POD (The Pattern Universe) (8 page)

Read POD (The Pattern Universe) Online

Authors: Tobias Roote

Tags: #POD, #book 2 in The Pattern Universe series.

BOOK: POD (The Pattern Universe)
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What she discovered was to set her on a new path, one that immediately terrified her to her new core.

She returned her attention to full awareness, resuming direct control over her Hive. Shooting instructions across the ether to everyone and activating long silent commands to begin construction of new projects it quickly became evident to her brood that a new dynamic Queen had emerged.

The first order given to her Hive workers and sent out across the network to her foraging ships was,

PREPARE FOR WAR!

- 6 -

Osbourne was despondent. He was ignoring the work at his terminal and leaning back in his chair with his feet up, bouncing a squishy ball against Pod, who was resting quietly on top of one of the cupboards that contained all the blueprints. He had been like that since Pod had shown the pictures of Ferris’ shipyard and they had seen the calibre of the competition mounting against them.

“How many of those ships do you think he has there, Pod?” he asked again.

“Judging by the feedback from the sensors that I recorded and the occasional fluxes the Globe is picking up, I would suspect approximately twenty of various designs and sizes. They may not all be gunships.” Pod spoke informally, a trend it was picking up, more and more, as it veered away from precise logical communication with other AIs

“Yeah, right! But Ferris doesn’t build anything without a purpose, so those twenty ships are going to be ‘kick-ass’ types for sure. We’re screwed!” he moaned.

“You have reconfigured the shields. He will not be able to penetrate them,” Pod reassured.

“He can still attack everything, and everyone, with those ships he has. I know Ferris, I know how his mind works. He won’t need to take us down, he will take out cities and governments until we cave in. The Space Council will not have the ability to deny him. We needed six more months.”

Pod lifted off the cupboard and began to hover, as if anxious.

“I see. What will happen if you ‘cave in’ Ossie?"

“We will be held to ransom, and then we will all be handed over to Ferris, even Zeke.”

Pod began to bob up and down, a sure sign, recognised by those close to it, that it was stressed.

“Zeke must be protected, he must not be allowed to come back here. He must not be at risk from Ferris,” Pod stated, alarm showing even through the mechanical tones of its voice.

Pod's bobbing became more exaggerated, its cloak seemed to shimmer on and off too. Osbourne decided that he needed to reassure the fledgling sentient before it went off and did something illogical.

“Pod, we will keep Zeke out of it. Let me call Garner and Pennington, and see if we can get him some protection from Ferris while he is in Washington,” Osbourne reassured him.

“Ossie, we need to do more. I can give you patterns for sentinel robots. They will keep him safe. We can make them here and send them to protect him,” Pod said, and the monitor dinged as a new message arrived on the unit.

Osbourne looked at it and Pod, still agitated, bobbed behind him looking over his shoulder.

“This is an interesting design, Pod, it’s one of your best yet. I would love to get my hands on the whole library in that head of yours!” He turned smiling, to see Pod pulling back sharply at the possibility of Osbourne dissecting it to recover the information.

He laughed when he saw Pod’s reaction. “It’s okay, Pod, your data core is safe where it is. It is just a human figure of speech that means you have a lot of knowledge that would get me excited to look at.” He sighed. “Maybe, one day you will let me share all of the blueprints you possess.”

Pod didn’t answer although its agitation now seemed less pronounced.

“I have another sentinel design that can be utilised over your cities and that may be able to handle the gunships, if they become a problem for your people. I cannot build them here on Earth; the manufacture needs a lot of materials that you don’t have.” Pod’s bobbing had almost halted now. Activity, it seemed, helped it settle.

“I see, we need to get this sentinel design modified to work with our current technology. I can do this in a day or two, but if we could work together on it, it will be quicker. Then we could work on the city sentinels you are considering. Do you have a plan?” The monitor pinged at the same time Osbourne finished asking for it.

He looked at the new schematics for a few minutes, making sense of them, and then whistled. “There’s a lot of fire-power in that there robot, Pod!” he added approvingly. “We can do this,” he admitted to himself, more than anyone else.

