The Fourth Sage (The Circularity Saga)

BOOK: The Fourth Sage (The Circularity Saga)
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The Fourth Sage

 

Stefan Bolz

 

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

 

The Fourth Sage

© Copyright 2014 by Stefan Bolz

 

All rights reserved. No portion of this

book may be reproduced in any form,

except for brief quotations in reviews,

without the written permission of the author.

 

First Edition

 

Cover design by Jason Gurley

http://www.jasongurley.com

 

Editing by David Antrobus

http://www.bewritethere.com

 

Map drawing by Lawrence Mann

http://www.LawrenceMann.co.uk

 

Hawk Photographs by Ann Brokelman and Guy Anthony

http://www.naturephotosbyann.blogspot.com

 

Drawings by Judy Rosenberg Krongard

and Chloe Mosbacher

 

This book is for the children: For the rebellious ones

and for the ones who dare to ask questions;

for the forgotten ones and the ones who remember.

 

 

One

 

 

From Now On

 

Like the wind o'er forgotten plains

When the storm clouds whisper names

Like the girl that came from light

Like the bird ’twas born of night

 

That your promise is our fate

That your fight was our gate

Freedom's voices never cease

Your sacrifice became our peace

 

Like the wind o'er forgotten plains

And the breaking of our chains

At the ending of their reigns

From now on

Just your memory remains

 

- kiire understaad

 

Chapter 0 — Ninety Seconds

 

The backlight of her wristwatch begins to glow, casting a green hue on her hand. She glances at it even though she knows what it will say: nine zero. One second later the micro fluid changes to eighty-nine. At eighty-eight she closes the book, holds it in her hands for a few seconds longer. Her fingers trace the slight indentation of the almost indecipherable title. The stamped feathers in the center have lost their coloring decades ago. Long before she was born. Even before the ban.

She gets up. A touch on the screen of the watch changes the walls of her room from an image of a forest to a regular room with a large window, showing the darkened skyline of a city in the distance. Eighty-three. In truth, there are no windows in her room. She crouches on the ground next to her futon, removes the thin cover in front of a rectangular opening and crawls inside. More frequently, now, Aries has begun to wonder how long she will still fit into the tight space. She's slim for a fifteen-year-old, but knows that one day the ducts will no longer allow her to roam the building.

Sixty seconds. The high-resolution display of her watch begins to pulsate in one-second increments. Eight feet into the air duct she turns on her back and looks up. The secondary channel, perpendicular to this one, disappears into its self-reflecting mirror image far up into the building. Thirty-six seconds. Aries pries open the panel in front of her. Behind it sits a conductor, generating the power to periodically sterilize this section of the air duct system. As a side effect, the high-density ray kills any other life forms that are present in the ducts. It’s been rumored that the primary function of the sterilizers is to prevent the inhabitants of the building from escaping to the outside world.

Twenty-eight seconds. She pushes the book behind the conductor and closes the panel. By her estimate, there are six hours and thirty-two minutes before the next duct cleaning. But the one-hour video loop feeding the cameras to her room will only hold for eighteen more seconds.
When she had hacked into the mainframe a few years back she didn't want to risk more than an hour for herself. There would be serious repercussions should she be caught. The Law of the Corporation demands house arrest for first time offenders. But she isn't a first time offender. She isn't even a second time offender. For her, it would be the third time. She would be in prison for up to a month. 

She turns on her stomach, slides backward while pushing off with her hands. The green screen of her watch pulsates in the semidarkness of the duct. Her feet reach the opening. Seven seconds. Her knees come out. She lifts her stomach to avoid getting caught on her belt lock. Three seconds and her head is out. She closes the panel, slumps onto her futon and pulls the blanket over her head. Zero seconds. Her wristwatch goes dark and she's live. Her heart rate is still higher than she wants it to be. It can't be helped. Let them figure it out.

Her thoughts drift back to the book. After she read it for the first time, she’d felt something she had not allowed herself to feel before. The artificial intelligence software analyses each frame of video surveillance and decides what steps need to be taken. Strength and pride are the main pillars of the Corporate Education System and weakness, especially in her age group, is not tolerated. Aries decided a while back to give them what they want. For twenty-three hours a day she's strong for them. But for one hour a day she allows herself to feel. And sometimes—mostly after reading—she cries. She cries for her mother and her father and she cries for her freedom and she cries for all the other children with her who are Wards of the State and who landed on the outskirts of a society that has gone too far in the wrong direction.

