Authors: K. S. Augustin
There was a slight hesitation. Was Carl going to say something? Was she? Then he arrowed through the air in a similar fashion to Miller and she was alone.
Tania couldn’t take to the air the way the two men did, not with such confidence. She was still relatively new to the Blue and was half-expecting the physics of the real world to kick in at any time. Because of this, she lowered herself gently to “street level” and then looked down, focusing on what was beneath her feet. The grey pavement separated into individual strands of criss-crossing energy – part of the information backbone that supported entire cyberspace – then she was through, descending to a lower level that superficially resembled the landscape she had left behind.
Carl had added a tracking system to the capsule. As she looked at it, arrows appeared in soft amber, indicating the direction she should follow. As she neared the lower structure of the Rhine-Temple, the arrows moved faster, their colour changing from an eye-soothing light orange to a brighter red.
Tania watched as the botnet loomed large around her. Unlike the static structures that littered cyberspace, the Rhine-Temple resembled a living thing in the way its tentacles pulsed. She reminded herself that it
was
a living thing, powered by semi-sentience and completely out of control. From the way it moved, she also knew Carl was right. It wouldn’t rest until it had taken over all of the Blue. And, after that, if it could somehow find its way into the real world...
“This is not real,” she said to herself as she walked. “This is just how I perceive data.”
The words failed to reassure her. There was something visceral, primitive, about the Rhine-Temple, a chaotic mass of ravening growth. And she was approaching it. Swallowing hard, she looked down again at the capsule in her hands. The arrows were flashing faster but they still indicated the direction she should follow.
What would happen if she just planted the capsule where she stood? It wouldn’t be at the node that Carl had identified but surely it would be close enough? Did he expect her to walk into the botnet itself to execute the first part of their plan?
Tania swallowed hard and her hands began to shake. She lifted herself into the air and moved within the outer perimeter of the botnet. Suddenly her world became a throbbing blood-red mass, above, below and around her.
She wondered what would happen if a tentacle decided to investigate
her
and imagined the destruction it could inflict. It would infiltrate then destroy her mind. Her skills, knowledge and experiences would be used to bring down more information banks but there would be nothing of Tania Flowers left. And, meanwhile, her body would be in a vegetative state in a Basement Five insertion room. It would never awaken.
“I don’t want to die here,” she whispered, shaking her head. She moved forward. “Please don’t let me die here.”
Her universe was the Rhine-Temple, enveloping her and cutting off her view from the rest of the Blue. She wondered if she would ever find her way out of its overlapping strands. What if the tendrils closed behind her? Could she wait until the capsule did its job or would its job mean that she remained imprisoned in a throbbing prison of red pipes?
Then the capsule beeped and a thick black letter appeared above a large green button. Despite her fear, Tania had to smile.
“‘X’ marks the spot, eh?”
Swallowing her distaste, she held the capsule against the nearest junction of tentacles she could find and pressed the green button. Slots opened along each side of the capsule and silver legs emerged, clamping themselves to the pipe of pulsing red. Once she was sure it was firmly attached, Tania let go. The top of the capsule slid back and hundreds of little white beetles emerged.
This was the start of it and, as much as Tania wanted to stay and watch the modules while they worked, the animal part of her was screaming to get out. She turned and navigated her way back through the forest of red as quickly as she could, trying not to look behind her. The reptilian stem of her brain was convinced that one thick red rope was aware of what she had done. Oblivious to the small white intruders overrunning its neighbours, it was reaching for her. Closer and closer…
Tania was almost running when she passed the botnet’s perimeter, and she stopped to drag in a deep lungful of air. Her heart was thumping in her chest and her trembling fingers were cold and clammy. It didn’t matter that this was more a mental response than a physical one. She was sure that adrenaline was also pumping through her supine body back in Basement Five. Would Don and his technicians pick it up or would the reaction be too fleeting to register? All she knew was that she had never been so happy to see an expanse of grey in her life.
After a few steadying breaths, she arrowed up to the rendezvous point.
She was the last to return and Carl couldn’t hide the relief that washed over his face at the sight of her.
He strode over to her just as she landed back on the ledge.
“Did you strike any problems?” he asked, searching her eyes.
“Not a one,” she replied, keeping her voice even. “Although it’s a shame we can’t quarantine it somehow. Up close, it’s really,” she swallowed, “fascinating.”
He grinned. “That’s my Tania. Pure ball-buster.”
Tania watched him walk back to his friend to share a joke and let out a pent-up breath. Did he realise the enormity of what he was planning to do? After planting the capsule and waiting for it to do its work, he was going to walk back into the depths of that
thing
, and let himself be surrounded by those seeking, ravening blood-red tendrils. Now that she had been there herself, Tania understood the magnitude of his task. But they had no choice. She knew he had to do it. Given their lack of time, it was the only way.
Carl
had
to destroy the Rhine-Temple.
“How long do we wait before we move into the next phase?” she asked, moving up to the two men.
“Tomek brought a makeshift monitor.” Carl indicated a small square screen in his friend’s hands. “He’s watching the traffic carefully. When we think the botnet is paralysed, I go in. It could take minutes. Maybe up to an hour. No longer than that, I don't think.”
Was she imagining things or did the tentacles appear to move more slowly, even as she watched?
“And you still want to go through with this?” she asked him.
“Now, more than ever.” His voice was heartfelt. “It’s got to be stopped, Tania. And I’m the best person to do that. You know why.”
“You’re not going to bring up your blasted intuition again, are you?”
It had been a constant source of friction between them in the past. Her logic versus his “feel” of a situation.
The smile he shot her blazed like an arc of light. “Don’t knock it. It’s worked before, hasn’t it?”
