Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    Michael Cobley - Humanity's Fire book 1

    Prev Next


      when he reached for the memories of when and how he

      had been damaged, there was nothing, a gap where

      familiar recollection should have been waiting to be

      relived. He felt the panicky edge of fear and subdued it,

      focusing on discovering the reason.

      What he found was a terrible swathe of decay which

      had eaten into one of the biocrystal chines of his cortical

      augmentation. His awareness function had failed to

      detect it as the sensor web had itself been affected, and

      the worst of it was that the rot was still advancing. If

      unchecked, it would in just a few years kill him.

      His thoughts were wry with a black humour. <To have

      survived these limitless chasms of time and all the trials

      that came before is still a great achievement. And now I

      have the opportunity to deliver unto my brothers and sis-

      ters a final victory. I am of the Legion, and although

      individual knights may fall, the Legion must triumph.

      The laws of convergence must triumph. >

      The analysis of the Darien report was before him, but

      he decided he would institute a final recovery trawl

      through the corroded biocrystal while he assessed the

      data.

      He saw the world Darien, a place of lush vegetation

      and a living landscape of mountains and rivers; he saw

      the moon and recognised remnants of the enemy's

      defences with no sign of his presence . . .

      With the powers of their machinemind planetoids, the

      Legion of Avatars cut through the extrinsic and intrinsic

      layers of material existence and opened an unstable fis-

      sure in the face of reality. In vast phalanxes they fled

      from a dying universe into this one, then used the plane-

      toids to tunnel up through the hyperspace tiers of this one

      in search of a new home, a new dominion . . .

      He saw the colonists, the Humans, saw all their weak-

      nesses and saw how weak they were in the face of the

      political realities surrounding them . . .

      There had been a battle, a gargantuan struggle spread

      across many thousands of star systems, a savage,

      resounding clash in which whole worlds and entire sen-

      tient species were eradicated as a matter of course . . .

      He saw the visual data, the near-complete ruins amid

      the forest, recognised more of the enemy's work and won-

      dered if it held their deadliest weapon, the one that had

      defeated the Legion even in the full glory of its might. If so,

      it could be turned to their advantage ...

      Fragmentary memories were being recovered . . . it

      hard vacuum, a close-quarters grappling struggle with

      one of the enemy's sentient machines, hooked and edged

      extensors searching for purchase on each other, then

      one of his greater tentacles found the jutting edge of. I

      hull plate, wrenched it aside and thrust a high-energy

      lance into the vitals . . . the knights of the Legion of

      Avatars gathered in a council of war, their millions wait-

      ing in curved ranks and arrays within the flickering

      gloom of a deep, desolate tier of hyper space, all intoning

      the catechisms of convergence . . . and an old, old

      memory of his own cyborg-form not long after his trans-

      formation, the long, armoured carapace patterned in

      dark reds and greens, the ten greater, articulated tenta-

      cles and the six lesser ones tipped with every kind of

      effector from tearing chainclaws to delicate manipula-

      tors, a magnificent new body which had freed him from

      the pains of the flesh .. . then a part of him realised

      that there was no memory of his organic appear am e

      from before his ascent to biomechanical immortality,

      nothing except the vague recollection that his chist n

      cyborg-form was utterly different from his old body . . .

      He assessed the Darien situation and the strategic

      implications of its location as well as the fact that the

      Humans were dispatching a mission to their lost colony.

      Then he considered various possible journey routes, but

      not for himself. With its battered substructures, leaking

      carapace plates, stuttering main drives, and near-defunct

      sensor array, his biomachine body might be able to drag

      itself into orbit but the lengthy voyage to Darien would

      be too hazardous. He would have to delegate that grave

      responsibility to lesser agents, three Instruments to carry

      out the task, each one an abridged simulacrum of his

      own persona, each one created out of his own neural

      substrate, each one a small loss, and a small addition to

      his freight of pain.

      10

      THEO

      Theo hated formal occasions, and since the ambassador's

      arrival three days ago he'd had to endure five of the

      damn things, at Sundstrom's insistence. Hammergard's

      main hospital, the McPhail Memorial, a zeplin yard,

      a root refinery, a church, and a distillery. Today,

      Ambassador Horst had been due to spend the morning

      at Pushkinskog, the Uvovo-tended daughter-forest south

      of Lake Morwen, but plans had changed overnight and

      now he was visiting Membrance Vale near Landfall

      Town, to see the hollow shell of the Hyperion and to pay

      his respects to the dead. And Sundstrom had asked Theo

      to attend, in an unofficial capacity. Tonight, a banquet in

      honour of the ambassadors was due to be held in thi

      Assembly ballroom, followed by speeches and a ceilidh.

