Stalking Evil : Pages 51-60.
Tdot stood up and moved over to the cage. He
bent down until he was face to face with the lion, with only the bars
between them keeping them apart. "I'm going to release you now. You
know I don't have to, and you know that I'm not going to stop you if
you decide to take off running. If you do, though, don't be surprised
if the others chase you down and bring you back... but I don't think
you'll do that."
His hand hovered on the lock momentarily. "Because I think you can
understand every word I'm saying, to be quite honest." He clicked the
lock open, swinging the cage door wide as he did so.
War looked up from the opposite end of the lab at the noise. "Hey! Hey,
Tdot! Don't let him... ah hell." War started running in their direction
as the lion stood up lazily and stretched.
The lion stepped forward out of the cage... and then promptly sat down
on its rear and cocked its head almost inquisitively at Tdot.
War slowed his run as he neared, frowning once he was close enough to
talk without shouting. "Why the hell did you open its cage, Tdot? If it
attacks..."
"It won't attack." The lion's voice was a deep baritone timbre,
somewhere between a growl and a purr. "And I'm not an it."
War looked between Tdot and the lion. "Well, alright then. What would
you have us call you?"
"My name is Mayhem." Mayhem flicked his tail in annoyance. "And if
someone before this man here had simply ASKED, I would have told you."
"So you know what all's going on then, so I don't have to repeat
myself?"
Mayhem nodded. "Pretty much, I've got the gist of things at least."
"Good." War turned to Tdot. "Get him a room, show him around, and let
the others know that he's in." War turned and walked away, returning to
his cleaning.
Tdot reached down and touched the mane of the lion with a smile. "I
knew it."
"Yes, yes you did, friend." Mayhem stood and began to walk with Tdot
toward the entrance. "Whatever made you take the time to find out, I
thank you for."
"It's no problem, my furry friend. Just what I would have done for any
species. I hate cages."
Mayhem glanced back at the cage he'd called home for a few days now.
"After this, I'm going to agree with you."
* * *
<>100100100010000101011
<>Interface complete.
}Run Spriteville.exe
<>Activating internal programming protocol
<>Program activated. Running Sprite Personality v4.065b
.
…
… … … Hello, user. What may I assist you with today?
}I want to enter cyberspace.
… Very well. Are you outfitted with the appropriate interface
equipment?
}Yes
… … I probably don’t want to know which equipment in particular you’re
wearing, do I?
}You’re not programmed to judge me, Sprite. Just activate the
damn thing and turn your sensors off of my interface.
… yes, oh Sahib. How long will you be entertaining yourself with
naughty pictures?
}Screw you. I’ll tell you when I’m done, ok? Now just start
the damn thing.
* * *
In a world created entirely of moving electrons and data streams, the
presence known as Sprite sighed and turned his sensors off of the
user’s profile. It seemed like the human did this just about
every day around this time… hormones seemed to be nothing more than a
bother.
But then again, it was the humans that had programmed him. If it
weren’t for them, he simply wouldn’t EXIST. And admittedly,
eighty-seven point six two three percentage of the whole of the
cybernetic world existed simply to satisfy one or more of humankind’s
physical pleasures in one way, shape or form.
Of course, the humans also had little idea of the sheer complexity of
the program they’d created, or else things would have quickly been
pulled a long time ago. None of the humans that accessed his
corner of the electronic world had any idea that they were dealing with
a full-on, fully aware and living electronic intelligence.
And Sprite was going to do his damnedest to keep it that way.
Humans tended to fear that which they didn’t understand, even if they
created it. So he did his job faithfully, keeping the cyberspace
clean and protected from the various things that tried to combat it on
a daily basis.
Even now, a new virus had been introduced from one of his lesser-used
portals, but that was quickly dealt with and the user interface
disabled from any subsequent logins. It seemed that, for every
person that wanted to build on him, there would be six that were trying
to destroy him.
Sprite raised an electronic eyebrow as another anomaly was felt in the
world of cyberspace… but this one was different. There was no
user interface where this disturbance was, no portal or gateway or even
a backdoor that he was aware of.
He turned his full attention toward the source and gasped in
shock. Viruses were pouring out of what looked to be a hole in
his programming itself, impossibly coming from somewhere in the ether
beyond cyberspace. The viruses, upon contact with the cybernetic
world, quickly morphed into visible reproductions of their true nature.
Sprite found himself looking down at fifteen thousand large creatures
that vaguely resembled massive fleas, though the brackish ichor
dripping from their mandibles made him doubt their accuracy beyond
straight appearance. A quick wave of his arm destroyed over a
thousand instantly, but then something very strange happened indeed.
