Read The Reborn (The Day Eight Series Part 1) Online
Authors: Ray Mazza
Tags: #Technological Fiction
Now, it was probably apparent that I’ve had an ulterior motive for bringing you here. This is it.
Trevor slid the final sheet of stationery to the side, revealing a small envelope underneath. It read:
He flipped it over. A golden sticker bearing an embossed “8” sealed the envelope. If he wanted, he could carefully peel back the sticker and investigate the contents of the envelope now, then reseal it. He was tempted… thirsty to know more.
No matter how much he found out, no matter what incredible things Damon described to him, Trevor couldn’t shake the unsettling feeling that he had only scratched the surface of a towering vault that guarded the world’s most precious secrets.
Trevor leaned back and glanced casually around the room, noticing another of Damon’s cameras nestled in a high corner. Reluctantly, Trevor set the envelope aside, anticipating the moment when he could tear it open. The NSA, optical computers, self-modifying human simulations, a new form of hardware even faster than optical processors that could run the simulations at full speed… it was beginning to fit together, and at this point, he was willing to believe just about anything.
Trevor looked around him. There had been times when he felt that things were too normal for him. That he was leading a plebian life as a necessary counterbalance to the other, more obscured side of the world. He’d known that there was a clandestine community out there, somewhere, comprised of secret societies, hidden government subterfuge, and billion-dollar classified intellectual triumphs preciously guarded in covert bunkers… bunkers much like this one.
Trevor was now a part of this clandestine community. His life had become anything but normal.
Trevor made his way to the couch and tossed his body across it. He rested his head on a pillow, nestled himself against the puffy back, and put his feet up on the arm. This would not be a computer bug he’d be able to fix by looking at code. Rather, he’d have to work it out in his mind while letting all this information settle in.
Thoughts of circuits growing, connecting, reproducing, and dying played out in his head. He relaxed his eyes and closed them to better visualize the problem. His pulse slowed and his mental state began to shift. In a realm that was stranded halfway between wakefulness and sleep, abstract images of circuits morphing into brains flitted in and out of his consciousness. His mind wandered deeper. The time between his breaths became longer. His pulse slowed. Soon, he was fast asleep.
~
Trevor woke, sprang from the couch, paced back and forth to the computer, then slapped his hands.
“That’s it!” he said. Allison clapped for him because he sounded excited, and that made him smile. She had just finished watching
Robin Hood
, so he put in another colorful movie for her, then engrossed himself in computer code before the answer escaped him.
The problem with it was that his program dealt primarily with circuits, but was trying to build brains. One fundamental difference was that circuits processed information linearly – there were very specific paths that a signal traveled in a chip, and it essentially operated on one piece of data at a time each step of the way. Yet brains processed information in parallel: various signals moved about the brain in unison and it operated on them all at once in a constant storm of activity.
Early forms of life had nervous systems that functioned more like circuits. Worms had a segment of the brain for movement, another tasked for eating, a third for sensing surroundings. These were independent, but over time, ganglia like these had become more intertwined, developing a parallel nervous architecture, approaching the more connected structures of our brains today.
Trevor needed to take this dichotomy between the linearity of circuits and the parallelism of brains into account in his program. This was a fundamental problem that Trevor never foresaw because he had always thought he was working on circuits… not human neural structures. And it was no surprise Kane or whoever else at Day Eight couldn’t fix the bug, because they were looking for a flaw in programming logic. But it wasn’t a bug in that sense. It was an entire shift in approach to realign the algorithm with the problem space.
The algorithm had come from
within
Trevor, so he could grasp its entirety when nobody else could. But that wasn’t all of it… something had changed while he had been asleep; his mind had shifted like a tectonic plate and done the work of countless thinkers.
He just
knew
the answer.
~
He had a few false starts, but now the program ran flawlessly. There were no crashes after a few seconds. There were no crashes after an hour. And the results were astounding. He’d never seen output so complex, so interesting. Damon would be thrilled, and the simulants could go back to artificially modifying their own intelligence.
Now, it was time to open the envelope.
Trevor carefully peeled back the golden sticker with the embossed “8,” as if tearing it would destroy the contents of the envelope.
He gently slid out a folded sheet of stationery, different than the kind on the desk. The paper was wider than it was tall. A very faint, sideways “8” adorned the extent of its surface. Damon’s familiar script looped across and down the page. The note began:
~
To be continued in Day Eight, Part II:
Of Mice and Hitmen
Thank you for reading
Day Eight, Part I: The Reborn
Please keep in mind that this was only the first part in a
three-part novel
. If you’re wondering why things didn’t wrap up nicely, it’s because the action is really just beginning…
I hope you’ve enjoyed the book so far. I’m excited about where it all leads. If you’d like to find out, you can find the other two books on Amazon.
Part II is titled,
Of Mice and Hitmen.
Part III is titled,
The Spiritual Singularity.
You may also find them via this top-secret link:
http://www.raymazza.com/novels.html
As always, if you want to send comments, feedback, or cupcakes, please mail these things to
[email protected]
. I would love to hear from you!
If you want to check out the acknowledgements, keep flipping pages (and I thank
you
at the end of them).
Happy Reading!