Attrition of the Gods: Book 1 of the Mystery Thriller series Gods Toys. (4 page)

BOOK: Attrition of the Gods: Book 1 of the Mystery Thriller series Gods Toys.
3.9Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Why do you say he is weird?”

“Well, quirky would probably be a better description. His clothes are strange, oddly old-fashioned and he almost always wears sort of greenish or bright blue…”

“Turquoise?”

“Yeah, that. And he’s always saying ‘holy moly’.”

“Holy moly? Meaning what?”

“I’ve got no idea! I told you he’s weird.”

“Can I meet him?”

Adam looks away, not sure how to reply.

“He doesn’t exactly come into High Jinn. I’m not sure what race he is but he definitely isn’t Aryan.”

“I guessed that! No, I mean when I come to Ravensdale with you.”  Adam looks at her bemused, still not sure if she is serious about visiting his home.



The following week Adam and Ember leave the RLT early and set off towards the loop, an overhead magno rail system that links the sections of the city. Ember’s excitement regarding visiting Adam’s home and going to a party is evident from her lively chit-chat but she soon approaches the other reason she is excited about this trip.

“Will Raphael be there? Why don’t you call him and see if he will be there?” she asks impatiently as they approach the loop station.

“Raphael doesn’t have any coms. He doesn’t even have a chip impla…” Adam stops himself, realising this may be a little bit too much information but Ember’s curiosity is already roused.

“He doesn’t have a chip?” she whispers. “But that is impossible! Everyone has a chip. Even the favelas have chips. How does he live?”

Ember looks at her wrist as she asks the question and Adam can clearly see she carries the latest version of an Aryan chip. Intrigued he reaches for her wrist to see the chip, his heart beating ever so slightly faster at the contact.

“Wow. It’s tiny, more like a tattoo,” he says.

“Daddy bought it… I mean… my dad bought it for me when I graduated. It has total quadro coms, limitless cyber storage and carries 2,300 credits.” Ember looks up and sees Adam is not impressed. “What now?”

Adam ponders on whether to reply. He really doesn’t want to get into another disagreement with her; still he can’t just say nothing.

“Raphael says that chips became compulsory as a means to control people. They are just another form of segregation designed to empower the Aryans and enslave the proletariat.”

Ember frowns. “But chips were developed long before the return of the Messiah and the Aryans were not even identified back when chips first were used. They are compulsory because they are needed. I mean, how would you propose people buy food or enter their homes safely? How would we travel or enter public buildings?” Ember swipes her wrist across the entrance to the loop, smiling as she proves her point. The door folds open and the noise from thousands of commuters cuts the conversation short. Ember points to a holo-screen showing the shuttle schedule.

“Next one is in two minutes,” she mouths to Adam. “We’ll have to run,” he shouts back but she takes his arm and points at her wrist. “We just need a hover bullet.”

Suddenly a tubular-shaped vehicle with two hollowed-out horizontal seats hovers next to them. Ember swipes her chip across a magnetic panel and with a sibilant sound the capsule opens. This time he is impressed. He has seen the local police riding around on these and witnessed a couple of Aryans riding them but he never dreamed he would ever get a go.

“Quick! Jump on!” she says.

The tube stands vertical, the transparent roof folded open and they fit alongside each other against its base. The roof folds back around them. The vehicle then tips up, hovering so they are face down but held by its gravity belt. Ember feels Adam trembling and is touched that he is scared, revelling in the opportunity to take him out of his comfort zone. Adam hopes Ember doesn’t realise the trembling is caused by being in such close proximity to her.

Seconds later they are flying through the station.

“Yeeeehaaaa” shouts Adam, unable to control his excitement.

The hover bullet automatically dodges the throngs of people while negotiating the twists and turns effortlessly. Soon they are approaching the stairwell down to zone eight and the craft seems to hover for a split second before dropping like a stone, whizzing past the heads of others who are running for the Ravensdale shuttle. Adam prays someone he knows sees him as the drone comes to a stop, rights itself vertically and the two disembark gracefully next to the Ravensdale direct door.

“Fucking hell,” is all he can manage to say.

Ember laughs at his wide-eyed look. “Guessing you’re a speed tube virgin then.”

