Authors: K. S. Augustin
No, this man appeared to be a much more mellow and measured person. He had guided her out of the apartment with a gallant gesture that looked so natural, even as Tania hesitated at its alienness. Not at the gesture itself but at the fact that it had been Carl who had made it.
Could someone really change in the space of a day, from opportunistic bastard to approaching normal? Gracious even? It beggared belief.
The two of them soared up through several virtual cityscapes, neatly dodging the vehicles that sped along the highways.
“There are trillions of bytes here,” Carl said, “with millions being added every second. Unlike our own world, this one is almost infinite, an entire universe within each computer, each server.”
Buildings of every shape and hue whizzed past them. Anything that stored, or sent, information via cyberspace was modelled here, from small cubes that reflected individual users on their own home servers to giant edifices representing large corporations spanning continents.
“Information about every single thing on Earth, just sitting somewhere in the Blue, waiting for someone to reach out and grab it.”
Tania let Carl’s words wash over her as they soared onward. She thought that the corporate-owned, impenetrable-looking blocks of encrypted databases were the largest things in the Blue, and wondered if they could be manipulated into more imaginative shapes. Then she began noticing a swarm of
something
directly in their path. They were still far away from it and she narrowed her eyes, trying to focus on what she was seeing. Was it another building? No, it couldn’t be. None of the windowless skyscrapers they had passed were painted such a distinctive shade of red.
It struck her that that shade she was seeing was the exact same colour as the orbs that had attacked them.
They moved closer and the objects started to resemble a sheet of paper, then a shower of thick strands, like a beaded curtain that had partially collapsed on the floor.
Instinctively she held back, but Carl tugged at her and they moved closer still.
It was a web, a mass of knobbly threads that squatted over entire districts of the cyberscape. Carl stopped while they were still a little distance away and Tania focused on the cyberspace layer below the current street level. She wasn’t surprised to see red tendrils reaching down through blocks of the level below her and – as she lifted her gaze – above her as well.
The tendrils weren’t content to merely engulf the buildings. As she watched, they slowly entered blocks, penetrating them effortlessly, and emerging through shattered panels on previously slick surfaces before gradually meeting up with the main structure again, the tendrils thickening as they reconnected with a major branch. Around the red web, spheres, very much like the bots that had attacked her and Carl, darted back and forth at high speed, circling the thick creepers like tiny flying soldiers.
“What can you see?” he asked.
She frowned as she took in the complexity of what was in front of her. “I see streets. And tall buildings.”
He lifted an eyebrow. “Really? Buildings and streets? Not, say, pipes or streams?”
She shook her head while remembering similar words from the giant rabbit. Maybe Carl and the animal avatar
did
know each other. “No. It looks, more or less, like a normal cityscape to me.”
“That’s what I see too,” he said. “It means you and I must be using a similar frame of reference to interpret objects in cyberspace.” He jerked his head. “What about that? Can you see something foreign over there?”
“It’s,” Tania grimaced, “destructive. A blood-red colour, with tendrils that appear to be infiltrating databases. What is it?”
“That,” Carl said, after exhaling heavily, “is the Rhine-Temple botnet. You must have analysed traces of it back in the lab.”
“A botnet?” She knew what they were but had never quite translated their existence in to the image of destruction she saw before her. The web of tentacles looked malign and horrific. “How dangerous is it?”
He tightened his lips and the wrinkles around his mouth deepened. “More dangerous than any other botnet in existence. We’re not talking about compromising individual machines here. The Rhine-Temple, as you can see, has successfully infiltrated the systems of several large companies.”
That was visible by the way some tall structures appeared to be infested with red, dozens of tendrils writhing out of holes in the buildings like the branches of a huge tree-creature reclaiming an abandoned skyscraper.
“When its developers built it,” Carl said, “they had no idea that it would acquire a characteristic that you don’t often see in botnets.”
Tania looked at him and he smiled grimly at her.
“Artificial intelligence. The Rhine-Temple has a degree of sentience. It can make decisions for itself. And the rigid protocols of many existing companies are no match for it.”
Tania turned her gaze back to the red web. She isolated one patch of movement and watched as a thin red tendril tapped slowly and gently at the sheer face of a neighbouring building.
“Every time a system goes down,” Carl said, “the botnet collects data, analysing how long it took to compromise that network’s security. It then develops its own programs to fine-tune its performance so that, the next time it attacks, it’s more efficient.”
“What’s its purpose?” Tania asked. “Processing cycles for scammers? An illegal grid platform for hackers?”
Carl laughed. It was a hollow sound, flat and echoless in cyberspace.
“It wants a whole lot more than that, darlin’. That Rhine-Temple botnet wants to destroy the world.”
“I think it’s figured out that there’s a lot of real estate here in cyberspace going to waste,” Carl said. “This whole virtual universe is powered by hardware working at peak performance. Thousands, millions, billions of instructions per second whizzing around above our heads and below our feet. Why share, when it can take it all?”
“But Carl, destroying the world? What makes you think that is its ultimate objective?”
“Because I’ve been watching it.” He glanced over at her. “Sit down, I want to explain something.”
They were standing on the top of a tall windowless building that overlooked the botnet. Carl let go of her hand and Tania sat on the edge of the rooftop. From habit, she tried not to look down at the virtual street below. Carl sat next to her, angling himself so she could look into his weathered face.
“The Rhine-Temple and I have already fought several battles. I’ve beaten it back a few times but it keeps coming.” He paused. “I’ve been doing this for years.”
She blinked, uncomprehending. “Years?” she repeated. “But—”
“Listen,” he said. “When we were training in the sandpit, we were inserted into cyberspace for only a few minutes at a time. When we came out of it, back to the real world, there was some sense of dislocation, but everybody at Basement Five put it down to the insertion experience itself.