How can the human spirit be captured? How can it be diminished almost to extinction? How can it be made so small and almost insignificant that the thought of fighting for it is nothing but an idea and easily dismissed as foolish? She's asked herself these questions many times over. She knows the answer. She knows that whoever, whatever, stands behind the Corporation has perfected it and has made it their goal—pursuing it by any means necessary—to break the human spirit, to hold it prisoner and eventually to extinguish it completely. And suddenly she knows she needs to do something about it.

 

Chapter 1 — Seth

 

“You will first dream of freedom.”

[
The Book of Croix,
Vol.1]

 

Aries opens her eyes. The clear night sky reflects the light in a myriad of stars. The trace of a dream lingers, not quite ready to disappear. In it, she found herself soaring high above the desert plains, dropping in and out of the clouds, while traveling toward a cluster of structures in the distance—mirages in the glimmering heat.

She takes a deep breath, as if to ready herself for the day. Her right hand finds her wristwatch; her fingers trace the invisible line on its screen. The night sky disappears and the default room design comes on. This one is free. It’s a plain room with a nice window looking out over the skyline of a city. Of course, one of the buildings has the
SELKom
logo on it, but Aries doesn’t mind. She'll be out of here in five minutes.

She checks her pad, wondering why she hasn't had a message from C.J. this morning, but decides that she can ask her later. At the touch of a sensor in the wall, a door slides open and she steps into the shower stall where she undresses and folds her clothes onto a small shelf. A blue horizontal laser line appears at her feet and from there travels upward. When it reaches her head, she opens her mouth. The laser moves through, scanning her gums and teeth, then her eyes.

The impulse to close her lids during this is always very strong. She thinks that in looking into her eyes the software can detect her thoughts and somehow see into her soul. All she can do is attempt not to think about anything at that moment. Most of the time she tries to solve a math problem—like a transcendental function involving sine, cosine, and tangent. She finds comfort in geometrical patterns and fascination in the fact that the inside angles of every triangle, independent of its shape, total one hundred eighty degrees.

The laser turns off and a low humming sound comes on, a sign that the UVL shower has been activated. Eleven seconds. For a few moments afterward the stall smells like iron until the air has been exchanged and a door on the opposite side opens. Aries steps into a small closet where she dresses in a dark blue jumpsuit and heavy-duty working boots. She ties her hair into a ponytail and steps through another door that spills her out into a hallway. The corridor stretches in both directions in a slight curve with doors on either side, all leading into units similar to the one she currently occupies.

Before she can see it, she can hear the noises coming from the wide opening in the corridor that leads into the dining hall. Aries collects herself. The knot in her stomach appears like clockwork each time she enters. There are usually about two hundred kids spread out over twenty tables. Aries scans the room then goes to the large wall of narrow glass panels, each of which contains ten square compartments containing a variety of food. She stops before a screen and generates a smile. Her picture appears.
Good morning, Egan, Aries, D. ID#: 4746-POC-201-0017485
. Two of the small compartments open. She takes two bottles from one and a piece of bread from the other.

One of the tables has only one kid sitting at it so far. The boy is about her age, maybe a year older. She thinks Kiire Understaad is his name, but she could be wrong. She remembers he's been here for at least as long as her. As a girl, not belonging to any of the groups here is bad. As a boy, it must be nearly unbearable. And for a boy with that name and his stout stature, it’s impossible. She heads for the table, seeing in her periphery three older kids get up from two other tables and nonchalantly make their way toward this one. By her estimate, they will arrive at the same time. It’s a game—every morning, every midday break, and during free time in the evenings. They remind her of vultures waiting for the slightest sign of weakness, anything they can use to create trouble without it being recognized as such. The monitoring system does not allow for any social misconduct. But there are ways to cheat the system and some of the kids excel at it.

Aries slumps down at the bench, diagonally across from Kiire. Simultaneously, the three other boys sit down at the same table, two across from her and one to her right and across from Kiire. They are a year or so older than her. Maybe sixteen. Their jumpsuits are orange. Rodent Control.

“Hey, Scarlip, can I kiss you?” the boy across from her whispers, his hand covering his mouth so the monitors can’t see what he says. His hair is dark with gelled spikes sticking up in all directions. “Scarlip, O Scarlip, just one little kiss. Scarlip, my Scarlip, I beg of you, please!”

BOOK: The Fourth Sage (The Circularity Saga)
4.72Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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