The Machine Awakes (32 page)

Read The Machine Awakes Online

Authors: Adam Christopher

BOOK: The Machine Awakes
11.74Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

And yet, he hesitated before speaking. He wished he was wrong, but he had a sinking feeling, deep in his stomach.

“An alien AI,” he whispered. “The Spiders?”

Glass looked at Kodiak, didn't speak, just gave a small nod.

“But … it can't be, can it? The Spiders are machines.”

“Powered by an AI. A self-compiling, self-programmed AI.”

Of course. Kodiak knew the Spiders were an AI—a gestalt computer intelligence that built machines to move around it. He'd never considered that the AI and the Spider machines were separate components of the same system—the mind and the vehicle, the software and the hardware—but it was obvious now that Glass had pointed it out.

But what the servitor was saying was too horrific to contemplate. The Fleet was fighting a war against a machine army. But if that army, that
enemy,
had found a way to infect other computer systems with itself … if, as Glass had suggested, that infection could turn Fleet machines into
Spider
machines, then the implications were monstrous. The war would end, and not in the Fleet's favor.

Kodiak rubbed his face and sighed. Okay. Concentrate. Focus. Gather data. Make a battle plan.

Try and get out of this alive. Try and get
everyone
out of this alive.

Including Cait.

“Okay,” he said, gathering himself. “What happens when Cait is plugged into the computer?”

Glass opened his mouth and closed it again. His eyes met Kodiak's and Kodiak just shook his head.

“It'll kill her, won't it?” he asked. “You'll burn out the infection, but you'll burn out her mind too.”

Glass's expression was blank, emotionless. “If she is strong she may be able to hold out for a time.”

Kodiak exhaled deeply, feeling the adrenaline course through his body. Glass had outlined a nightmare scenario, one that would throw the war in a whole new direction.

But … there had to be another way.
Had
to be. He couldn't let Cait be sacrificed, no matter how logical Glass made it seem.

So what about the source of the infection? Maybe, if he could find that, he could find a way of cutting it off, and maybe that would be enough for the JMC computer's security systems to regain control and wipe the infection out without drawing on the power of Cait's mind.

The source.

A string of now familiar coordinates ran through his mind. Eight-seven-nine-one-two-two-Juno-Juno. The Caviezel Corporation's secret Jovian facility. Wherever it was. Whatever they were hiding, Kodiak was fairly sure that was the best place to start looking.

Kodiak nodded to himself. He had made his decision. Screw Glass's logic. He couldn't let one person be sacrificed, even if it meant saving millions—
billions
—of others.

At least, not until he had exhausted all other options.

He looked up at Glass. Glass narrowed his eyes. Was that emotion, or a facsimile of emotion?

“We have no choice, Agent,” said the servitor.

“That's where you're wrong,” said the agent. “We always have a choice. Whether it's the right one or the wrong one, just having the ability to decide for ourselves is part of what makes us human. Something you wouldn't understand.”

“What
you
don't understand, Mr. Kodiak, is that I can't let you interfere. I removed you from Flood and her associates so you would not jeopardize the operation by trying to rescue Ms. Smith.”

“Yeah, I was starting to figure that,” said Kodiak. Then he grabbed the staser hanging from the servitor's hand in a single, lightning move. Glass reached for the weapon, a look of confusion crossing the servitor's face, but Kodiak was already out of reach. Stepping backwards, he raised the gun and sent two stun bolts into the robot's torso. Bright white chains of energy crackled across Glass's body. Then the servitor froze and fell forward onto the floor.

Knowing how the personality of Glass had jumped from one servitor to another, Kodiak figured he would meet the AI again. But for the moment, he had his freedom.

He rushed to the door, slapped the manual control with his palm, and pulled back against the wall. As the door slid open, letting in a blast of cool, fresh air, he peered around the doorway. The corridor outside was empty and white—he was back up in the public areas of the refinery. To his left, the corridor curved away out of sight. To his right, it went on for a few meters, then opened out into one of the big, high-ceilinged atria.