Pod returned to the cupboard top and settled once more. “Let us begin.”

 

“Crap!” Ferris shouted. “I designed those mesh shields around the laboratory myself. I don’t believe the object could de-materialise and vanish from the complex ‘just like that’.” He clicked his fingers to emphasise the point. “The shields and mesh should have contained it... it must still be here,” he bawled at the scientists around him.

Goeth wisely kept quiet. He had heard from the security personnel that something might have brushed past them, but they weren’t sure and neither was he. It still would not have been able to exit the shield. He decided not to mention it. No point in having Ferris’ anger directed at him.

Flack, who was in charge of the tracking scope, was adamant. “Sir, the shields are locked down. We have tracked every object, within fifty kilometres from here with the radio-scope, and there is nothing here, to a depth of one thousand metres, that is reflecting the Ferrazite signature.”

Goeth nodded. “We have used that scope for years and it's managed to trace elements much deeper than this object could go, even underground.” He looked at Ferris, eyebrow raised, warning him not to go too far. “The complex has been checked end-to-end and top-to-bottom. It’s no longer here.”

Ferris sighed. He was still having major issues with the generator room staff over several tons of granite slabs that were taking up space and sitting on top of their controls. Nobody had a clue how they had got there. Ferris had a feeling it was the object’s way of saying it wasn’t happy. He thought that if it could do that, then perhaps they had got off lightly.

“All right, let's assume, for the moment, the object has disappeared. The question is, can it come back? And, did it find out anything while it was here? And lastly, who does it belong to?” Ferris scanned the room looking for feedback. These people were some of the most brilliant minds in the world; he valued their input, despite raging at them on regular occasions.

Goeth, as usual, led the response now they were on safer ground. “I think it’s gone, but don’t ask me how, because it didn’t go through the shields.” He looked at the others for confirmation. They all nodded echoing his thoughts.

Flack, a small chubby type with a grizzled beard and a jolly manner, responded to the second question. “If it comes back we will detect it immediately within fifty kilometre range. We have set sensors at strategic points to alert us if it approaches.”

“Which leaves us with, did the bloody thing discover anything and if so, who does it work for?” Ferris nodded at them.

“We checked all of the equipment in the laboratory, not that it had time to access it, or the means. We also ran through logs of all of the events surrounding that time and have come up with zilch.” This came from Burgess, who was their IT specialist and dealt with their nanotechnology development. He was the new whizz kid on the block.

Ferris nodded. “I think it's safe to say, that the different elements in the Ferrazite signature, tell us it's a different AI to the previous ‘Ship’ entity.” He looked at Flack, who nodded agreement, then went on, “the fact it is synonymous with Callaghan’s, leads me to think it has something to do with Space Island.”

He looked at Burgess. “We should consider that it achieved whatever it set out to do before it disappeared. Destroy all of the equipment in the lab. Make sure it isn’t attached to anything on the main network.”

Burgess nodded approvingly. “This will mean a lot of lost files that cannot be replaced. I would suggest the information be held on an isolated computer so it can be retrieved on demand,” he suggested to Ferris.

“All right, but no data transfers, okay?” Ferris agreed, but fixed them all with a scowl, to ensure they understood.

“Have we found a replacement for Lockwood yet?” Ferris asked.

Nobody responded, they were all downhearted at the loss of Lockwood; he was young, but well liked. The scientist who had accidentally shot him, letting go of the laser when caught by the Needlegun, was still in the infirmary and would be out of action for some time.

“Okay, well, keep looking for someone, keep me posted,” he said gruffly.

“Meeting over,” he announced and they all got up and filed out, leaving just Goeth sitting in his chair, looking despondently out of the window.

“He’s still alive,” Goeth muttered.

“What?”

“Callaghan, he is still alive out there.”

“There is no way he could have got out of that forcefield trap we set,” Ferris said.

“Did you see him die, get pulped?” Goeth accused him.

“Well, he was... I saw him beginning to compact under the pressure as I left. It was a matter of seconds before he would have been strawberry jam. I’m not squeamish, but...” Ferris said. “There is no chance he got out of that in just a few seconds... No chance at all,” he affirmed.

