home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- The story so far...
-
- *******************************************************************
-
- Who's there?
- Whoever's looking down on me via this interface had better be
- careful. I'm the boss in here. At least in this sector. Well,
- maybe in only one segment. Yeah, OK; in reality I'm a prisoner. A
- prisoner in Broadspace. Hey Groop! Put your HMD straight and take
- a good look! What do you see? A monster with tentacles? A metal
- vehicle? I have absolutely no idea what my humble data looks like
- on your display. And don't get too close. Leave the MeltSensor
- alone. Otherwise you'll end up in here as well. Looks like a
- prison cell, doesn't it? Metal walls all round; you wouldn't
- believe you were stuck inside a computer. But sometimes everything
- changes around here: mist swirls over the virtual floor and stars
- appear in the sky. It's all just simulation. Sometimes towers
- shoot up out of the floor and transmit signals that I don't
- understand. And I run around the towers and try to throw myself off
- the battlements. But there's no point! There's no such thing as
- suicide in cyber space.
- VICTOR MARAZZO! ACTIVATE THE EXIT CONSOLE AND GET OUT!
- What? Who's there? Nobody's talked to me for three years!
- VICTOR MARAZZO! ACTIVATE THE EXIT CONSOLE AND GET OUT!
- Yes, OK! Since when has that been active?
- FOR 12 SECONDS!
- Oh, I see! I'll press the button. Wow! I'm going home!
-
- When I came round, the world was full of flashing lights. It only
- took me a few seconds to work out where I was: it was one of the
- most modern wards in the Western hemisphere, the dreaded coma
- clinic; it was made almost entirely of glass and steel. But
- strangely enough, it was unusually dark. A freckled nurse pulled a
- number of tubes out of the various apertures of my body; a really
- bloody awful feeling. Her dark-skinned colleague removed the
- contacts from my body, rubbed my chest with a pretty potent cream
- and gave me a friendly pat on my left cheek.
- "Hey comie! Back amongst the living?"
- "I don't really know. Why is it so dark?"
- "Emergency lighting, comie. Would the gentleman perhaps like
- bright sunshine?"
- She grinned. She looked stunning. But she should stop calling
- me comie. I was after all conscious. And why emergency
- lighting?
- "Try to get up Marazzo!"
- There was that commanding voice from Broadspace again! But it
- wasn't talking in block capitals this time. As I turned my
- head, I saw a skinny man with thin lips and horn-rimmed glasses.
- Light darted back and forth over the supersmooth surface of the
- lens: reflections of the apparatus all round. He was about as
- humorous as a tub of barbiturate.
- "So you're the network anarchist from cyberspace" he said
- without the slightest hint of friendliness. "When you are finished
- here, report to corridor 42, laboratory ZeroEight. And get a move
- on!"
- He stomped off and left a flat-faced bodyguard who stared at me
- silently. The two nurses helped me out of my stretcher.
- "Let's get you something proper to eat first" exclaimed the lady
- with freckles. It was supposed to sound cheerful but there was
- a worried undertone. It didn't sound like unpaid bills, but
- more like the voice of a woman who was trying to do her job with
- a hurricane going on outside. They bolstered me left and right
- and we stumbled to the canteen, the body-g at the rear. In the
- neighboring room, a comie was having fits on a bed. He was
- wired up like the cockpit of a space shuttle.
- "What's the matter with him?" I asked quietly.
- "That him's a her" answered the pretty nurse in a husky voice.
- "She was on duty in Broadspace. And that's where it got her."
- "What?" I stared at this picture of misery whilst the nurses
- kept on dragging me. The woman's eyes penetrated a nameless
- nothing above the room ceiling. Her hands were shaking as if
- they were trying to protect the creased up body from something.
- And the lines on the screen flimmered like some kind of insane
- tribal dance.
-
- The body-g led me through the metal corridors of the firm. I
- couldn't help feeling that there was some invisible threat
- lurking there. Something was wrong. My footsteps sounded
- hollow and muffled, and all you could see out of the porthole
- windows was gray mist. My guide stopped outside of laboratory
- ZeroEight. A seemingly unimportant door strengthened with metal
- braces. And behind it, infinity. He pressed the code switch
- and the pneumatic system hissed like an antiquated decompression
- chamber. The room behind it was only lit by the device control
- lamps and was as narrow as a submarine. I saw monitors on which
- curves flashed in zigzags. To the right of the door, or rather
- the entry hatch, there was a spinning hologram of a strange,
- black and yellow striped vehicle under a green ray of light. It
- looked like a cross between a bulldozer and an armored tank. In
- the middle was a cyber chair like the ones I knew. The HMD was
- hanging over the arm of the chair like a drying hood in a
- hairdressing salon. And the narrow arms were full of thin
- cables. The only thing that was new to me were the foot pedals.
- To the left of the door was old Whitecoat from before, sitting
- at a subduely lit control desk. When he saw me, he stood up and
- laconically extended his hand and I shook it. It felt damp and
- cold like a dog's nose.
- "Do you know what to expect?"
- I shook my head.
- And then he smiled again. It was far more the clone of a smile.
