Avenging Angels (The Seraphim Chronicles Book 1) (20 page)

BOOK: Avenging Angels (The Seraphim Chronicles Book 1)
8.09Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Evangeline,” he said, reaching out his hand to shake hers. Evangeline mirrored his gesture.

“Jack,” she returned with a nod and a smile. Evangeline shook Jack’s hand with her firm, military grip. Jack’s grip was just as firm for the first few seconds. After one quick pump up and down, their hold on each other softened and ebbed until they just stood there, holding each other’s right hands.

“It’s a pleasure to meet you, Jack,” Evangeline said, letting his hand slip from her fingers. He was unaware that he was still staring at her. His persistent, boyish grin won over, and she could not help but return his attention with a smile that was soft and inviting.

“Trust me,” Jack replied, in shock that Tishia’s gorgeous friend was neither dull nor boring; in fact, Tishia had said she was smart. “The pleasure is entirely mine!”

Tishia turned from Jack and Evangeline with a glint in her eye, and started a conversation about their alma mater’s athletic program with her other friends. The women dove into the topic as she guided them toward the bar to join the rest of their group.

Jack and Evangeline found themselves outside on the patio, enjoying the warm summer evening at a small table as they talked into the early hours of the morning. Tishia and the gaggle of wives had dispersed from the restaurant one by one throughout the evening to go home to their families. The single girls had remained inside, getting more and more rowdy with the men they met at the bar.

Jack had noticed Evangeline glancing at her watch several times as the hour approached two o’clock.

“You need to be leaving, don’t you?” he asked. Evangeline offered a sad smile.

“Unfortunately, yes,” she sighed. “I have to be on patrol in eight hours.”

Jack remained in his seat. He did not want to be the first to stand and end the magical hours he had shared with her. Evangeline began tugging at the coat draped across her shoulders. She had almost forgotten that Jack had offered his brown fleece jacket to her when the air had grown chilly as the night hours passed. They had both laughed at how horrible it looked against her violet dress.

“This is yours, I believe,” she said, standing and holding the fleece to him.

“I’m okay, you can keep it on.” Jack smiled and stood up from his own chair, taking the outstretched coat and draping it across her shoulders again. She smiled up at him with her soft, brown eyes. The air caught in Jack’s lungs as he realized he was smitten with this military Captain. His heart pounded in his chest as he worked up the courage to ask his one request for the evening.

“May I walk you home?” he said, breathless, as if he had just run up a flight of stairs.

Evangeline’s smiled broadened from ear to ear, causing a slight squint in her eyes.

“I’d like that,” she sighed in a near whisper. Jack walked around their little café table and took her hand, resting it in the crook of his elbow. They strolled out of the patio area, arm in arm, and onto the promenade in front of the restaurant. She tightened the front of his jacket around her shoulders and pointed off to her right.

“I live that way,” she said.

Jack looked down into her eyes with a warm smile. “Then that’s the way I’m going until you tell me not to.” Evangeline giggled, rolling her eyes. His flirting was sweet and funny; genuine but not overbearing. It reminded her of how her father had often flirted with her mother, countless years ago. She squeezed him arm, making his smile nearly split his face in two.

They walked along in silence for a short while, each reflecting over the evening as they approached the first shuttle station. They stopped underneath an awning.

“If you liked that,” he said, placing his hand atop hers on his arm, “I’ve got plenty more to tell you.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

thirty

 

 

Jack rose out of bed without disturbing Evangeline’s slumber. He walked into the bathroom and cleaned himself up for the day. Overnight the bruise on the back of his neck had spread to the sides. It looked like a small purple and yellow towel clinging to his neck like a parasite. He felt grateful that the pain inhibitors were still working He did not want to imagine what it would feel like without them.

After he dressed, Jack crept out of the bedroom and made a beeline to the kitchen to make himself a quick cup of morning tea. With steaming cup in hand, he headed for the second bedroom, which he used as an office whenever Evangeline was not on duty. He sat down at his desk and placed his cup of tea on his favorite sandstone coaster from the Calexico Islands.

“Good morning, Gideon,” Jack spoke to the screen. A light emanated from the holographic projector above Jack’s head, the figure of a man materializing in front of the desk. He was a featureless approximation of male anatomy, possessing legs, a torso, arms, and a head, but simplified and vague, much like the symbol on the door of a men’s restroom.

