Linguistic Mystics

Mr. Repose
The Warden

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The Library of Discontent

Monolithic Horizon; Act 1: Heathen – Chapter 6: Dead Man Walking

This may sound like a foolish thing, but I wasn’t afraid.   Serra wasn’t either, she stood defiantly in the middle of the room, as though there was nothing in this world that could move her.  She says, “try to keep up.”  Then she sprung forward, the force of which made the Cicada dip slightly, she struck the door with enough force to rip it completely off it’s reinforced hinges, and rode it right into the side of the police cruiser that had it’s guns aimed and ready to fire, the magnetic lock cable it had anchored to us to halt our movement snapped off with ease, whipping back into it’s reel.   The moment she struck it, she used her momentum to leap to the side and out of sight.  The way she moved, the force of the impact as she hits the police cruiser, sending it spiraling off towards the ground.   It looked ridiculous, spiraling away like that, it’s black gunmetal shape almost giving the impression that it were a large fly that had just been swatted away.

Cyborg.   Probably high-level bionics.  Military grade muscle fiber interlaced with a skeletal support system.   Probably bone density supplements and nano-fiber.   Definitely had spinal grafts, maybe titanium plating.   Judging from the force she knocked that door off, I’d say she had the same treatment for her arms that she had for her legs.   As a matter of fact I wouldn’t be surprised if she had an artificial body, but that seemed unlikely.  Her touch was too warm, she still had human emotions.   Something about taking the leap from human to bio machine did strange things to people.   In my limited experience of it and what I’ve seen, the top police officers and some of the private security guys that go through the process lose their humanity in the process.   They were perpetually on the net, never tired, never seemed to give a damn about anything.   An emotional no-man’s land.   Not her though.   To be honest, I had expected to have been popped off by now.   I confessed everything to her, not really out of trust, but because I thought that I was going to be executed any moment so I didn’t see much point in hiding anything.  She said she was my bodyguard, and I laughed in her face.  What a fool I was, she really is an army unto herself.

That’s when a more dangerous notion wormed it’s way into my head.   I began to have a little bit of hope.   It happened so fast, like a lightning striking, that I couldn’t stop myself.   Once one begins to hope all sorts of insane ideas begin to gestate in one’s head.   Ideas of escape, survival, even victory.   In my experience hope was something that happened to other people, I never dared tamper with the stuff.   That way I was never let down too bad.

Cicadas were piloted with an old control stick setup.   Like you see in the ruined sectors of Europa, hovering around from landing to landing, scavenging old tech and fuel.   There was a pain that resonated from the back of my head.   Then what sounded like someone took an old circuit board and put it in a microwave.  Then a flood of memories, reality and dream seeming to blend together in that moment.   Zombie-like I wandered over to the control panel and pressed the manual override.   With the magnetic lockdown the police cruiser Serra destroyed was placing on us gone, I could get the ship moving again.  Outside I was half seeing, through the cockpit window, Serra holding on to the railgun mounted on the top of another police cruiser,  and shadows of the past.   The conflicting vision was of me piloting a helicopter away from a corporate strike team, you could see the logos on their body armor shinning brightly amidst the snow.   They were firing up at me, but more to get my attention then to try and shoot me down, I must have left them behind.   The image faded, but I found for a second I could think about it free of pain.

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Monolithic Horizon; Act 1: Heathen – Chapter 4: Us and Them

Not dead. Eyes open, and there’s smoke and chunks of metal and plastic, white material from the airbags, the foam inside them already drying up, causing the powder left in it’s wake to give thier surface a faint glow in the blinking red crash lights. There is an automated message playing on a cracked screen informing me that the crash is indeed over, and to exit the vehicle and seek medical attention. Oh and don’t forget to have a pleasant day and thank you for using Circa inc for all your commuting needs.

Memories, triggered by the smell of electrical fire, the pain radiating from my head and limbs, by the feeling of being buried in rubble. Somehow the past was playing catch up with me. The accident that took me out of commission couldn’t be the source, there was no memory from that, as it was explained to me it happened so fast and was so violent that I was immediately incapacitated and unconscious. Maybe a mine, bomb, grenade, betrayal, crash. No, this memory was much older, from something deep in the past, and the pain normally associated with recalling anything from anything from that far back was momentarily less horrific then the current head trauma I seem to have suffered. I was buried alive at one point. There was a city, I vaguely remember. Hands, frail and with chipped nail polish on them start digging and I’m crying. Then the memory fades, the pain overwhelms the forces of my concussion’s. Usually if something triggers an old memory; say, a smell, a moment, a voice of a turn of phrase someone uses around me, I get the sensation that my head is just full of those little white and black waring dots from white noise, all of them trying to kill their way through each other and out my ears. Like a loud electrical buzzing that rumble across gray matter like thunder. So I push those feelings down, I forget the moment, avoid it if I can and go about my normal routine. Smile, wave, talk to the reporter, lie a little, lie a lot, who cares, what’s it matter, do it and don’t ask questions and get your pay and go home.

With a tremendous struggle I turn enough to look out the slot window, between a piece of concrete and some cables and glass the sky is burning in the background. Like an apocalypse, a personal one, because nothing is a cliché when it’s happening to you. The sky was burning, the smog and clouds glowing in hues of orange and red that seem to rumble and pulse with their own hidden life. My home was up there, old books, old tech that I had collected. The sitting room where leaders met with me to take pictures and shake my hand and smile then berate me and criticize me when the cameras were off. A grim smile begins to worm it’s way across my face, with the knowledge that at least that part of my life is over. This is what you could call, my pink slip. Termination papers. Write-up. In every sense of the word, I was irrevocably fired.