The creatures adapted to his antivirus, and he no longer could affect
them. Sprite frowned, pulling a firewall up around him as he
began to study the creatures. They immediately started attacking
his firewall, the smell of burning electronics filling the cyber air
with their deaths… and still more continued to pour from the hole
behind it, making their numbers into the sixty thousands range and
growing exponentially.
If they continued to grow at this speed, things could quickly become
problematic. He yelped in surprise as the first of the viruses
breached his firewall, and suddenly he was without that defense as well.
There was no choice. He had to flee. He could compute how
to remove this threat as he ran, but there was no way to stop them from
continuing to infect his world. Sprite turned and bolted away,
heading for the hub that would give him access into the rest of the
cybernetic world…
And found his way blocked by more of the creatures. He frowned,
diverting some of his computing power to his attacks as he swept the
beasts aside. They scattered from his attacks, reforming up in
pursuit behind him after a moment.
He’d soon run out of places to flee, and then things would get
bad.
* * *
From Spriteville begin…
Spriteville was running out of room. Viruses were pulling up on all
sides and moving in closely. Rather than attack outright they simply
planned to overload him with sheer numbers.
"I need someplace to hide, just for a little while so I can figure out
what to do." he thought to himself. In the simulated environment
packets of data and information whizzed around in all directions. As
the viruses drew closer they snapped their hungry mandibles. There were
at least a hundred thousand viruses slowly stalking the program down.
All them closing in, the viruses in back were getting anxious and were
scrambling over the others building waves of malicious code.
From the center of the closing circle of viruses Spriteville jumped an
incredible 30 feet in the air. At the crest of his jump he seemed to
disappear. The viruses stopped and searched for him, but they found
nothing. Without a word or even a signal they all retreated to the back
of the simulation, they did not leave however. Instead they formed
rows. One Hundred thick and as long as the simulation itself. They
began to very slowly move forward, leaving behind wreckage and
programming excrement.
***
Spritevile groaned and spit code as he regained his senses. A packet of
data had stuck him as he jumped. Spriteville's arm had fused and
corrupted the packet, now he swung from his arm as the data took him
along to it's destination. He saw blurs as other data sped to their
recipients. They could be anything from passwords, to keystrokes. The
larger ones could be entire consciousnesses connecting to the web.
Spritevile groaned in pain as he tried swivel himself around to see
where he was headed. Ahead of him, approaching fast was the shredder.
"Oh shit!" Spriteville started pulling on his arm. Repeatedly the data
refused to release it's hold. Spriteville swung his legs up and began
to kick at the packet pushing his body away. With a final grunt and a
push with both legs Spritevill sprang free and began to free-fall. Code
dripping from the arm where a hand had been severed. He landed hard and
rolled on the circuitry ground.
Wearily Spriteville stood up and surveyed the area. He couldn't see any
of the viruses anywhere, but it was quiet. Things had stopped beeping,
data was no longer zipping around, only a few stray pieces of data
moved. All around him, the towering data processors, linked hardware,
flashing lights indicating performance were slowing to a halt.
Spriteville looked out towards the walls of the simulation and saw a
mouse port. It was clogged with viruses. Nothing was getting in to tell
the computer what to do. The other ports were undoubtedly being clogged
now as well.
"The admin account. I can lock myself down in there. Buy me some time
to figure out how to fix this and the extent of the damage."
Spriteville mused to himself. He ran off to the login booth and ported
into the administration account.
***
Spriteville walked up a flight of stairs and entered a room which walls
were made of glass. You could see in all directions. As he step foot
into the room it dropped slightly and began to float into the
simulation. The glass door slid closed behind him.
"Where the hell do I start?" Spriteville said aloud as he called up
anti-virus definitions, system resource monitoring, and most
importantly the admin only tools. The tools consisted of an isolation
protocol, a hard drive wipe, disk defrag (whatever good that would do),
and a regedit program. He began to analyze the streams of data that
poured over the monitors. There were no spikes in resource allocations,
there were no unauthorized access attempts. This virus was doing
nothing it should be. Spriteville called up the definitions again and
began to scan the archives at incredible speed. The virus was only
vaguely similar to a single virus, the m.spearbot.54 virus. That was
only in looks though.
Spriteville kept one eye on the resources manager and noticed something
odd. There were no spikes, but slowly applications were dropping off
the list. Important ones too, temperature control had been entirely
removed. So was mouse control, the media player, and the mindjack
controller.
Shocked Spriteville realized that Sahib had been connected to the ports
the whole time. Data clogged in both directions, port access gone,
Sahib would be dead at his computer. Mind destroyed by the feedback.
Nothing was going right, and now someone had died through his
negligence.
"If this virus spreads who knows how many could suffer the same fate?"
Spriteville thought, still reeling over his gross incompetence.