“Good morning, Jack,” a voice chimed from the computer screen. “Did you sleep well last night? You appear to be injured; do you require medical attention?”

“No, thank you,” Jack answered, swiping his hand across the desktop. “I’m alright. There was an incident last night at Ground Zero, but I’ll be okay.” Jack began typing commands into the console that appeared on his desktop.

“I’m pleased to hear you are well, Jack,” Gideon’s voice said with the ambivalent politeness of a manservant. “What shall we be working on today?” Jack let out an involuntary grin. His gift for Artificial Intelligence surprised even himself from time to time.

Jack finished entering commands into the console and then sat back. He picked up his cup of tea, gripping it between his hands and enjoying the feel of its warmth radiating from the cooling cup. He lifted the cup to his lips and gulped down the rest of the tea in one long swig. Evangeline would not have approved.

“I’m expanding the parameters of your matrix, Gideon. You’ll no longer be limited to the confines of domestic maintenance.” Jack put the cup back down with a hollow clink and resumed typing commands.

“Where would you like to begin, Jack?” he asked.

As Jack’s fingers flew across the keyboard, he pondered on the original purpose for his latest design. Gideon was meant to be a digital butler for family residences. He would organize grocery lists, keep a schedule of appointments, provide reminders, and screen incoming calls if desired.

Jack closed the console, picked up a device from his desktop, and slipped it over his head. This was a tool of Jack’s own creation, his neural interface, which resembled two pairs of sunglasses attached to each other by their earpieces, almost as if they were holding hands. The front part rested on the bridge of his nose, covering his eyes. The other part fit snugly over metallic ports on either side of his spinal vertebrae at the base of his skull. He pushed the probes into his cranial ports, launching his mind into the virtual workshop where he did most of his programming.

“Lie down on the worktable, please.” Jack instructed, turning away from the anatomical man.

“What kinds of expansions did you have in mind, Jack?” Gideon’s voice asked as he lowered his digital head onto the table’s flat surface. His voice rang throughout the workshop as if he were on a PA system.

Jack walked toward a workbench and began sifting through drawers and shelves. “The first thing I want to add to your program is the ability to interface with outside systems,” he answered.

“I am capable of accessing information regarding weather, news, calendars, and other databases to which I am currently authorized, just as you designed me, Jack,” Gideon responded. “What other outside systems will I be authorized to access?”

Jack had sorted through a box with cubes that looked like glowing clumps of microchips. He chuckled to himself. “I’m not giving you additional authorizations, Gideon. I’m installing abilities to access systems to which you do
not
have authorization to access,” Jack said as he selected an illuminated cube that shined like a gem.

“You are programming me to
hack
,” Gideon stated. “Is that wise? Unauthorized access to restricted databases is a criminal offense. Since I cannot be incarcerated, it stands to reason my program would be terminated,” he continued. “What justification do you have to install potentially criminal capabilities into my matrix? If detected, you would suffer the consequences as the creator of an illegal program.”

Jack carried the cube over to Gideon, still and motionless on the table. He placed the cube on the forehead of Gideon’s virtual body. The cube began to fuse into Gideon’s head, melting and warping across the surface.

“Because I simply don’t trust anyone or anything else to do what it is I’m hoping I can program you to do,” Jack said to himself in a whisper. The cube had dissolved into the virtual man’s skull, leaving an imprint of a computer chip on his forehead.

“Gideon, I want you to shut down and restart your system,” Jack said aloud into the open workshop. The illuminated, virtual body on the table flickered and disappeared. Seconds later, the holographic figure returned, lying on the table. Gideon now possessed discernable fingers and eye sockets.

“Excellent,” Jack whispered over his digital Frankenstein.

“The upgrade has been completed, Jack. Would you like me to test the new application?” Gideon asked.

“Yes,” Jack said, jogging around the table to examine Gideon’s new form. “Let’s start with something small and relatively benign.” Jack folded his arms and pondered about which outside computer system he could test. He lowered his arms, walked over to one of his other workbenches, and opened a display window. “Gideon, access the building’s internal security feeds and show me the front entrance.”