She then leaps onto the first carriage, when she looks round at Adam, he is standing on the platform staring at her with knotted eyebrows. “Aren’t you getting on?” she asks.

Adam points to the sign above her head.

Aryans Only!

Her face is flushed and she involuntarily chews her lip.

“We seem to be encountering lots of these
geo-social
issues you always mention,” she remarks, exiting the carriage and, taking Adam’s hand, she makes her way to the middle of the shuttle. As she walks she notices the disdain on the faces of the occupants of seats in the Aryan-only compartments as they look out at this young couple. She looks at Adam, hoping he is not too upset. She needn’t have worried, he is still on a high from the drone ride and the feel of her touch. The two sit in a mixed section and when Ember activates a Micro data streamer via her implant Adam resumes his protest concerning the chips.

“Raphael told me that back in the day the chips were brought in under the guise of a convenient accessory to help people shop and stuff. He says they were like the latest must-have gadget – however, he believes the purpose was to make people so reliant on them that they would be helpless without one. You have to admit, people got on fine in the twentieth century without them. Now, as you say, we can’t shop, travel, and even take a piss without one.”

Ember’s intense concentration is broken by this last remark.

“Eh, gross!”

“You know what I meant.”

But she doesn’t. She doesn’t get it at all. To Ember the chip is pure luxury and convenience. “Well the way my father tells it is that when chips first appeared in 2014 they were a great idea, soon they were introduced by banks for contactless payment. Before long you could simply walk out of a shop with your shopping and not have to queue to pay. They were a revelation, no need to carry lots of bizarre plastic rectangles around anymore, did you know people had to do that back in the day?”         

Adam shakes his head despairingly and is about to demonstrate but Ember carries on with her explanation.

“Also you would need to carry around tickets to go to music and theatre events, they couldn’t store their own medical records, documents like travel or vehicle insurance would be on bits of paper, now all these things are loaded on to the chips, never left behind and never lost.” She opens her arms out looks at him wide eyed, as if to emphasize how obvious her argument was.”

Adam delays his response as he recollects Raphael’s version of the chips introduction into human live. He told him that the uses were limitless and the Western world fell for the chipping idea, hook, line and sinker (all except the crazy conspiracy theorists, that was, and no one listened to them). The chips really took off when a tracking device for children was added and, after several high-profile rescues of abducted children, it was soon judged irresponsible
not
to have your child implanted. Within a decade seventy per cent of adults and ninety per cent of children in the Western world had implants. Many retail outlets started to refuse any other types of payment.

Then, what was known back then as the UK was the first country to input more official documents in the chip, like passports, visas and driving licences as a reaction to the horrendous Heathrow bombing by the Diabolicals. This eventually meant that everybody simply
had
to get a chip to function in society. Most people didn’t really have a problem with this, it was terribly convenient after all. The telecommuting companies were not slow to react either. Soon the chip became your sim card and a small earpiece was all you needed for a call.

When Ben Starkey went on a killing spree in small-town America and then went into hiding, the LAPD tracked him down within minutes using the unique signal from his chip. A good thing really as he was a callous murdering bastard and everybody was greatly relieved, but when the same thing happened to a government whistle-blower, people became aware that each and every one of them was on the radar, so to speak. Some got their chips removed but they soon realised that it was very difficult to survive in society without one. Without a chip it was hard to buy food, impossible to travel, drive or even enter a public building.

Then there was the luxury chip given to the rich and famous that allowed entry to areas that normal people could not go: exclusive clubs, expensive shops, VIP bars in nightclubs, Disneyland on special days. And thus a two-tier chipping system was born. And yet this was not the most sinister side of the chips, nor was the tracking application. Instead it was the sheer power of them.

Gerry and Bridie Hoey, an elderly couple from Australia, refused to pay a bill sent to them by a car hire firm. The firm claimed that they had returned the car with a scratch on it and wanted three hundred dollars to cover the work. Gerry was sure that there was no such mark when he returned the car but the car hire firm took him to court and the court found in the company’s favour, ruling that if the Hoey’s didn’t pay the bill their chips would be deactivated. Gerry and Bridie still refused to pay. One week later, hungry, cold and scared, Gerry agreed to pay the bill plus five hundred dollars legal fees and a further two hundred dollars to have his chip reactivated. The chip was finally fulfilling its potential and most people conformed willingly.