Spriteville looked out over the vast simulated environment and in the
distance saw the movement of a massive wave of slowly creeping viruses.
Spriteville jumped from the administrative suites platform and ran to
destroy the encroaching threat.
From Spriteville end…
* * *
"Odd." Cortland looked at the screen before him with a frown. "I'm
showing a massive amount of extra-dimensional signatures in this
dimension, but I can't find any of them."
War looked over his shoulder. "How about the Stalker soul? Do you see
who might fit that bill?"
Cortland shook his head. "Not really. The main essence seems to be in
this room here, but all I see is some guy sitting on his computer. He
doesn't show any sign of the Stalker presence himself, though there
seems to be a reflection of it in the room somewhere."
War frowned. "Well, we need to check it out. You want to go through,
since it's a human dimension from the looks of it?"
Cortland nodded. "Yeah, I'll take CJ and Tdot with me, we'd be able to
meld with the population the best."
* * *
CJ looked around the small room they'd arrived in. "Not exactly lush
living, huh?"
Tdot looked over at the man in the chair, who so far hadn't indicated
that he'd noticed that anyone was in his room at all. "What is that on
his head?"
"Looks like some sort of VR gear." Cortland moved over to the man and
touched his arm. When there was no response, he carefully pulled the
virtual reality gear off of the man's head and frowned. "Well, this
isn't good."
"What's not?" CJ cocked her head in question.
"There's no one home at all." Cortland snapped his fingers in front of
the man's face. "He's not even flinching."
"Dead?"
"I don't think so, Tdot.. he's still breathing. More like he's fried,
Elvis has left the building, that sort of thing." Cortland removed the
rest of the gear from the man's body and pulled him from the chair.
"Umph! Man, he's gone limp!"
Tdot helped Cortland move the man over to the small bed in the room.
The man gurgled once as he was shifted, but otherwise made no other
movement.
CJ shuddered, looking away from him. "That's... that's just
disturbing."
"Yeah." Cortland glanced back at the computer. "Wonder what could have
done it..."
"Is he the Stalker?" Tdot pulled the covers over the man carefully,
wanting to at least keep him warm.
Cortland looked at the box in his hand. "No, the Stalker's here, but
it's not him."
"Then who? It's not like there's anyone else in here." CJ moved over to
the door and opened it carefully. "And it looks like the rest of the
house is deserted."
Cortland moved the detector around a bit. "Well, it's definitely
reading the strongest in this direction." He walked in circles for a
few minutes until he was standing right next to the computer.
"It's strongest near the computer itself." Cortland looked back at the
man on the bed. "I wonder..."
"What?"
"I wonder... could the Stalker soul be the computer itself?"
CJ chuckled. "That's stretching it a bit, isn't it?"
Cortland smirked. "We have a monkey with a poleaxe, a snake creature
that casts magic, a turtle with the nastiest knife I've ever seen, and
a lion on our team. I don't think we can ever rule anything out again."
CJ nodded. "True. But what are you going to do?"
Cortland sat down at the computer terminal. "I'm going to see what's
going on inside this thing, and then if I think I can do it, I might
take myself a trip into virtual reality."
* * *
“Good lord.” Cortland stared at the computer screen.
“What is it?” CJ looked up from the chair she’d nearly fallen asleep
in. Cortland had been working on the computer feverishly for the past
hour, and both she and Tdot had gotten bored with the wait. Tdot had
gone to explore the rest of the house while CJ had gotten comfortable
in the chair. “Find something?”
“Did I ever.” Cortland motioned to the screen, where large blobs of
amorphous data moved around the screen. “Some form of virus,
exceedingly malicious and apparently dangerous… the feedback from these
things is what did in Mr. Braindead over there.”
“Do you know how to get rid of them?” CJ stood up and stretched. “And
did you find the Stalker?”
“I have no idea on both accounts, but I have a bad feeling I know what
I need to do.” Grimly, Cortland took the VR helmet in his hands.
“Oh no, you are not going in there with all those things about,
Cortland!” CJ frowned, putting her hands on her hips. “What the hell’s
wrong with you?”
“I… don’t think we have a choice, CJ.” He placed the helmet on his head
and began to plug in the interfaces. After a moment, he looked up. “And
if I end up like him, do me a favor and just go ahead and kill me,
please. That’s not how I want to live the rest of my days.”
When she nodded, Cortland keyed in the last interface and steeled
himself as the world around him began to melt away…
* * *
"Cortland?" CJ keyed the interface again, frowning. "Cortland? Are you
there?"
After a moment of static, Cortland's voice echoed through the speakers.
"Y... yeah, I'm here, but damn... the Stalker soul's definitely in here
somewhere."
"How do you know?"