      Theo was strolling along the westward road that led

      from Landfall to the vales of the Tuulikki Hills, which

      would take a good thirty minutes on foot. The morning

      sky was bright and clear, the air cold and laced with the

      odours of growth, ideal weather for walking. Besides,

      Theo had decided to walk so that he could meet some -

      one on the way, and was pondering once more what

      Sundstrom had said yesterday. Holger was a few years

      older than Theo but he considered that they were essen-

      tially of the same generation; during the Winter Coup

      they had been on opposite sides, Sundstrom a Trond

      councilman who voted against supporting Viktor

      Ingram's insurrection then went underground to actively

      work against the coup. That and his political efforts at

      reconciliation while arguing forcibly for the new Accord

      policies had persuaded Theo that he was a man of

      integrity and substance. In addition, just as Theo had

      had his years in the wilderness after the failure of the

      coup, so too had Holger been forced to quit politics

      after the injury that led to his lower-body paralysis. Yet

      in later life, both found themselves back in the thick of

      it.

      And Sundstrom's mysterious information source

      troubled Theo. The Enhanced were the living results of

      a short-sighted genetics programme shut down twenty

      years ago, most of whom worked on research pro-

      grammes of one kind or another. Redesigned cortexes

      and synaptic connectivity had given them astonishing

      mental abilities, but they suffered from a corresponding

      lack of social
    intuition that made it hard for them to

      deal with ordinary people. Theo had only met a few in

      his time, but he knew from reliable contacts that the

      Enhanced were essentially looked upon by government

      departments not just as a kind of intellectual resource

      but as a badge of prestige which, once acquired, was

      retained for as long as possible. The president was sup-

      posed to be above this kind of bureaucratic jostling,which made Theo wonder how much political risk he might be taking if he was using Enhanced help.

      Before long the road passed into the woods, their

      overarching branches interweaving to form a leafy

      tunnel through which spears of sunlight lanced to touch

      the road with gold. This was a sparsely populated area,

      and apart from the occasional spinnerbus taking visitors

      back and forth, Theo saw no one else. When he came to

      where the road crossed a steep-sided gully, he stepped

      off the verge and sat down on a weatherbeaten bench

      overlooking the crevice. Moments later heavy footsteps

      approached through the undergrowth and an overalled

      Rory sat down heavily beside him.

      'You're not exactly a woodsman, Rory.'

      'Aye, well, I was never any good at all that creepi

      about and hidin', Major - canna stand the bugs.' As if to

      make his point he vigorously waved away a few hover-

      ing insects. Theo grinned.

      'Let us hope we don't need to head off into the wilds,'

      he said. 'Anyway, what have you learned?'

      'Right, Ah got tae the Hyperion early this morning

      and sure enough, more graffiti. The manager and his

      boss were practically tearing their hair out so when Ah

      turn up wi' my handy cleaning sprays and sponges they

      put me to work straight off.'

      Theo frowned. Such vandalism was almost unheard

      of on Darien, yet since the arrival of the Heracles more

      and more had been cropping up, mainly in Hammergard

      and nearby towns. Then yesterday, the Knudson

      Ecumenical Church and the Chernov Brothers distillery

      had both been defaced shortly before Ambassador Horst

      was due to arrive, which was why Theo had sent Rory

      on ahead earlier, pre-equipped.

      'What did it say? Any reference to these personal

      AIs?'

      Rory's eyebrows went up. 'Oh aye! Stuff like

      "Machine-lovers leave Darien", "No Al-slaves here",

      "The only good AI is a deleted AI", that kinda thing,

      along with "Darien for Dariens" and FDF logos.'

      FDF stood for 'Free Darien Faction', a previously

      unknown group clearly intent on stirring up resentment

      and unrest, neither of which Theo was strongly opposed

      to, provided it was for a good reason. But the FDF was

      appealing to the baser instincts of parochialism and prej-

      udice, and with yesterday's breaking news about the use

      of AI implants by the Earthsphere ambassador and

      others, a dose of fear was stirred into the mix. No doubt

      Horst's visit to the site of the colonists' triumph over a

      deadly AI enemy was meant to counter such adverse

      popular opinion.

      He'll never get that imp back in its bottle, he thought.

      The only positive tack he could take is to meet the dis-

      trust head-on, but he doesn't seem to have the steel for

      it. Wonder what advice he's getting from this AI com-

      panion of his}

      'Okay, Rory,' he said, getting to his feet. 'I have to get

      along. You be on your way to the Pushkinskog daugh-

      ter-forest - I've already told Listener Gansua to expect

      you.'

      Rory stood, scratching his sandy hair. 'Whit d'ye

      think these FDF guys'll do there? - graffiti a tree?'

      'God knows. For all we know they may not be will-

      ing to involve the Uvovo, but given their lack of respect

      for certain landmarks I wouldn't bet on it.'

      Rory paused, a half-smile on his lips. 'I guess you'll

      have been asking about the ither colonyships, Major,

      aye? I heard that they've still no' been found.'

      'Still missing, Rory, still a mystery.'

