmers scurrying around with an air of frantic focus.
“So if Carl wants to get out?” she asked.
“He’ll have to come up with a method of contacting us himself.”
Tania’s legs trembled. Reaching for a chair back, she pulled on it and gratefully sank into the upholstered seat. Don did the same at a more sedate pace.
What the Basement Five lab was trying to do, what Tania and Carl had competed for so fiercely, was to be part of the next step of virtualisation. The top-secret project was aimed at inserting a person—their thoughts, experiences, personality, the whole kit and kaboodle—into the internet, with potential access to every connected computer network in the world.
Right now, Carl could be tripping through the bytes at CalTech or lost in waves of data in Bangalore. And the way back home, the trail of breadcrumbs to safety, had just disappeared.
Tania swore softly. “Shit!” She paused for no more than a heartbeat. “I know Carl and I have had our differences, Don, but you have no choice. You have to send me in.”
The words were ripped from her before her brain could catch up. It wasn’t what Tania had wanted to say, what her hurt ego was demanding, but it was the
right
thing to say.
“No.” Don was vehement. “Absolutely not. I’ve already lost one researcher in cyberspace. Do you think I want to complicate the situation by throwing another person in there?”
Tania took a deep breath. She had made a decision and was now committed to seeing it through.
“This isn’t something simple, like a database file or sorting algorithm gone wrong. We’re discussing another human being, a person, lost in an entirely unexplored universe. Damn it, Don, we know more about the surface of
Mars
than the data we process and store every day.”
Don’s expression remained mulish. “I’m not going to do it, Tania.”
She sat back and bit her bottom lip, knowing she would have to tread carefully. When he stuck his heels in about something, Don was easily as stubborn and intractable as Carl.
“Carl and I were chosen for this program because of our abilities,” she said. Her words came out slowly as she gathered her thoughts. “I was chosen for my knowledge of cloud applications and my work on the theories of data organisation. Carl was chosen because...because of his broad technical knowledge and quick adaptability.”
Not to mention the ability to charm every one of the board members straight into the outstretched palm of his hand. Knowing that this wasn’t the time to open
that
can of worms, Tania tried to keep the dryness out of her voice.
“You and the board chose Carl because he is extremely tenacious.”
She thought about his single-minded pursuit of her and almost smiled, before putting it out of her mind.
“I’m sure,” she said, “that if anyone could have survived a tether sever, it would be Carl.”
Don nodded cautiously and Tania took a breath. That was the groundwork done. Now, for the meat of her argument.
“But right now, he needs help. Help from someone who knows the ins and outs of cyberspace better than he does. Carl is good, but he doesn’t have an in-depth knowledge of how data can organise itself in semi-anarchic environments.”
“But you do.”
Tania let the words hang in the air between them, forcing Don to recognise her skills and experience.
“You know I do,” she said.
He sighed and looked away, shaking his head, before pinning her with a glare.
“Nice try, Tania, but no.” He threw his hands up in dismay. “What do you expect me to do? Create
two
zombies for the insertion rooms? What if the same thing that happened to Carl happens to you?”
Tania leant forward in her chair, ready to press the matter until it broke. Or Don did. Her tone increased in urgency.
“You know I’ve spent years researching complex data systems,” she said. “I’ve published more than twenty papers on the topic. Carl hasn't. It could be that he did something when he entered the Blue. Maybe there was a data polling error. Maybe he severed the tether by mistake. And now he’s stuck there with no way back. What are you going to do, Don? Wait until his vacant body expires of old age before sending someone in to help him?”
The director looked pale and exhausted, visibly aging before Tania’s eyes.
“It’s only been two hours,” he said. “He may find a way out of this.”
“We still don’t know the long-term effects of the Blue on our temporal sense,” she argued, feeling him about to waver. “Our immersions in the sandpit only lasted three to five minutes apiece, and that was in an extremely controlled environment. Carl has already been immersed in the wild for more than a hundred minutes. Who knows how that’s affected him?”
Don shook his head again.
“I’m not willing to risk you, Tania, not yet.” His voice strengthened as he obviously came to a decision. “We’ll leave it for a day. Monitor Carl’s progress, his vital signs. Maybe he’ll find some way to interface with us. If we hear nothing after twenty-four hours, I’ll request a meeting of the board. If there has still been no contact from Carl and the board is agreeable,” he swallowed, “I’ll make the go-no go decision.” He pinned her with a glare. “Tomorrow.”
“Not just ‘tomorrow’, Don. Tomorrow
morning
.” Tania was insistent. “There are too many variables in a situation like this. We don’t want to hesitate, not if it can mean someone’s life.”
They stared at each other and Don’s heavy breaths echoed in the room.
Tania didn’t leave the lab for the rest of the day. She peered into the small room where Carl lay, watching the readouts with intent and narrowed eyes. She tried to reduce him to a cipher, a symbol of their project, but couldn’t. Images from the past few months flashed through her mind. His infuriating smugness and undeniable sex appeal. His arrogance and gift for data analysis. His sometimes child-like sense of humour combined with a razor-sharp mind that made her catch her breath. Lastly, she remembered the hot and willing lover. The nights of ecstasy, the days of frustration.
A snippet of her conversation with Don continued to haunt her.
We lost the tether nine minutes after insertion.
Nine minutes.
Why nine minutes? It didn’t make any sense. She could understand a termination straight on the heels of insertion. That would mean some kind of fault, either with the hardware or the transfer process. A process, she added, that had
appeared
to work flawlessly in the safe and secure environment of the sandpit.
She could almost understand a termination six minutes after insertion. That was at the upper limit of their own experiments. Maybe something broke down after reaching that duration? It was unlikely but not unheard of. But
nine
minutes. That was inexplicable.
Tania knew computer systems. If something complex was running for six minutes without a problem, chances were it would keep running for hours without a hitch. Of course that was with the proviso that the engineers who designed and developed that system were good, but Tania knew that Basement Five’s engineers were some of the best on the planet.
She had looked over the morning’s data. The tether had been working well for almost the full ten minutes. There had been no spikes of alarm, no gaps in computer processing, nothing at all to warn of catastrophic failure. Frustrated by the lack of data, she kept combing back and forth through the figures, checking and double-checking diagnostic reports, tests, past simulations, anything she could think of that might give a clue to the mystery.
By the time six o’clock rolled around, she was still out of options and there was no change in Carl’s status. He was breathing normally, looking peaceful, apparently asleep, and sexy as sin under the thin blanket. Tania gazed at his face, torn between wanting to kiss his lips and punch him in the nose.