Unfortunately, she couldn’t argue with him. It’s what had kept them neck-in-neck during the Basement Five trials. Whenever she thought she had bested him with planning or through her use of analytics, he would bounce back in a second with a strategy that completely bypassed the problem, or a solution that seemed to come like a lightning bolt from a cloudless sky. Suddenly, only at the end, Tania realised what a great team they could have made if they’d worked together, instead of against each other.
“I don’t want you to go,” she whispered, her voice raw. “Isn’t there another way?”
He cupped her face with a hand. The wrinkles that were once so prominent on his face had all but disappeared, and his hair was back to being blond, not a thread of silver among it. “You know there isn’t, sweetheart.”
He was almost back to looking like the youthful Carl Orin she had once disliked. The Carl Orin she was now afraid she was starting to fall in love with. Tania parted her lips to say something but no words emerged.
Miller’s voice called over to them. “It’s time.”
Pulling himself away from Tania was one of the hardest things Carl had ever done in his life. Wordlessly, Tomek retrieved the sphere from his rucksack and handed it over. Carl thanked him with a nod…then stepped off the building’s ledge.
He drifted down to the pavement and began walking towards the Rhine-Temple botnet, forcing himself not to take one last look back.
Wasn’t this where his life was supposed to flash in front of his eyes?
Carl tried thinking back on what he had managed to achieve in the past couple of decades. He had changed from a high-school failure to a well-respected security consultant, able to name his own fee. He owned a house, his own private jet and a secluded luxury hideaway along Italy’s Amalfi coast.
Tania would have loved it there.
Too late.
I could have made love to her twenty thousand feet in the air.
Too late.
Her skin would have gleamed brown and silver in my sauna room.
Too late.
Would it have killed him to concede that the first cybernaut should have been her? No, it wouldn’t have. Would it have cost anything for him to offer a word of thanks or appreciation? To take her supple body into his arms because of what he could give her, not only for what he could take? Carl gritted his teeth. He could kick himself for his past pig-headedness.
With steady steps, he neared the botnet. The code capsules he and Tomek had worked on seemed to be operating exactly as they were intended. From his vantage point, Carl noticed entire sections of the botnet frozen in place. He quickened his step. There was no better time to shut down the entire malignant network than right now.
He passed under the cover of several data pipes. It should have been dark under the umbrella of blood-red, but it wasn’t. Darkness, sunlight, shadows were all constructs of the real world. In cyberspace, Carl could clearly see whatever his mind could comprehend. Unfortunately, he was currently comprehending everything.
The pipes – Tania liked to call them tentacles – closed over him, making him draw in a deep breath.
“The only way is forward,” he told himself and willed his body to put one foot in front of the other.
According to his research, the IRC channel port he was after should have been situated quite close to him. The distance wasn’t a problem. What concerned him more was the kind of defences it had. He moved further into the maze of pipes, stepping over some at ground level and bending his head to avoid others. The closer he got to his destination, the more tightly the pipes wound around each other, until he was brushing against them as he slipped through narrow gaps. He thought he felt a faint pulse beat against his skin as he knocked against them, and tried not to shudder.
The port he was looking for was old and he let out a breath of relief when he finally found it. It was circular, matte black and a little wider than the width of his shoulders. Over it, like a nesting spider, lay a locking mechanism. The lock was hexagonal in shape and from each side, a thick leg extended, soldered seamlessly in place against the port’s casing. Carl stared at it for a long moment and tried not to think of how much time he had left before the Rhine-Temple recovered from Tomek’s attack code.
“Why am I seeing a six-legged spider?” he muttered. “Six defences? Or maybe just one defence in six parts.” He narrowed his eyes. “Maybe if I can break four legs that’ll be enough to open the port.”
He wished Tania were here. She’d be able to identify the lock’s underlying structure within minutes. All he could do was rely on his intuition…and guess.
Without moving his gaze from the lock, he reached into the side pocket of his suit and pulled out a small device. It resembled the tether that he had first worn when entering the Blue so many years ago. In fact it
was
that tether, but it had been modified extensively over the past fifteen years. He hadn’t told Tania that he still had it. Flipping open the lid with his thumb, he finally dragged his gaze to the small screen on the unit, choosing several diagnostic programs to execute. He then pointed the tether’s hinge at the port lock. He had worked for months on the hinge, inserting a small probe into it then making sure it was protected against knocks and falls.
He watched as the programs ran through their analyses and smiled when, after a few minutes, the device beeped at him. He perused the results carefully.
“Got it,” he said softly in triumph.
As he had suspected, the Rhine-Temple had closed down the IRC port back in its infancy to prevent its original operators from interfering with it. That shutdown had occurred at a time when it wasn’t as sophisticated as it was now. Ticking that task off its list, the botnet had then moved on to taking over other computer systems.
The lock had effectively been forgotten.
But not by Carl.
Rather than representing six layers of defence, the spider that squatted over the port’s cover used only a relatively simple hash algorithm to protect access. That was easy enough to crack, especially as Carl had fifteen years to work on the problem. He directed his modified tether to work through the combinations using a method he created and was gratified when, only five minutes later, the spider’s legs clicked open and the lock mechanism fell off the port.
Carl stamped on the lock with his foot, in case it somehow came back to life and blocked the exit again, then wondered why he cared. After all, wasn’t this supposed to be a one-way trip?
“Habit,” he told himself and carefully eased up the port lid.
The cover was surprisingly heavy and creaked as it moved. That was Carl’s brain telling him this was an old and disused access port...as if he didn’t already know.
When he had the lid fully open, he peered inside. A long dark tube snaked down and away to the right. Under the circumstances, he wouldn’t have been surprised to see cobwebs obscuring part of the passage. Gingerly, he crouched and entered the tube.