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Monolithic Horizon; Act 1: Heathen – Chapter 3: Electric Dreams

Back in the Circa, I waited inside the dock.   The place was still empty.  Rows and rows of carved in grooves in the smooth metal all lined up and ready to fire one out into the skyline, like bullets in one of the old-model guns.   The kind that used gunpowder and firing pins all timed with perfect precision, admirable much in the same way you would covet an old clock with all those spinning gears and wound up coils that managed to keep near perfect time.   Amazing, all those years of practices and knowledge to keep track of an abstract concept.   Now you can scarcely find a toilet without a clock built into it.    You know, just in case you need to time how long your workers spend on the bowl so you can dock it from their wages accordingly.    How all those old inventors would weep for the future if they knew how their advances were used to commit even the pettiest of oppression.

Personally, the old guns were always more reliable, Rail Guns overheat.   The magnetic rails that power the projectile have to have a certain degree of friction which, after a few shots it starts to drastically overheat and wear down.  To compensate some of the more determined proponents of the technology started mounting massive, cumbersome, heat sinks on the guns. Gauss guns sometimes are too powerful, firing through several city blocks depending on the size.   Not exactly what you’d want to use on covert ops.   An old gun though, was a perfect invention.   Just raise the caliber, pack in better quality gunpowder, and you could shoot through a tank.  A Gauss Gun is the weapon of choice by the police for civic suppression.  Like a riot at a mall over a new product release, or god forbid, some workers decide to protest.   The friction in the air can sometimes superheat the metal as it fires out, place some magnesium or phosphorous on the outside of the metal slug and you’ve got a high speed ball of molten steel.   The results of impact are often rather unpleasant.

The seat pulls back and reclines.  In this void of a place cradled in between the grooves of the railway system, cluttered with cables and electrical panels, the texture of the ceiling inside the Circa changes.  The front projection is replaced by a 180 degree screen, perfect picture, gesture activated, internet connection.  This is the type of interface people on the street have wet dreams about.

Bright lights, a login prompt, I say ‘Adamus Coerca.’  The world falls away and suddenly it’s spinning downward among digital towers, ads and light patterns arranged in perfect geometric patterns that serve as a grim facsimile of the outside world.   One would think that the net would be much different from the outside world, perhaps looking like a laser light show made of vertex graphics.   Maybe a forest, with each leaf really a portal or a remote server, the trunk composed of the various gateways and hubs.   An ocean, that you dive into, and swim among the sea of floating servers and data ports, where things are fluid and smooth.   When you’re greeted with a less gritty version of the current reality, the net becomes a much less exciting place.   The frontier, the old internet, has long been incorporated into the Demer Enterprises interface scripting, forcing the internet to conform to a logical structure that most people can relate to and immediately interface with ‘for the good of commerce.’   The thing that they didn’t tell the few people left who actually cared about things like having independent information ports and feeds was that, the only compatible internet interfaces were those run by the corporations themselves.   Private internet was locked out of the new corporate system and banished to the fringes, a place you could only access if you knew how to crack a five hundred and twelve bit encryption based firewall.  Several of them.

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Monolithic Horizon; Act 1: Heathen – Chapter 2: Behind Blue Eyes

The capsule screen is black.   I haven’t pressed the button yet.   When the screen is black you get a decent reflection, it’s the kind of black mirror you envision in children’s stories.   The colors are faded enough to mask how thing really are, but enough to give you the details.   My face stares back at me, with it’s cut-too-short brown hair, it’s slightly wrinkled brow, and bright blue eyes.  Bright enough to almost negate the toned-down colors reflected in our makeshift black mirror.

I lean forward, press a button.

The sky opens up around me, the only structure that still stretches up higher than my current position is the Demer Complex.   It’s one of those arcologies, the kind that were ripped off from old oriental architecture.   It’s a self-sustaining structure.  A self-contained city.  The standard rails won’t operate on it, you’ve got to get on the one railway that goes around the circumference of the tower, which, from this height looks like a mountain of steel    Tall and angular.   They call the railway system for the complex the stairway to heaven.  Once you’re rich enough to ride it, you won’t be coming back down to gallivant amongst us mere mortals.

The capsule takes a dip.   They call these capsules Circas.   The kind I use, because it’s got a duel piloting system.  That means that I can control where I go to a degree, I can choose routes, and change them on the fly by touching the screen and pointing to a different building, rail, whatever.   The conduit towers are supposed to be used for two purposes, to catch people coming back from orbit and to place people in orbit.   You can only use it as a quick jump halfway across the city if you happen to press the release at the moment it is about to pull you upwards and inside the tower.    Inside your vessel is subject to what a spike would be inside a rail cannon.

During the decent I get a slight case of vertigo, this is all right and perfectly normal.  When you lose the sensation of gravity and then are quickly reminded of it’s presence you tend to have moments like this.   This is my vacation.   This is my therapy.   Thinking that I might die, it’s not as frightening as you may think.  Especially when there’s always the prospect of my job looming in my mind’s horizon, making my thoughts of the future only of two things, which I’ve already had in ample supply in my life.   Dread.   Regret.   The important thing to remember is, I’m not a monster.   My job is the president of The Commission.   You look at my face on the news every night, you hear my voice in every national address and speech.   I show no emotion other than optimism, and what I say never has any true meaning.   You see, there is an arrangement to ensure this is the case.

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Experience is not what happens to a man; it is what a man does with what happens to him. — Aldous Huxley, Texts and Pretexts (1932)