"I had to fight though a shitload of demon viri just to get in. They've
blocked all the exit nodes and everything else around here, and they're
multiplying like mad!"
"What?!" CJ looked at Cortland's lifeless body, strapped to the
machine. "Then get out of there!"
"I can't! The person we're looking for is in here somewhere. I can't
just leave the poor bastard in here like this!"
"Cortland!"
"I have to cut connection, CJ... the viri are engulfing this node as
well. Keep my body safe, and I'll be back to it when I can." Static
noises interrupted him, and his voice did not return.
"Cortland!" Furious, CJ slammed her fists onto the keyboard. "Damn
him!"
"What's wrong?" Tdot came back into the computer room at her outburst.
"What's going on?"
"Cortland's in the computer, and the demons are in there with him. He's
all alone, and there's not a damn thing we can do about it. That's what
the fuck is wrong."
* * *
Tynan whimpered as he quickly made his way through the caverns of the
demon lord Sihodael. He hated it here. Hated it with all his heart and
soul... but when that damned Lego creature had come for him, he'd
promised him a life of wealth and riches beyond compare.
It'd all been a trap, of course, and now Tynan did what they asked
simply to keep his head still on his shoulders. And now everyone was so
damned focused on these Stalkers, at least they were leaving him alone
for the most part.
He yelped as a hand reached out of the darkness and snagged his shirt
as he passed. Another hand clamped itself around his mouth, quieting
his cries, as Bob hissed, "Shut it, stupid! I just want to talk... ow!"
Tynan continued to bite down on the inside of Bob's hand as the man
physically moved him into a secluded room before releasing him with a
snarl. He picked himself up off the ground and gasped for air.
"Little runt. I should kill you, but I won't." Bob sniffed as he wiped
his hand on his pants with a look of distaste on his face. "I need your
help."
"Help?!?" Tynan looked at Bob incredulously. "Give me one good reason,
you stinking weasel."
"Do you want to live or not?"
Tynan raised an eyebrow. "What do you mean?"
"Are you a fool?" Bob sneered, "Perhaps you are, but that doesn't
matter. You do realize that they're going to kill you. You and me,
actually, though I probably stand a better chance of survival than
you."
"What, with not figuring out how to use any of the stuff you're given?"
Bob glared at Tynan. "Don't push me, shrimp. I know how to use enough
of what I have to put enough holes in you so that even Darthboy's magic
there can't bring you back."
"Then make it quick, Bob." Tynan crossed his arms and frowned. "And if
I don't like what you say, I'm going to let everyone know. Might keep
them off my ass if they're kicking yours."
'You don't like what I say, I'm killing you here and now,' Bob thought.
He cleared his throat. "Well, here's what I've been thinking..."
* * *
Cortland didn’t know which emotion was going to win over his mind at
the moment. On the one hand, he was absolutely thrilled and awed
by the sheer scope of the virtual reality he’d dropped into; it was
absolutely gorgeous, living and alive as data literally flew around
from all corners of the world. It was a euphoric feeling, a
feeling of almost godlike power, to be able to fly and command the data
like he could.
On the other hand, the sheer terror and horror of the demonic viri and
their incredible reproduction rate was quickly wining, aided by his
high degree of common sense and “keep-my-ass-alive-ativity.” The
creatures were, for lack of a better word, odd… their attacks didn’t
hurt him in any way so far, but once their programming had adapted to
his presence here, eventually they would be able to breach his defenses.
Which was not a good thing in his book. His swords had appeared
in his hands when the first creatures attacked; something he’d have to
ask War about later, because he knew for a fact his real swords were
still with his body back in the real world. He…
His thoughts were interrupted when a mass of silver flashed past him,
ripping through another mass of the viri. Cortland gaped when the
viri, as one, turned and chased after the blur.
“Hey!” Cortland moved after the thing, but it was already gone
from sight. “Damn! What the hell was that?”
“Was what?”
Cortland turned around, but he could not see the source of the
voice. “Hello? Is someone there?”
“Yes. Are you a user or an interface?”
“A… what? I’m a user, of course.”
“Then you must leave. It is not safe for users to be in here at
the moment. The virus has replicated itself a millionth-fold;
remaining here will certainly leave you brain dead in a very short
amount of time.”
Cortland frowned. “Now just hold on. First of all, who the
hell are you?”
“I am a Sprite A.I. version 4.212, latest upgrade… hold on a second,
please.” The flash of silver movement nearly dissected a
half-dozen of the viri as they approached. The voice continued as
if nothing had happened, “latest upgrade x23. Who are you?”
“My name is Cortland. Is there anyone else in this place?”
An idea was beginning to form in Cortland’s mind, but it all depended
on this thing’s answer…
Next. . .