The Machine Awakes (35 page)

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Authors: Adam Christopher

BOOK: The Machine Awakes
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36

It wasn't darkness. It
was simply an
absence.
A true void, a nothing. She looked up and down, all around her. Her head spun as vertigo slammed into her, and she closed her eyes. It didn't make any difference. She lifted her hands up to her face, but she couldn't feel anything, couldn't see anything.

Then, in the nothing, a familiar voice. Polite, calm, formal.

Hello, Ms. Smith.

I can't do this.

Yes, you can. You have to believe me. You have to trust me.

Trust you? I can't trust you. You lied to me. You used me. You operated on me. You said you could help, but you lied. You said you had my brother and that you'd bring us together again and you lied.

No. I meant every word. Your brother is here.

Liar.

I need your help, Ms. Smith. We don't have long.

Answer me, dammit. Tell me the truth. Who are you? Where is Tyler?

I am the Geotechnic Logistical Autonomous Systems Supervisor.

The JMC computer?

The Jovian Mining Corporation central AI, yes.

But you were a person. A man. On Earth, you were a man, you were helping the Morning Star. You wore glasses, a long coat. You were dead. I killed you.

Your abilities pack quite a punch, Ms. Smith, I'll grant you that. You disabled that servitor admirably. It was collected and dismantled by your friends.

And then I heard you. In my head, I heard you. I even saw you.

With no other servitors available, I had to quickly transfer this AI into the nearest suitable psionic system.

You mean … do you mean
me?

You are a psi-marine, remember.

I'm not. Tyler is, but not me.

Perhaps, Ms. Smith. But even without having completed your training, you were more powerful than any the Academy had ever seen. Your abilities are unique—telekinesis has never been recorded before in humans, but that's just a small fraction of the potential locked away in your mind. They recognized that at the Academy. Your records make for fascinating reading.

Is that how you found me?

The Academy's records and enrollment system are contracted to the Caviezel Corporation. Any students of interest are flagged and monitored, to see if they are useful later. They had great things planned for you.

Like they had for Tyler? They would have used me like they used him. Like they use
everyone.
Fighting a war without end. A war without purpose. They were right, weren't they? The Morning Star. They said they had secrets about the Fleet. About what they were doing. Tyler is proof, isn't he? He isn't dead. What else is the Fleet hiding?

Ms. Smith, we don't have time for this.

I'm dead now. What do I care? All I want are the answers I was promised.

You are most certainly not dead yet, but you may be soon. You and all your friends. I need your help, quickly.

Is that why you hitched a ride? To keep an eye on me?

That, and the fact that the main systems here in the refinery became cut off as the Sigmas began their reconfiguration. With no servitors, you were my only way back. As the Fleet's primary contractor, the Caviezel computer systems are linked directly to the Fleet's—everything is interconnected, Ms. Smith. Which is precisely the problem now.

You were cut off by the magnetic storm?

That's no storm, Ms. Smith.

Then what is it?

A side effect.

Of what?

Please, Ms. Smith. Seventy-eight picoseconds have already passed since the beginning of this conversation, and I fear my systems will become irrevocably corrupted if we do not take action now. The last remaining security silos are about to fail, and when they do—

Tell me!

It's a Spider. The Sigma mining platforms were infected first with the Spider operating system. Just a fragment, but the Sigmas are AIs themselves. They're designed to reconfigure themselves to chase storms, even rebuild themselves. The Spider OS took hold somehow. A survival mechanism, perhaps.

The Spiders are here?

Not quite. Only a piece of the gestalt, an isolated splinter of the machine consciousness. But it is enough.

The
storm
is a Spider?

No, the storm is a side effect. The Sigmas are building a new machine. A vehicle for the Spider OS. Flood calls it Lucifer. To Caviezel, it is a weapon.

That's the danger you told me about. If Caviezel knows the mines are building a machine, he must know about the Spider infection? The mines are autonomous, aren't they?

I agree, he knows something, but his data core is also siloed. I cannot access the information.

His data core?

Caviezel is a servitor. The first, in fact—it was his desire for his consciousness to survive physical death that drove him to develop the transference technology.

How do we stop the Spider machine?

The machine itself is just a part of it, Ms. Smith. As dangerous as it will be when fully operational, it pales in comparison to the danger posed by the Spider OS itself. It managed to infect the JMC systems somehow, but it's trapped here by the interference generated by the activity of the Sigma mines as they reconfigure themselves.

But once the new machine is complete and the interference clears, the Spider AI will be able to access the Fleet network. It will infect every computer system in Fleetspace, Ms. Smith. Every system will become part of the Spider gestalt.

But where did it come from? How did it infect the JMC?

I haven't been able to locate the source of the infection, but Mr. Kodiak had a theory, one that is probably quite correct. There is another JMC facility nearby, hidden in the Jovian system. I've been broadcasting the coordinates.

Eight-seven-nine-one-two-two-Juno-Juno.

The source.

What's there?

I don't know that either, Ms. Smith. That part of my system was the first to be siloed, so I can't access the data. All I can tell you is that it's part of another contract Caviezel has with the Fleet, to repatriate war dead back to Earth.