Kodiak slipped out, staser held ready. Checking behind him as he went, Kodiak crabbed along the wall until he reached the end of the corridor. The atrium ahead was still, silent. Kodiak listened for a while longer, then crept forward. He had to find the refinery master control room, and fast, if he was going to stop Cait from being plugged into the computer. His plan was a simple one—get her out, and then locate the company's secret operation, somewhere in the system. With the Bureau shuttle now within Jupiter's magnetosphere, he just hoped he'd be able to plot a course to the coordinates.

“Drop it!”

Kodiak froze, then frowned. He recognized the voice. Turning around, he saw Special Agent Braben stepping out from behind a tall decorative column in the atrium.

Talk about good timing. Kodiak smiled. Good old Braben. And good old Avalon. She must have gotten tired of waiting and sent his partner out to help.

Kodiak's smile dropped as Braben raised his gun, aiming it right at him.

 

33

Kodiak lifted his hands,
more out of surprise at finding his partner at the refinery. The two of them stood still for a moment, then Braben sighed in apparent relief and lowered his weapon as Kodiak lowered his arms.

“Brother, you have to stop sneaking around like that,” said Braben, shaking his head. “I nearly shot you. Again.”


Me
sneaking around? You're the one hiding behind a pillar. But I'm glad to see you.”

“The Bureau hadn't heard anything from you,” said Braben. “The whole Jovian system is cut off. Some kind of interference from a big magnetic storm. What's going on? Where's Cait?”

“Come on,” said Kodiak, “I'll explain on the way.”

*   *   *

A few minutes later,
Kodiak and Braben were crouched behind another decorative pillar in another wide atrium, this one with a direct view of the refinery control room's main doors, Braben having led them there thanks to the refinery map he'd been able to call up onto his wrist computer from the JMC's public access network. As they watched the control room doors, Kodiak filled his partner in on everything that had gone down since he and Cait had arrived.

“That explains a few things,” said Braben. “This place is deserted. I followed the automatic guidance beacons and brought my shuttle down on the main landing pad, and then just walked straight in. I'm lucky I found you, man. This place is massive.”

Kodiak nodded. Yes, he thought, it was lucky. Kodiak pushed Braben in the chest until they were both flat against the wall. Braben looked at Kodiak, but Kodiak just shook his head and shushed him.

Footsteps approached—no, footsteps, and something else too. Something heavy, rhythmic, metallic. It echoed down the corridor, louder and louder. Kodiak and Braben glanced at each other, then Kodiak risked a look around the pillar.

It was Flood's little group—herself and her four masked acolytes clad in their black jumpsuits and masks. A JMC servitor led the way, followed closely by Flood herself, her mask hanging loosely around her neck. Behind her two men pulled Cait along by her arms—Cait was conscious, but she was hanging from their arms loosely, her head bouncing with their movements.

The loud, heavy sound came from the machines that were following. Eight feet tall, little more than angular frameworks of black metal, articulated limbs reminiscent of the human form, but only just. Kodiak recognized them immediately. They were the Bureau servitors, the ones he had brought to the refinery in his own shuttle.

So, that proved that. The machines were JMC built and now the JMC had taken back control. Kodiak had boosted the Morning Star's strength himself.

Well,
shit.

He sighed, and felt Braben move beside him so he could take a look too.

The group, their prisoner, and robot escort stopped at the control room door, the human facsimile servitor moving forward to operate the controls, pressing its hand against the chrome security plate. Operator recognized, the double-doors hissed open and the group entered. As the last two Bureau servitors thudded across the threshold, the door slid shut.

Braben made to move forward, but Kodiak pulled him back. Braben looked at Kodiak with a quizzical expression, but Kodiak didn't have to pull him very hard to get him back behind the pillar.

Braben gestured at the door with his gun. “We gotta stop them, Von. We gotta get Cait out of there. Glass said she would die, right?”

“But he also said he needed her to help him burn out the infection,” said Kodiak. “He said that was the greater danger.”

Gah!
He didn't need this, not now. Kodiak tried to refocus, tried to stop himself second-guessing the decision he had already made. That kind of hesitation, that kind of indecision out on the field is what got agents killed.