“I’ve figured it out, though. When you’re in cyberspace for more than a few real-time minutes, your brain starts to adapt. Because it’s now in a world that moves so much faster, it starts moving faster too. And cyberspace, real cyberspace, is much more neurologically stimulating than the test environments where we did our trials. In order to cope, our brain has to somehow take in all that information and make sense of it.”
“We speed up,” Tania said, “is that what you’re saying?”
“We call it ‘clocking up’, but it’s the same concept.”
Her eyes widened. “‘We’?”
She thought back again to the giant white rabbit but still didn’t feel comfortable enough to share that strange conversation with Carl. Not yet.
He waved her question away. “I’ll explain that bit later.” He took her hands and stared into her eyes. “As far as I’m concerned, I’ve been battling the Rhine-Temple botnet for close to fifteen years now.”
She stared back at him. “Fifteen?
Years
? A decade and a half?”
“That’s what it feels like. I’ve been afraid to ask this question, but I’ll ask it now. How long has it really been, Tania?”
Her gaze darted over his features, at the greying hair at his temples, the slight furrows on his forehead and the faint lines fanning from his eyes and trailing down his cheeks.
“You mean, how long since you were inserted into the Blue?”
Carl pursed his lips and nodded.
“You were inserted at nine-thirty in the morning,” she said. “Yesterday.”
He looked incredulous. “A
day
? I’ve only been here for one
day
?”
“No more than twenty-four hours.” Tania’s voice was faint. “I came as quickly as I could.”
“I tried to make contact several times over the years,” Carl told her, his voice anguished, “send you information about the botnet, but you disappeared completely from the Blue. All I found was a piece of flat vacant land where the Basement Five block used to be.”
Then the spike in traffic that Don showed her
had
been Carl trying to contact them. Following on from that, maybe the board’s collective fear of a foreign government attacking them was nothing more than a fantasy brought on by Carl’s determination. But then, if it wasn’t for that fantasy, she wouldn’t have been given the go-ahead to enter cyberspace.
“We were afraid of a security breach,” Tania said gently. “Don ordered all the DMZ servers to shut down last night. We only had the Basement Five private network running. The servers are up again now. The building you knew should be back.”
She hesitated. “But there’s something I still don’t understand, Carl. Why do you look as though you’ve aged so much? This isn’t the real world. As I said, you’ve only been away for one day.”
He smiled ruefully. “That took me a little while to figure out, too. I didn’t mind. It gave me something to do while I was waiting for the Rhine’s next move. I think it has to do with our self-image. According to my internal clock, I’ve been here for a long time so my brain changed my self-image to match.”
Tania frowned at him. “You’re saying that your subconscious thinks you’re in your late forties now?”
“Must be.” His grin was rueful. “And maybe some of it is a psychological effect from battling the Rhine-Temple. I can’t think of any other theory that fits.”
Now that she was over the shock of his appearance, Tania had to admit that, even with a few lines on his face, Carl Orin was still one of the most attractive men she had ever seen.
They both stared at each other for a long moment before Carl chuckled.
“Now don’t go trying to make too much sense of all this. We’re dealing with two huge variables here. Cyberspace, which we’ve only just begun to explore, and our own brains, which is another frontier we’ve barely begun mapping. Put them together and I’m surprised I don’t see giant sea serpents riding imaginary waves between levels.”
Tania couldn’t help the laugh that bubbled up from inside her. It was partly relief but she was also starting to like the newer, gentler Carl. Damn her.
He sobered. “You have a choice now, Tania. I wish I didn’t have to spring it on you so quickly but I’m running out of time.”
He pointed at the traffic moving below their feet. “See that?”
Tania took a few moments to focus, then she saw what he was referring to. A thin silvery thread stretched across the highway, staying miraculously intact despite the traffic that whizzed above it. Tania tracked the thread up the side of the building where they sat. To the disc that swayed gently on its hook at her belt.
“That tether tells the Rhine-Temple that there are actual humans in cyberspace,” Carl told her. “Rational, adaptable human beings, not rigid, static computer networks. After our first couple of battles, it learnt about me. Learnt I was a different kind of creature. So it created an army of specialised bots to track and destroy human beings. It wants to kill us before we can kill it.”
Tania felt a chill travel up her arms. “So what are you saying?”
“You need to go back. Return to Basement Five, tell them what I’m doing and tell them to hold on while I try to destroy this thing.”
“By yourself?”
He shook his head. “Not by myself. I have friends. But I’m the only one running the marathon. The others pitch in when they can, but they’re just sprinters.”
“And what do
I
do?”
“You wait. You tell Don and you wait for my signal.”
“When will that be, Carl and how will we recognise it?” Tania’s voice stretched with the tension thrumming through her throat. “How will we know if you’re still fighting...or if you’re dead?”
He swallowed. “I guess....” His voice husked. He cleared his throat and tried again. “I guess a real-time week should be enough time, one way or another.”
She tightened her lips. “What’s the alternative?”
“What alternative?”
She glared at him. “There’s always an alternative. What is it?”
He slanted her a long look, a smile twitching the corner of his lips. “You stay here and help me. Together, we destroy that red-tentacled monstrosity. But...you cut your tether. That’s the only way to guarantee a minimum standard of safety from the Rhine’s seeker bots.”
“And how do I do that?”
“Cut your tether?”
She nodded.
“You open it and issue the shutdown command. You have to do it twice, confirming the command each time.”
Sounds of faint traffic, a hum rather than a roar, drifted up to Tania. The silence between her and Carl was complete. He watched her as she mulled over her thoughts and she watched him against the backdrop of a slowly-expanding, sentient botnet.