      'Right, aye, but it makes ye wonder, ye know . . I

      mean, there's the old Hyperion just up the road,' he

      said. 'What if the other ship AIs cracked up too, like a

      design flaw, maybe?'

      Theo shrugged. 'I've heard that theory before, and if

      it is true then perhaps we are the lucky ones to have sur-

      vived.'

      'Call this luck, Major?'

      Exchanging waves, they went their separate ways,

      Theo's smile fading a little, his thoughts growing sombre

      as he crossed the bridge that led to the outskirts of

      Membrance Vale.

      11

      GREG

      The reporter Lee Shan scanned the ruins of the site

      through an opaque oval eyepiece attached to a sleek

      white headset, its flattened band encircling his bald head

      and anchored to a second around his neck. An equip-

      ment pannier floated quietly nearby on suspensors.

      'Very nice, Doctor Cameron, very atmospheric, so

      what we would like to do is take lots of shots of the

      ruins - and some of you at work, obviously, especially

      at the sacrificial altar, then we embed simz of those

      Uvolos, but that'll be done Earthside, before tiercast...'

      Greg stared at the reporter, Lee Shan, with a mixture of

      annoyance and intent curiosity, wondering who was

      speaking, the man or the AI implant. He then pointed to

      the grey stone bowl to which the reporter had been drawn.

      'They're called the Uvovo, and that is not a sacrificial

      altar—'

      'I see, I see, so do you know what it is, Doctor?'

      'Mr Lee,' he said carefully, 'the Uvovo abandoned these

      ruins thousands of years ago, after which this entire

      promontory was covered with jungle. Where we are stand-

      ing was the roof and this bowl was most probably used for

      ritual fires, perhaps even cooking.'

      'So you're not completely certain what it is?'

      'The Uvovo have affirmed that blood sacrifice never

      played any part in their culture.'

      'A useful testimony, I am sure, Doctor, but after several

      millennia how can they be sure?'

      Lee Shan smiled. In the background his aircams

      darted around just above head height, scanning every-

      thing in sight and unintentionally providing great

      amusement for the Uvovo scholars. The reporter's

      small, neat smile, however, served only to aggravate

      Greg beyond the already strained limits of his courtesy.

      He knew that he should ignore the man's arrogance,

      but the situation was like a door through which he

      could not help but walk.

      He matched the reporter's smile with one of his own.

      'You know, Mr Lee, perhaps you've got a point.

      Perhaps we're not being imaginative enough in our

      hypotheses. How about this - we could suggest that the

      ancient Uvovo sacrificed criminals and prisoners to, let's

      say, giant alligator creatures from the sea, and that these

      blood-soaked ceremonies took place at night because

      the alligator-things only came up to the beach after

      dark. It ma
    y be that those sea-borne predators who

      failed to consume any of the sacrificial carrion were

      themselves killed and eaten by the Uvovo ancestors ...'

      'Doctor, do you have any proof for any of this?'

      'Not a scrap but it's such fun, don't you think? And -

      and to demonstrate these hypotheses I might be able to

      persuade our Uvovo scholars to dress up in furs and

      ritual paint then hold a re-enactment for you and the

      cameras after nightfall, complete with torches, drums

      and barefoot dancing. Perhaps some of my Norj and

      Dansk colleagues might come in horned helmets and I'll

      wear my kilt. What d'ye say?'

      There was an awestruck silence, and the sense of

      breaths being held by the Uvovo scholars and Rus

      researchers, who had all paused to stare at the con-

      frontation. Anger smouldered in the reporter's eyes, but

      his voice remained level and unhurried.

      'I do not take kindly to those who impede my pursuit

      of the facts, Doctor.'

      'Well, perhaps you made the mistake of ignoring the

      facts you didn't like and making up ones that you did.'

      He lowered his voice. 'You also made the mistake of

      thinking that we're all gullible yokels eager for your

      godlike wisdom. Or perhaps you were badly advised - I

      understand that these personal AIs aren't quite infalli-

      ble.'

      Lee Shan's gaze was all icy calm.

      'So I am to be shown the way out?'

      'Sadly no, Mr Lee, since you undoubtedly have writ-

      ten permission from the Institute to be here, which

      means that you are at liberty to record whatever you

      please. However, I insist that you do not interfere with

      any excavation or exposed relics, nor interrupt any of

      my staff while engaged in their work. As for background

      detail, you have a copy of the site's tourist dossier - I

      suggest that you read it.'

      For a moment Lee Shan said nothing, then gave an

      acquiescing bow of the head and turned away to his

      pannier. Greg breathed in deeply and hurried back to

      the small hut where he had been categorising finds

      before the reporter's arrival. He knew that his treat-

      ment of the man had gone beyond rebuke into public

      humiliation, which a media celebrity like Lee Shan was

      not likely to forgive or forget. And yet it had been so

      satisfying, a guilty pleasure.

      It took about fifteen minutes and a fresh cup of kaffe,

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2025