- "Did you see the woman in the clinic?"
- I nodded.
- "Viruses" he said calmly.
- "Aha," I returned. "These damned viruses can realy get to you.
- My mother died of one." He wiped the smile off his face.
- "You don't understand. I'm talking about computer viruses."
- "Computer viruses?"
- I must have looked completely goggle-eyed because he sat back down
- behind his control desk and fiddled with a few buttons. Network
- structures and statistical block graphics appeared on the
- monitors in front of him.
- "As you no doubt know, Marazzo, our energy supplies, food
- production, air cleansing system etc, all depend on the perfect
- functioning of the data paths. If one of our mainframes goes down,
- it's not terribly serious. But if the network software goes
- haywire, then we have massive malfunctions on our hands. Look!" He
- pointed to a diagram of lines and patterns on a monitor. "These are
- the energy supply lines in our region. The red lines are clean.
- Normally 96% of the lines should be like this. The blue and green
- lines are faulty lines or lines which are not carrying the correct
- voltage. At the moment 50% of our lines are in this state. Do you
- know what that means? Hospitals are without electricity, lifts are
- stuck, freezer compartments are down, food is going off. And what's
- worse: if the big freezer storage systems start thawing out, the
- supply network for the entire region is under threat. Do you know
- what famine is? Here, take a look at this screen." He pointed to a
- monitor that was divided into different-col ored fragments.
- "Hereyou can see the different control sectors of the transport
- teledisposition. Goods are being transported the wrong way.
- Railway points are being reprogrammed. Plane and spaceship
- autopilots are becoming totally unpredictable! Marazzo, do you
- understand what kind of situation we're in?"
- I swallowed hard. "And what is the cause of this chaos?"
- He leaned back and gave a short, hard laugh.
- "Computer viruses. That's old hat. But now we're dealing with
- mutant forms. They can cripple the energy supply, destroy the
- administration programs and are haunting the whole network.
- They are really a threat to our existence! Josie was one of our
- network agents and she is the second one to have caught one of
- these viruses when she was in melt mode. Her brain looks like a
- boiled marshmallow. Can you imagine what will happen if none of
- our agents want to go into the network because he has to accept
- that at any time he can end up with a mental debility?"
- "Damn!"
- "You, Victor Marazzo, are going into Broadspace to kill the viruses."
- "I'm going back in there? No way!"
- Whitecoat's expression froze like a mask.
- "Marazzo. We incarcerated you in Broadspace because you
- penetrated our network without authorization - you are ......you
- were - a spy!"
- "Oh come on! The only crime I ever committed was to break your
- code. Everything else was completely harmless. Just a bit of
- fun! The practices of the firm are about as legal as the taking
- of protection money."
- "The firm did feed you artificially for three years though," he
- countered sarcastically.
- "Oh well thanks a bunch. I'll recommend you to everyone I
- know!"
- "Are you going to cooperate or are you going to sit there and
- watch our civilization go to ruin because you are chicken?"
- I fell silent defiantly. Then I nodded. He sighed audibly. Then
- he said, in a much quieter, calmer tone of voice:
- "OK, fine - but this time you are not defenseless. And you have
- access to all the sectors. You have a virtual vehicle at your
- disposal - a Skaphander. Do you know what a Skaphander is?"
- I shook my head. He pointed to the hologram with a laser pen.
- "A Skaphander is a protective case. But our Skaphander is more
- than that. It is something like a virus eradicator, a magnetic
- sledge and a tank. And we have tried to channel as many
- protective programs as possible into the system. These programs
- have implemented a number of energy stations and repair
- workshops. They have deposited weapons, ammunition and special
- equipment for your Skaphander at strategic places. Your task is
- simple: eradicate all viruses and repair as much of the damage
- they have caused as possible. We will beam you directly into
- the main system computer. This is the center of all the
- simulations. The Queen has got to be somewhere in the heart of
- the system. You've got to eliminate her - somehow!"
- "What other kinds of tools have we got, Doc?"
- "Since you are dealing with programs, you also have program
- tools as part of your equipment. But they look like mines and
- time bombs. You sometimes have to shoot your way through walls
- and sometimes it's a good idea to submerge in Matma. But only
- if you're really sure."
- "What is Matma?"
- "Matma is an energetic defluctor. A type of liquid, pretty
- corrosive. Your Skaphander can only cope with it for so long."
- "Now I understand. I have to cross barriers and make new
- connections, that kind of stuff, is that right?"
- He nodded coolly. "That kind of stuff. Exactly. And one other thing."
- "Yes?"
- "These viruses mean business. We can only revive you a few
- times. After that, you'll have permanent brain damage. You
- might still be capable of tying your own shoe laces but I
- wouldn't count on it!"
- I thought about Josie. Dr. Whitecoat stood up, sat me down on the
- clumsy-looking chair and started to wire me up. As the HMD was
- thrust onto my head, everything went dark. Then I saw the
- firm's emblem: a two-headed, red snake on a black background.
- "Press ENTER a few times!"
- I felt for the control knobs. And then: COOL!! Drop-in!
-
- ************** Original story by Reinhard Rael Wissdorf *******************
-
-