Authors: Mike A. Lancaster
Tags: #Europe, #Technological Innovations, #Family, #Action & Adventure, #Juvenile Fiction, #Computers, #Fiction, #Science Fiction, #Computer Programs, #People & Places, #General
It restarts the memory.
A gentle hand on my shoulder pulls me out of my thoughts. The hand squeezes and I know it is my mother without turning around. My father doesn’t do shows of affection.
I turn around and there she is, my mother, and the way she’s standing – in front of a blazing sun – makes it seem like there’s a halo of light surrounding her.
I am overwhelmed with a sense of loss. I mean, it’s a miracle that I am here, standing so close to her, but it’s just a reminder of everything that I lost when she walked out of our garden seven years ago . . .
Ashley says and I realise that I am broadcasting my thoughts.
The edges? What the hex is she talking about . . .
Oh, wait.
Now that is odd.
I move closer and I see immediately what Ashley is talking about. The edges of my mother are hazy, strange, and it looks like she is an image that has been . . . cut away from its background.
Like the memory itself has been . . .
edited
is
really
where this scene took place.>
I reach out my hand and touch the tattered edges of my mother’s image. Here, up close, it’s so obvious that the memory has been tampered with. I can even feel the edit marks tingle in my fingertips as I touch them, like tiny electric shocks.
I realise that Ashley is right, and just about everything about this memory is a lie.
This is the most important memory that I have
, I think,
and it’s not even real
I feel a blood-red anger that boils inside me.
the true memory
within
a faked memory?> I ask incredulously.
It makes me smile. Makes it sound less like craziness, too, somehow.
Ashley says:
I get down on my hands and knees and I scan the area. The garden of that lost summer day. Flowers and bees and grass.
There’s nothing here.
Nothing except the questions I’ve got running around inside my head.
I do exactly what she says.
I feel myself smile. She is my world, I think, and it makes me feel warm. And then I notice something. My mother is not smiling. She’s standing there, looking down at me, her edges
blurred by the brightness of the sun, and her face looks . . . sad. As if she is on the edge of tears.
I stop the memory again.
I look at my mother’s edges, blurred by the brightness of the sun.
And I think about finding the edit marks around her image and how obvious they looked when they were pointed out to me. I think that the dazzling aura that surrounds her must have made it easier to edit the image, and that maybe the person doing the editing might have just slipped up, figured that the brightness would do a lot of their work for them, by masking the image.
Maybe there is an answer in that aura.
I move closer and study the light around her. There are no longer any of the crude editing marks around her edges. I imagine a control panel and it appears in my hand as a controller. I locate a zoom control and use it to enlarge a section of the aura. And I can see
something
in the midst of the light. I use my tools to alter the image, trying different filters.
It looks like the surface of some pretty rusty metal – which seems to prove that the background this memory originally occupied certainly was not our garden – but metal is metal and there is nothing to help place it in the real world.
But the metal texture that I have revealed – poorly masked around my mother’s image – makes me certain that my father
has
made a mistake. I’m sure that he never expected me to subject this memory to this type of scrutiny.
We are missing something.
Something elementary.
I need help, so I decide to message Perry.
/Hey man./
I say.
?Where the hex are you?
Perry answers, sounding perplexed.
/You’ve never missed a day’s schooling in your life, buddy boy./ ?And now, what? ?You playing hooky?
/Something came up./
I tell him.
/Something I really can’t get into now. But I need your help./
/Of course you do, Petey. And I want to help you. I really do. But first you have to tell me something./
/Go on./
?Is this to do with the mystery girl? ?Gee, you realise that she’s probably trying to get at me through you? ?you know, date the friend first...?
?Er, Perry?
?Ah, hex, she’s listening, isn’t she?
His voice sounds embarrassed.
?OK then, what do you need?
/I was thinking about the tiger on the train./
?You’re weird, you know that?
?I’m weird? /It was you who thought it was a real picture. I remember I was the one who told you it was a fake./
Another one of Perry’s bizarre photos, the tiger on the train was a Link sensation a few months back. An anonymous picture showing a White tiger on-board a slider, that had tapped into the gullibility of the LinkGazing masses, and had people believing it without really questioning it.
Perry had sent it to me and I had replied with . . . well, pretty much what I’ve just said. Perry had then examined the photo and managed to break it down into its component parts. The source of the tiger in the picture had been a zoo in China.
?Is this an I-told-you-so call?
Perry says, grumpily.
/On the contrary, I want you to tell me how you managed to work out where the tiger was from./
/Ask me a hard one, Peter! The answer is geotagging, simple as./
Geotagging. I really am a fool sometimes. I tell Perry thanks and promise to explain later and then I cut off the conversation.