Goeth nodded. “Nonetheless, something is going on... that ‘was’ Zeke Callaghan’s Ferrazine inside that object.”

Ferris, finally accepting his friend was right, sat quietly. They were both wondering what the hell the object was, and whether it represented a threat to their plans. The mood in the room was pensive.

In the end, Ferris broke the silence; a decision made.

“Get onto the network and put out an alert for Callaghan. If he has somehow come back from the dead, he might still be out there,” he told Goeth. “ It would explain a lot.”

He leaned back and rocked his chair slightly as he puffed on a new cigar. Goeth, not wanting to be choked by cigar fumes, left speedily, shutting the door firmly behind him to seal in the pollution. Ferris sat there with an evil smile on his face, which would have scared Goeth witless, had he seen it.

 

Ferris stood naked in his quarters staring at his body in a full size mirror. He wasn’t one to be prudish about his body, nor was he an exhibitionist, but he needed to check on something. He had increasingly felt aches developing along the long muscles and joints of his arms, legs and back. These had no seeming basis. The scientists avidly recorded everything that happened to him, on a daily log, even down to weighing his stools.

To this end, they had installed a volumetric calibration device in his toilet that would measure displacement of the water, then a large syringe would protrude from the edge and take a sample. Only after this would the flush work.

It made him chuckle. His Marine humour over what they did with his waste left him red-faced with laughter. Nonetheless, he allowed them because his body was under constant metamorphosis, and he needed to know what it was doing.

The problems he was having were stress related. Every time his stress increased, the Ferrazine seemed to fight the reaction, causing him to have long periods of pain. His pain threshold continued to escalate which meant the pain itself would probably cripple a normal human being.

Ferris had noted recently when fighting the artificial sparring machine set to kill level, that he would sustain an injury and then heal almost immediately. The Ferrazine nonetheless continued to flood the area causing an accelerated mutation in the region.

He was beginning to have doubts as to the continued efficacy of the Ferrazite implants and, had it not been due to the fact that he had laughed off every earlier warning of the continued development of side effects, he might have gone to them and had it removed. As it was, he was caught in a mood of stubborn intransigence and believed he could weather the changes.

As a result of this he viewed the pain and stiffness perversely as a the price he would have to pay for achieving his dreamed of objective.

Ferris believed that he would transform into a super being if he just persevered long enough. It was this that drove him onward regardless of the increasing pain and the accelerated transmutation of his DNA. He didn't see what others saw, an increasingly restrictive body where joints and movement had reduced by over fifty percent.

While he could move fast and his reaction times were incredibly quick, these only represented a small proportion of his overall activity. In addition, when he used these skills, he paid a heavy price as the Ferrazine swamped through his system and drove him further along the disability trail. For all his intelligence, he found he was becoming predominantly occupied with his condition instead of the Fortress and his plans.

 

The young scientist, in his white lab-coat, didn’t look out of place as he shuffled down the cold underground corridor. He shouldn’t do, as this was Research and Development territory and all of the laboratories came off these frigidly cold walls; walls that were hewn from solid granite by their own designed NRG devices.

The white lapel badge, hanging off his open coat, simply said ‘LANG’. It didn’t even have an initial. They didn’t go for sociability in the Fortress. You were lucky to be called by name at all, most of the time. The scientists were a highly competitive and organised group. Their camaraderie was shallow; their will to compete and rise in the ranks required them to be on the constant lookout for any advantage. They would steal your research, and make it their own, if they felt it advanced them up the hierarchical ladder.

Boris Lang was a deeply worried individual. He had a serious problem that he needed to rectify, which, all being well, would be sorted in the next fifteen minutes. Unbeknown to his colleagues, he had been working for months on cracking the alien code architecture built into their nanite technology.

It wasn’t strictly his field, but he had silently picked up the challenge after trying to assist an arrogant colleague, who shot him down in flames for not knowing what he was talking about. He hadn’t told him that he had also been a game-board enthusiast, who had created whole worlds and languages for a commercial software organisation under another ‘pen’ name.

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