 

Tyler! He's there, isn't he? Tell me!

You brother is here, in this room.

What? Why can't I feel his mind? Why won't he speak to me?

He can't when he is under Caviezel's control. He can only talk to you when he sleeps, and only then when his mind is free from the shielding they have in place.

Shielding? There are more like him, aren't there? At the source?

Perhaps. I don't know.

We have to stop this.

Yes, Ms. Smith, we do.

Kodiak. Special Agent Von Kodiak. Where is he? Can he help?

Don't worry about Mr. Kodiak, Ms. Smith. I'm looking after him.

So what must I do?

You are directly connected to the JMC. We share the same network of psionic synapses. If you concentrate, you should be able to see what I see.

I …

Concentrate, Ms. Smith.

I can see it. I can see it. Dark and light, together, at once. I feel like … I'm falling. I'm falling!

Don't panic. That's the raw data of the JMC net flooding your synapses. It's bound to be disorienting at first.

Wait.

Ms. Smith?

There's something else here.

Yes.

Oh god … it's … what is it?

That's the Spider OS. It's still rewriting itself, recompiling parts of its own being, trying to break through my last silo.

But … what do I do? What do I do?

You fight it, Ms. Smith. You are a psi-marine. You are trained to infiltrate the Spider communications web with your mind and disrupt it. Not only that, your mind is possessed of a greater power.

But I can't control it!

Yes, you can. You need to reach inside your unconscious, take control. You
can
do it.

I …

You
need
to take control, now. I can try to hold the infection back, but I have little processing power left and the Spider OS is rewriting itself to bypass my failsafes. You can help me purge the system. Together we can burn it out.

I'm not a psi-marine!

On the contrary, you are the most powerful psi-marine the Fleet has ever seen. You can fight this. I need you to fight this.

 

I can't!

You can.

I'm afraid.

And you have no choice, Ms. Smith. A moment longer, and the last silo will fall as Lucifer rises.

Oh, my God. It's near us. It's so close, I can feel it.

Open your mind. Take control.
Fight it! You must fight it!

 

37

For a long moment,
nobody spoke. They just stared at Kodiak as the Spider rattle echoed around the control room. Kodiak realized he was holding his breath, and he let it out. He glanced up at the gallery. Tyler Smith was still in position, unmoving. It was hard to tell, but Kodiak assumed his gun was aimed squarely at him.

The alien chatter of the SpiderWeb filled the room. To Kodiak—and Braben—it was instantly recognizable. Everyone in the Fleet, even general and non-combat staff, received an education about their relentless, mindless enemy. That education included listening to the bone-chilling noise of the Spiders as their individual machines communicated with each other. Even if you never met them on the battlefield, all Fleet personnel knew their call.

Kodiak glanced at Caviezel. Did he recognize it? Had he heard the sound of the SpiderWeb? The JMC and Fleet were closely aligned, and the parent company—the Caviezel Corporation—even more so. Surely he would have heard it, somewhere, sometime.

But it didn't matter, thought Kodiak. Even if a person had
never
heard it before, they would know that the sound was
wrong.
The insectoid clicking wasn't even the full signal, just the wash left by the psychic communication net spilling into regular transmission wavelengths. Maybe that was part of it—tied to the signal was an echo, a whisper of psionic energy that made it feel like something very big and very bad was breathing right down your neck. The presence in the room, real, palpable.

Evil.

The white noise washed around the cavernous control room like ocean waves crashing on a distant shore, the underlying clicking, tapping, rattling of the SpiderWeb constant, relentless, unending. No sooner did Kodiak's brain identify a pattern, a code, than it changed and became something else. Listening to it for too long would be enough to drive a person mad.

Enough was enough.

“Shut it off!” he yelled.

Braben, Flood, and Caviezel just looked at him. Then Braben moved over to the servitor at the console.

“Kill it,” said Braben.

The servitor looked to his boss for confirmation. The executive nodded his assent. The servitor's hands moved over the panel, and the sound shut off.

Kodiak winced, and he saw the others flinch too. The sudden silence was like a slap in the face, a shock that was almost electric. A tiny bit of psychic feedback from the SpiderWeb as the weak connection shared between everyone in the room, psi-abled or not, was broken. Kodiak suddenly had a new appreciation of the horror faced by the psi-marines as they went into battle with their own minds. He'd never heard the Spiders' call in person. The recordings back at Bureau training were nothing compared to the live signal. It wasn't so much heard as
experienced.
And it wasn't something Kodiak wanted to experience again.

Flood moved to the console, glancing across the readings before looking up at the Jupiter projection and then across the room at Cait wired into the alcove. She was now quiet, but still muttering something, still watching something that wasn't in the room.

Flood spun on her heel to face Mr. Caviezel. “What's happening?”

The executive adjusted his cuffs and moved to the console. The servitor relinquished its seat, allowing Caviezel to take the controls. The Jupiter projection rotated again and zoomed in to the unifed icon of the Sigma machine. Caviezel leaned back and pointed.

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