Still there was reasonable resistance. When Senator Dan Cloud supported a proposal from NATAS (North American Technology in Analogue Science) to upgrade the chips with a shock application, the motion was beaten, albeit narrowly. The upgrade would have enabled the chips to administer a painful pulse through the person’s body, thus allowing law enforcement agencies to subdue a suspect without pulling a gun. But then within twenty years this proposal was resurrected with bells on. Ultimately the chips would play a major part in the slaughter of billions of humans, an event known as the Tribulation.

Adam looks at Ember and decides not to relay his version he just nods and with a smile agrees to disagree.

 

On schedule, the train rolls into Ravensdale station and as they get off Adam is shocked to see a large group of people waving banners and flags at him. Ember is delighted.

“They came to meet you!” she says, raising onto her toes, unable to hide her excitement on seeing the banners with Adam’s name written across them.

The people look strange to her. She has not really seen Caucasians in their own environment before and it strikes her how jolly they appear as opposed to the glum images she’s used to, especially as they wave and cheer the arrival of their very own genius. Soon the crowd surrounds the two youths, friends slapping Adam on the back, women hugging and kissing him, men shaking his hand vigorously. Ember is very impressed. Adam not so much; he had pleaded with his mum to keep it low-key; he should have known he would have more success asking their dog to make the tea.

“All these people here for you… Wow, you’re famous,” remarks Ember, grabbing his arm excitedly. “Not really, my mum just goes overboard on the celebrations.”

Many of the other commuters randomly join in the cheering. Then, even amongst the commotion, one or two of the group start to nudge each other as they realise this strange blonde-haired, blue-eyed Aryan among them is actually Ember Jones, the daughter of Procurator Conrad Jones. Whispers can be heard as the couple reach the centre of the group. Adam’s mum grabs her son, pride beaming across her face and Adam introduces Ember. After a slightly awkward moment Margareta Costello catches Ember off-guard with a warm hug.

“You’re very welcome to our little neighbourhood,” she says and once more the crowd cheers.

“Thank you,” says a startled Ember, unused to such affection; Aryans would never hug and kiss each other in the streets. She looks around at Adam’s Caucasian friends and family, noticing the warmth they show each other. She likes these people.

“Which one is Raphael? Is he here?” she asks as they are propelled through the shuttle station.

“Oh no,” says Adam. “He wouldn’t be out with Joe Public. Raphael is not that type. I gotta be honest, I doubt you will ever meet him. There’re people lived around here all their lives who haven’t even seen him some think I made him up, like an imaginary friend.” He laughs awkwardly and noticing the look on Embers face quickly adds “he’s not”

Ember looks disappointed, she wonders if perhaps Raphael is actually a figment of Adams imagination, she decides to forget about meeting the enigma Adam has told her about and soon the fun and games of the celebration take her mind off it altogether.                         

As the group exits the station none of them notice the guy in the turquoise suit who is watching from an upper platform. “Holy moly, Miss Jones,” he mutters. “You have come to us, just as the Antihost said you would.”

 

 

STOKE PRISON PRESENT DAY

“When a well-packaged web of lies has been sold gradually to the masses over generations, the truth will seem utterly preposterous and its speaker a raving lunatic.”

– Dresden James

 

Shane Mills sits alone in the recreation room of D wing with his arms folded. He peruses the area, observing his fellow inmates. As a new arrival he is expecting the usual testing banter all inmates get on their first day in prison. Although this is Shane’s only stint in a civilian prison, he has plenty of experience in military prisons and expects this to be the same except full of pussy civilian-pretend-hard-men. Ready to establish his place in this shithole he purposely sits upright, his muscular frame tensed in a deliberate display of masculinity. Shane is aware that today he needs to make his mark. He is prepared to bust some heads if required but he doubts he will need to. “Stand your ground today and let the others know you’re not a pushover,” he drills into his subconscious. “After that the next four years should go swimmingly.”

Other books

Carlo Ancelotti by Alciato, Aleesandro, Ancelotti, Carlo
Exit Music (2007) by Ian Rankin
Soul Seeker by Keith McCarthy
The Sinner by Petra Hammesfahr
Gravity by Amanda Miga
Sometime Yesterday by Yvonne Heidt
The Friar of Carcassonne by Stephen O'Shea