The display flashed. Random images scrolled by in a blur, like flipping through the pages of a picture book. After two or three seconds, the image resolved to a bird’s eye view showing a streetscape. People walked by the entrance doors and vehicles crawled along the street. Jack smiled. It was a simple hack. Accessing a building’s security feed was not difficult. Under normal circumstances, he would not have thought it was worth the effort.

“Good, now move the camera’s position thirty degrees to the left,” he instructed. Jack this hack would take more time. The building’s internal security system would soon recognize that someone had outside access to its visual system. The camera jittered to the left, displaying more of the vehicles on the street. The entrance door was no longer in the frame.

“Gideon, are you detecting any recognition from the security system? Have they discovered that they’ve been overridden?”

“There is no indication that the integrity of the security cameras has been compromised,” Gideon responded. “Would you like me to terminate this experiment, now?”

“Yes, Gideon. Reset the security cameras and disconnect,” Jack answered, distracted by the myriad of capabilities he wanted to add to Gideon’s programming. “For now, only access outside systems when I ask you to, okay?”

“Of course, Jack,” Gideon replied.

Jack resumed his search through his files for the various subroutines he intended to add. He was curious as to how far he could stretch Gideon’s capabilities. For now, he had other installations to complete first. He had to start with the basics.

He spent the next several hours installing other applications into Gideon’s matrix. Basic human psychology, principles on morals and ethics, strategy games, evasion and escape techniques, advanced problem solving, voice recognition and impersonation, digital camouflage, distraction techniques, and basic combat tactics.

By the afternoon, Gideon was no longer a featureless automaton. He sat on the edge of the table, covered in a silver body suit that shimmered like living circuitry. It covered his body from his neckline to his wrists and ankles; the sleeves were equipped with holographic consoles and buttons along his forearms.

Jack had designed Gideon to be tall, muscular, and athletic, complete with powerful-looking arms and legs, fully articulated hands, feet, fingers, and toes. His figure was intimidating, striking. Gideon’s every feature resembled those of a man - all but his face, which was still smooth and featureless. Jack gazed on the blank face and shuddered, remembering the man in black who had attacked him in the arena the night before. He did not like the idea that his own creation could look so menacing, instilling fear in those with whom he came in contact.

Jack had puzzled all morning over what Gideon’s face should look like as he had worked on the rest of him. His thoughts turned to Addison, his virtual son, who resembled the perfect blend between himself and Evangeline. Jack knew in an instant how he wanted to proceed.

Jack accessed Addison’s physical parameters matrix. The image of Addison’s head appeared above a console.

“He is a very fine looking boy,” Gideon said, breaking into Jack’s thoughts.

“Yes, he is,” Jack replied, playing with his lower lip. “Gideon,” he called out, “extrapolate Addison’s face to make him appear to be in his late twenties.”

The image of Addison morphed into a young man with short blond hair and blue eyes. He was handsome, with a kind face. There was strength in his features, to his character. Jack wondered if Addison were a real boy, if he would have grown up to look something like that. He felt nostalgic for a future that would never exist.

Jack shook his head to bring himself back into the present moment. “Gideon, overlay this image onto your template.” The surface of Gideon’s faceless head shimmered and rippled as the adult version of Addison took shape. The upgrade now complete, Gideon hopped down from the table and began to walk around the room looking at his arms and legs.

“This image is appealing to you, Jack?” he asked, his voice bearing a touch of Addison’s innocence. This time his voice came from his mouth instead of from overhead. Jack was in awe as he laughed at himself. Gideon was still young in real world time, but he was Jack’s most sophisticated creation yet.

“Your image, or rather your appearance, is simply a representation of your capabilities. I didn’t install many applications that wouldn’t be essential,” Jack said, smiling. Gideon looked at Jack and then back to himself. He cocked his head slightly to the side, just as Addison would.

“Do you possess capabilities that are non-essential, Jack?” he asked.

Jack looked down and patted the small pooch under his shirt, which jiggled at his touch. “Yes, Gideon, I guess you could say that,” he laughed.

Other books

Boswell by Stanley Elkin
Waiting For You by Natalie Ward
The Omega Expedition by Brian Stableford
Heart of the Jaguar by Katie Reus
Convoy by Dudley Pope
La siembra by Fran Ray