I have always used Diary Plus for my LinkDiary. It costs, sure, and a lot of people don’t use it, but it automatically logs geographical information and encodes it into every entry in the Diary.
I check the geotag for the entry and it tells me that it was logged as:
Location = outside\714-3256-6245 which is a numeric way of saying it happened in the garden at my home. I don’t need to look it up, the software’s already done it for me:
LocationLookUp = 7256 Avalon, New Cambridge, UK.
But I know that’s not true so I access the entry’s code log and scan through code. There’s a lot of stuff I don’t understand, but I know what kind of tag I’m looking for and it doesn’t take long to trace the history of the image.
And I see that the tag was altered:
\rewrite geotag\
and I see what it was altered
from:
Location = outside\612-9841-1793.
Again I don’t need to look it up, because the software’s there way ahead of me.
LocationLookUp = Naylor silos, Millgrove, New Cambridge, UK.
I hear both Ashley and Alpha gasp.
I think ‘leave’ and step out of the memory. I don’t want to see any more.
I lost my mother at a place that appeared in the
Kyle Straker Tapes. A place that still appeared on the map software I’m running. Map software that I snagged from my father’s home network.
It turns out that my father had map software that shows places that no longer exist, that were supposed to have never existed, if you were to believe his words.
I open my mouth to speak, but I can’t think of a single word to say.
File:
113/50/05/wtf/
Source:
LinkData\LinkDiary\Peter_Vincent\Personal
We sat there for a short while, at the table in the Strakerite cafe, and sorted it though in our heads.
I was thinking about connections.
It seems that we live our lives making them, or looking for them, even sometimes breaking them, but very rarely do we stop to think about how dependent we are upon them.
I think that the Link itself is born from nothing more than a pressing need for us to connect. It’s a part of an instinct to reach out and share information, no matter how trivial or dull, just so we can feel like we are a part of a group, a set, a community.
We need to feel like we belong. The Link provides us with all the connections we need.
So much so that we pretty much let it run our lives for us now.
It’s how we make sense of the world. So we look for patterns and linkages, because without them the world is a senseless blur.
Never mind that most of the time we’re linking up with people we’ll never
actually
meet; sharing memories and secrets and updates with strangers just so we don’t have to feel so alone in the world, just so we can connect, even if the connection doesn’t really mean anything at all.
And then, just today, I discover that
everything
is connected anyway.
Three days ago I would never have read the Kyle Straker Tapes. I wouldn’t even have
considered
it. Indeed I would probably have laughed in anyone’s face who suggested it.
Yet in the space of forty-eight hours I discover that everything in my life is connected to that secret history, written so long ago.
My father investigated them.
My mother disappeared out of my life at a location mentioned in them.
My memories have been altered to conceal the connections, but in spite of that, suddenly they have all converged.
One moment in time, where all the sticky threads lead.
The Grabowitz ghosts.
Mr Del Rey and the other missing members of the committee that investigated the Straker Tapes.
Me. My mother.
Alpha. Ashley.
LinkCrawlers and recovering missing information from eight-year-old memories.
The Straker Tapes themselves.
The Naylor Silos – where Annette Birnie finally learned to fit in, and it only cost her her humanity.
A thousand eyes, watching.
Threads in a web, spun by a single spider?
My father?
Sitting in the middle of the web, feeling it pull as we struggle against our fate, only becoming more ensnared as a result of our actions.
I suddenly realised that anything I had discovered – about my mother and the silos and the next upgrade – must be things that my father already knew. And if he could scoop handfuls of LinkActivity and examine them, like I had seen him do at the Science Council, then
he knew that I knew
. That was what he was had been trying to tell me earlier.
I didn’t know what my father was up to, I couldn’t see what he had been planning for . . . for, well, years . . . at least since my mother disappeared. I just knew that he was doing
something
File:
113/50/05/wtf/Continued
Source:
LinkData\LinkDiary\Peter_Vincent\Personal
Finally Ashley broke the silence.
‘So it’s true,’ she said in breathless wonderment. ‘All of it. Kyle Straker. Millgrove. Alien upgrades. The 0.4. And the silos . . . they still exist.’
Her voice was a mixture of wonder and horror. I just nodded, feeling cold and scared.
‘Do you know what this
means
?’ Ashley said, her face suddenly pale and tense. ‘We have proof, at last. Proof of all of it.’
‘But we’re running out of time,’ I told her. ‘There’s another upgrade coming and I think it’s happening today.’
‘What are you talking about?’
So I told her about Alpha’s father and the Committee for the Scientific Study of the Straker Tapes. I told her about the Grabowitz pictures and the young man counting down on his fingers.
Ashley looked disbelieving, about to laugh, but something in our faces stopped her. Her eyes narrowed into slits as she processed the information, and then her face came alive with the significance of what we were discussing.