Braben sighed. “We don't know that. I've never heard of the Spider AI being able to infect other things. The only thing I
do
know is that they've been ahead of us this whole time. They led us here, Von.”

“No,” said Kodiak, “they led
her
here. This all centers on Cait.”

“So it's about time we got her out of there, right?”

Kodiak nodded. He was glad Braben was here, his encouragement silencing the doubts that threatened to cloud Kodiak's mind. Braben was right. It was time to get Cait out of there, then locate the mystery coordinates and, if he was correct, cut out the Spider infection at the source.

Another thought entered his mind. Another thought he tried very hard to ignore.

Locate the mystery coordinates, cut out the Spider infection at the source.

Or die trying.

Kodiak looked around, snapping himself out of it. If they were going to get Cait out, they had to get into the master control room. A master control room now filled with twelve armed Bureau servitors, under the control of the JMC computer, which was still cooperating with Flood and her small team.

They could hardly walk in through the main doors. No, they needed another way in. Somewhere they could maybe see what was going on, find the right moment to act.

The atrium and corridors were still, quiet. On the opposite side of the large open space was a stairwell, curving up with the wall. Looking up, Kodiak saw it led to a balcony, which itself curved away from sight over the top of the control room wall.

“What do you think's up there?” asked Kodiak, pointing at the balcony.

Braben followed his finger. “Could be a gallery.” He turned back to face Kodiak. “Over the control room?”

Kodiak nodded. “Let's take a look.”

Braben gestured with his gun, the grin on his face wide. “This plan I like. After you, Agent.”

*   *   *

Their guess had been
right. The two agents crept along the curving balcony, which overlooked the atrium below and then turned into a short corridor. A few more meters and they were greeted by a reddish orange glow from the other end as the corridor opened out into a gallery overlooking the control room. As they approached, Kodiak motioned for Braben to keep down; they shuffled forward in a crouch, and as the control room came into view, Kodiak lowered himself completely to the floor and pulled himself along in a crawl on his elbows. The last thing they needed now was to be spotted.

The control room was circular, with a high flat ceiling. The gallery ran right around the circumference, with other corridors opening out onto it at intervals. Kodiak shuffled himself to the railed edge and looked over.

There were two long, curved consoles sweeping around the center of the room, in the center of which stood a huge holographic projection of Jupiter. The control room was elegantly lit with white uplights and spots—designed more to impress Fleet visitors than to be truly practical—but the planetary projection, photoreal and covered in an array of overlaid graphics, provided most of the light in the room, the swirling clouds and storms casting rippling light across the walls, like reflections cast off moving water.

Braben slid himself next to Kodiak; Kodiak glanced at his partner, but his face was unreadable in the shadow of the gallery.

The stations around the two curving consoles were occupied by JMC servitors, a mix of male and female human facsimiles, all of whom appeared to be busy at work. The phalanx of black Bureau servitors had spread out around the chamber, their formidable weaponry aimed at the technicians, but that seemed unnecessary as the JMC robots continued calmly about their tasks. Cait had been pulled to one side, still held by her two guards, while Flood stood next to another servitor clad in the purple of the JMC. Rather than the high-collared uniforms of the servitors, this one was wearing a suit. He looked older, with dark gray hair brushed back into a pompadour and bushy dark eyebrows. The moving light in the room made it hard to see, but his face was jowly and deeply lined. He had his arms folded, a slight smile on his face; that, and the way he and Flood seemed to be talking, suggested, if Kodiak didn't know any better, that he was a real person, rather than a servitor facsimile.

Kodiak frowned. He couldn't hear what the pair were saying. The man rocked on his heels and nodded as he listened to Flood. If anything, he looked very relaxed.

“The refinery manager, I guess,” whispered Kodiak. “The one we never met.”

“Oh, he's more than that, brother,” said Braben. “That's not just a company executive. That's Mr. Caviezel himself.”

Other books

Mystic Mayhem by Sally J. Smith
Kiss and Tell 2 by Faith Winslow
1 Motor City Shakedown by Jonathan Watkins
Fargo Rock City by Chuck Klosterman
Alive and Alone by W. R. Benton
The Lonely War by Alan Chin
The First Lie by Diane Chamberlain